Collecting the weird and wonderful
techy stories from in and around the interweb.
The Linux distribution Ubuntu is getting a lot of air play of late; the new darling of the Linux distribution space. I did see a lot of delegates at EuroOSCON with it, but I guess that isn't really indictative of a broad user base; kool aid isn't sipped there, it's guzzled. XYZ Computing has a piece on the Ubuntu distribution highlighting some of its strengths and some of its weaknesses, but its a good piece for anyone wanting to know more.
Our man in India, Matt Harrison, has now finished up at FOSS and has blogged all week about his exploits. One of the more bizarre entries is the one where by he managed to impersonate Alan Cox for a little while. There was some sort of incident where Matt obviously had the Linux kernel developer bundled away so he could continue with the signing and handing out of books. He even blagged his way into people's photos! Read his version of events on his blog.
It's December, the last month in the year and the one with Christmas (and more importantly my birthday!), but it is also the month where we do the most reflecting on the 11 previous months. Dana Blankenhorn over at ZDNet blogs starts the ball rolling by looking at 2005 in terms of open source. 2005 was definitely the year that open source has achieved more column inches than any other year, so the message is starting to get out there. The journey has just begun though, 2006 is just around the corner.
Countdown to Christmas Fact #18:
Apparently in Greece, some people burn their old shoes during the Christmas season to prevent misfortunes in the coming year, while in parts of England, it is thought that if you put your shoes together on Christmas Eve, it will prevent family arguments. If only it where that simple!
Courtesy of http://www.santas.net/christmasquotesandsayings.htm
links: digg this del.icio.us technorati reddit
Sign-up to the mailing list to be alerted when a new news entry goes online.

SpikeSource tests, certifies, and supports open source software. We make open source more safe and reliable for enterprise use.

This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License.
