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Distros
Review: Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon vs. Mac OS X Leopard
Ubuntu
Podcast: Interview with Ubuntu's Jono Bacon and Jorge Castro
This week we spent some time talking to Ubuntu Community Manager Jono Bacon, and External Projects Developer Liaison Jorge Castro, about the Ubuntu community, Personal Package Archives, and where Linux is headed in 2008.
Ubuntu’s rich set of tools make system administration a snap
Have an old PC or three? Turn those aging hunks of silicon into refurbished Linux workhorses.

Ubuntu is the best Linux distro out there. Here’s how to make it even better.
If you’ve never tried Ubuntu Linux, you’re missing a real treat. Here’s how to get started with the absolute best free desktop Linux.
OSDir has put the spotlight on Kubuntu and has an short interview with Andreas Mueller and Jonathan Riddell of the project.
SUSE
Pretty Fonts Are Possible
Make your fonts go pop!
Novell has announced SUSE Linux Professional 9.3 with a load of improvements and new features, including Xen, the new Beagle desktop search technology, Mono 1.1.4, PostgreSQL 8.0 and much more.

Novell released a new version of SUSE Linux Professional that includes the 2.611 version of the kernel, the 2.0 version of the OpenOffice.org productivity suite and the Firefox 1.0 browser. See the full story at ComputerWorld.

Novell has been involved with Linux for just a short time — it made its major acquisitions in the area only a few years ago — but the company seems to be trying to make up for lost time. Its deal with Microsoft is controversial, but the company’s new CEO says that customers stand to benefit greatly. Here’s an inside look at how Novell sells Linux.
Debian
Debian, Get Your@%#* Together!
To make Debian a real success, its many advocates and vendors must pool resources. But columnist Jason Perlow says that makes too much sense to actually happen.

Due to the lengthy Sarge development process, Sarge shipped with XFree86 rather than X.org. Since most Linux distributions switched to X.org quite some time ago, this put Debian more than a little bit behind the curve.

The Etch release, however, will sport X.org. Debian Administration provides a tutorial on moving to X.org. Debian is also transitioning to GCC 4.0 as the default gcc/g++ for Etch, which is covered here on the Debian mailing lists.

Now that the Debian Sarge distribution has finally reported for duty, rumors abound that an enterprise distribution based on Debian may be in the works.

A story in eWeek says that Mandriva, Progeny and Turbolinux will announce a Debian-based enterprise Linux distro at LinuxWorld in San Francisco. None of the parties involved are confirming this at this time, (including Ian Murdock, who blogs about it a little) but it seems like a distinct possibility since the three companies have been working together for the Linux Core Consortium project.

(From "Do It Yourself" columnist Scott Granneman's blog...)

Yes, hell has frozen over and if you’re planning to place any crazy bets, today might be the day to make them!

Debian has finally released Sarge! Holy mackerel, there’s finally a new Debian stable! Amazing! Incredible! Let’s hope that the new Debian management keeps up the pace and releases Debian on a more reasonable, modern rate. Please!

Software includes kernel 2.4.27 (yes, it’s old, but this is stable, & it’s childsplay to upgrade to 2.6), KDE 3.3 (upgrade to 3.4 using experimental, if you feel like it - I use it, & it’s fine), GNOME 2.8 (same thing for GNOME 2.10), Firefox 1.0.4, Tbird 1.0.2, Apache 2.0.54 (1.3.33 is still available, for those running that version - I do!), PostgreSQL 7.4.7, XFree86 4.3 (but a switch to X.org is imminent), GCC 3.3.5, OpenOffice.org 1.1.3, and much, much, much more.

For more info, see the main Debian site.

If you use Debian, adjust your sources.list file & get to APTing!

The city of Munich has chosen Debian GNU/Linux for a project involving approximately 14,000 computers. The high-profile project drew attention from several other Linux vendors, and even attracted the attention of Steve Ballmer, but ultimately went to Debian and local vendors Softcon and Gonicus. CNET and Heise Online have more.

Commercial Linux distributions have come and gone, but through it all, the non-commercial Debian project has forged ahead. Here's a look at where it's been and where it's going.

Fedora isn’t the only community supported Linux distribution that’s worth looking at as a Linux desktop. Debian, the distribution with the largest base of available software packages and the largest development community, has now come of age.

Branden Robinson, the newly-elected Debian Project Leader, is already making good on campaign promises. (If only politicians could follow this example!) Robinson has produced a Debian Project Leader report detailing the state of Debian, and a status report on Debian Sarge.

Top Stories
Scott Granneman referees a technological cage match between Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon) and Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard).
CNET has a look at Red Hat "clone" distributions like CentOS and White Box Linux, and how that helps and hurts Red Hat.

It's a pretty brief overview of the Red Hat alternatives that are available, without much detail on the relative quality of the other distributions. I reviewed CentOS a few weeks ago, and found it to be a pretty good distribution — certainly worth a look if Red Hat Enterprise Linux is out of your price range.

One of Linux's greatest strengths is that it's easily customized. Although most distributions ship with a variety of standard tools for specific purposes (such as sendmail as a mail server or Vixie Cron to handle repeated jobs), alternative tools are readily available. You can rip out just about any component, either removing it entirely or replacing it with something else. Linux lets you remove or replace more components than most operating systems, allowing the savvy administrator to customize a Linux installation for specific purposes.
It took five years, 10,000 employees, and (allegedly) billions of dollars. It contains some 50 million lines of code. Yes, it's Windows Vista, and it's finally here. And guess what? In some ways, Vista has Linux beat.
The latest and greatest gadgets and gizmos for your pal, the Penguin.
Calls Solaris "a more strategic alternative to commercial Linux distributions" but the company's own Linux shipments exceed Solaris.
Solaris 10 blooms into the open.
Last month's column introduced the powerful Grand Unified Boot Loader (GRUB), a utility that enables you to boot one of many operating systems when you start your computer. That column looked at basic GRUB configuration, including setting up GRUB on a floppy disk to boot Linux.
Red Hat
Two years in the making, RHEL 5 is finally ready. The result? With Xen, SELinux, the Red Hat Global File System, and more, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 raises the bar for commercial Linux. We break down the new features and walk you through creating your first virtual machine.

Last beta before first of the release candidates go live.

CEO says they won't drop prices.

Wall Street took a pound of flesh from the Linux vendor this week. However, they may have jumped to their conclusions a bit too soon.

At the end of April 2004, Red Hat will discontinue its support and maintenance of Red Hat Linux, leaving a good number of users in a lurch. While some users will likely switch to SUSE or Debian or others, the Fedora Project promises to take up where Red Hat's left off. But is Fedora a viable option? Here's a hands-on trial of Fedora Core 1.
Don't call it the next Microsoft. If things go Bob Young's way, people will think of Red Hat as the Wal-Mart of the open source world.
Solaris
Solaris 10 blooms into the open.
Calls Solaris "a more strategic alternative to commercial Linux distributions" but the company's own Linux shipments exceed Solaris.
eWeek has reviews of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and Solaris 10, providing a fairly balanced view of both operating systems. Both OSes score well according to eWeek's criteria, with Solaris 10 coming out about even with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4. A good executive summary of both OSes.
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