Open Source Business

July 12, 2007

Agile Metadot serves up open source Web apps

Filed under: lamp, open source, open source business model, red hat, saas, ubuntu — tina @ 4:03 pm

Ten years ago, when Metadot founder and CEO Daniel Guermeur was working for a large technology company, he discovered that the Web-based content management systems he was developing were too complicated for his customers, who kept saying they needed a Web-based portal application that was easy to learn and easy to use. Guermeur wanted to provide that, but he was stymied by the closed aspect of the technologies he was developing with: with no access to the source code and long waits for product upgrades from vendors, it would be too slow and expensive to roll out more efficient solutions. So Guermeur started looking at open source. (more…)

March 12, 2007

Library system migrates from Linux — to more Linux

Filed under: library, linux, migration, ubuntu — tina @ 4:17 pm

The six branches of the Howard County Library system in Maryland provide 300 computers to their clients. Every one of those computers has been upgraded from a “homegrown” Linux kernel, to Groovix, an Ubuntu Linux derivative. (more…)

March 11, 2006

Ubuntu Dapper Drake delay decision due

Filed under: distributions, linux, open source business model, ubuntu — tina @ 6:53 pm

Dapper Drake, the next Ubuntu release, is going to be different, say the developers working on the release. So different, in fact, that Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth has proposed a six-week delay for final polishing on the distribution that has captured the hearts of new and expert Linux users alike. Shuttleworth and the rest of the developer community surrounding Ubuntu call Dapper the first enterprise-level release. Read more at Newsforge.com.

Automatix kicks Ubuntu into gear

Filed under: automatix, distributions, linux, open source business model, ubuntu — tina @ 6:52 pm

There’s been some discussion lately about whether Ubuntu is suitable for Linux beginners. If you raise this issue, someone is sure to tout a script called Automatix as the solution to any perceived notions of the user-unfriendliness of Ubuntu. Automatix automatically installs a laundry list of applications, plugins, and utilities that are supposed to turn a barebones Ubuntu install into desktop perfection. That sounded like something I should try. I already thought Ubuntu was pretty easy to use. Although it doesn’t come out of the box with everything I need, I quickly found out how to get just about everything I needed by pointing and clicking. The Synaptic Package Manager helped me set up extra repositories, and update-notifier made it easy to get the latest version of whatever it told me I needed. (more…)

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