Collecting the weird and wonderful
techy stories from in and around the interweb.
Andrew Brown writes for the Guardian Unlimited, a piece on the open source flagship OpenOffice and asks why is it still so buggy. Based on the old mantra, that "many eyes make bugs shallow", Brown contests that the majority of users do not report bugs and put the problem down to them instead of the software. He also suggests that majority of users cannot fix the bug even if they wanted to, due to the complexity of the underlying source code. Having tried to work with OpenOffice myself, the couple of hundred pounds I had to shell out to for Microsoft Office, was well worth it, saving me a huge amount of headache and stress.
Intel, in a classic demonstration of "not invented here" anxiety has come out and said the worlds poorest don't want a $100 PC (or gadget as they call it), but they want a full blown PC that will run everything they perceive a PC should run. They believe such gadgets will fail to ignite the general populous and should wait until their solution is ready. Aaah ha ... me thinks me found the root of their problem.
Sun has thrown down the gauntlet to both Redhat and Novell to step forward and open up talks about porting their Linux distributions to the T1000 and T2000 firebird processors. At the moment, Solaris permits Linux applications to be run ontop by using container technology. However, Sun would like to lower this barrier, and have the whole Linux operating system run on top of Solaris to allow Linux applications to be completely binary compliant. A virtual Linux if you will.
Countdown to Christmas Facts #15, #14, #13:
For the majority of the world Christmas is celebrated on the 25th December. However those that still live by the Julian calendar (many families in the Ukraine) have Christmas fall on the 7th of January. This has many advantages, since the new year sales makes buying presents way more cheaper and the whole event is a lot less stressful and more spiritual. Bishop Liberius of Rome, in 354 A.D. finally picked the 25th of December as the date for Christmas replacing a Roman sun-god worship festival.
Courtesy of http://209.82.14.226/culture/traditions/christmas/
tags: sun christmas openoffice intel
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