Collecting the weird and wonderful
techy stories from in and around the interweb.
The Blackberry device could become the plaything for Europeans only if a court ruling goes to the next logical step and stop RIM from selling more units. The court case evolves around the patent infringment from NTP and while it was thought this was sorted out earlier with a pay off, there was disagreements. So back to court they went, and it didn't turn out too good for Blackberry. Although, surely the worse case for both companies is for Blackberry to be denied a sales channel in the US; no one would be earning then. We'll watch to see how this plays out.
Our own Matt Harrison is over in India at the moment attending the FOSS event. When he isn't manning the booth he is taking in various sessions and reporting them on his blog. He recently sat in on a session from Google and for the Google spotters out here there he has some interesting nuggets gleamed from that talk.
Going to another Matt, Matt Asay over at InfoWorld has an interesting blog entry on what constitutes an open source company. He had blogged about this before and then received an interesting email from Greg Gianforte, CEO RightNow Technologies on how they are utilising open source. Excusing the traditional open-source-success-story here, what is interesting is his play into the world of car manufacturers and what would happen if they were open source. I think I can see where he is going there, but I don't think it quite fits. See what you think.
Linux Journal has an article published on how to make a terabyte backup server using Liunx and inexpensive hard disks. This is something another one of our chaps Glen Martin, accomplished some time ago with his Debian setup. Although Glen's setup was a lot more sophisticated than the one outlined here in Linux Journal. There is no mention of RAID nor is there any mention of using this as a virtual single partition in this article.
Countdown to Christmas Fact #24:
The humble christmas cracker is french in origin, as it originally started out as small treats wrapped/twisted at both ends. An englishman, Tom Smith, spotted this and started to add small gifts (and eventually the bad jokes and paper hats). The term cracker came from an idea he had while listening to the noise of his open fire and thought he could add to the sense of occassion by making this sound using a small explosive.
Courtesy of http://www.santas.net/crackers.htm
tags: blackberry foss open source christmas linux backup
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