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As June 30th approaches, are you stocking up on Windows XP licenses?

Windows XPMicrosoft may be cutting off Windows XP sales on June 30th, but that doesn’t mean you won’t be able to walk into a store and pick up a PC running the venerable operating system over the July 4th holiday weekend. That’s because there are a whole bunch of loopholes in the cutoff date. PC World has a rundown, but here’s an overview:

  • If you’re a PC maker with a bunch of Windows XP licenses lying around, nobody’s going to stop you from putting them on any computers you sell from now to eternity
  • If you’re a PC maker selling computers with Windows Vista Business or Ultimate, you can offer customers a “downgrade” option
  • Microsoft has made an exception through 2010 for PC makers selling low cost desktops and laptops meeting strict requirements (the hard drives can’t be too large, the processor’s can’t be too fast, etc.)

On the other hand, if you want to buy a retail copy of Windows XP, it looks like your time is running out. If you think you might need a usable copy of Windows XP in the future, now might be a good time to buy a copy.

But we’re going to assume that a whole lot of people aren’t paying much attention to the deadline and will wind up downloading bootleg copies of Windows XP if they need to reinstall their PC operating system sometime this fall.

gNewSense 2.0: Ubuntu 8.04 without any proprietary software

gNewSense
Like all Linux distributions, Ubuntu is built on open source software, which means anybody can examine and modify the software used in the operating system, right down to the kernel. But in order for Ubuntu to take full advantage of your computer’s hardware, there’s a good chance you’re going to want to use some restricted/proprietary drivers for your WiFi or graphics card or other PC components.

But if you’re a die-hard open source enthusiast, you can install Ubuntu without any restricted components by hitting F6 at the boot menu when installing Ubuntu. This will let you install free software only, although you’ll still have access to the restricted repositories.

Or if you want to be really hard core about it, you can install gNewSense 2.0, which is basically Hardy Heron without any restricted drivers — or even easy access to them. That means there’s a decent chance that your WiFi and video cards won’t be supported right out of the box. But you can also be certain that you’re using 100% free software which means you or anyone else can examine or modify every last line of code on your system.

In the past, Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, has released Gobuntu, which is basically an official version of Ubuntu with free software only. But according to the Gobuntu wiki, the community that had been supporting the free software version of Ubuntu hasn’t gotten around to creating a version for Hardy Heron, the latest Ubuntu distro.

For the most part gNewSense feels like Ubuntu. But it has about 100 packages missing, including some proprietary drivers, graphics, and even Firefox. The operating system uses Ephinany as its web browser instead.

[via Linux.com and Slashdot]

Google demos latest version of Android cellphone OS

While Google may not be ready to release its Android mobile operating system on the world yet, the company did demonstrate the latest version of its upcoming cellphone OS today.

Overall, Android has an iPhone-like look and feel. The home screen has a program launcher that looks remarkably similar to Apple’s. But there are a few things that set it apart. First, the status bar that shows up at the top of every page is far more interactive. You can click and drag any item on the status bar from any program to pull down a menu that will show you missed calls, unread emails, or other information.

You can also easily customize the shortcuts on your home screen as well as the look and location of widgets like a clock. And while you can zoom in and out of web pages using the mobile browser much the same way you can with Safari for the iPhone or Opera Mini for pretty much every other phone, you can also double click on the screen to open a magnifying glass-type box that lets you zoom in on just portions of a web page.

In addition to the video above, the folks at Android Community shot a few videos demonstrating Google Maps, Street View, and Pac-Man running on a prototype Android device.

OS X 10.5.3 update available now

The latest point update for Mac OS X Leopard has just been released. If you thought OS X 10.5.2 was big, hold onto your socks because 10.5.3 is even bigger. The combo update for versions of Leopard prior to 10.5.2 is 536 megabytes and the standard update for users of 10.5.2 is a still staggering 420 megabytes.

Still, with big sizes come BIG changes, fixes and features. Apple has the full list, but here are some highlights:

  • Addresses stuttered audio or video playback from certain USB devices
  • Improved Airport and 802.11x behavior and reliability
  • iPhone users can now sync their address book contacts with their Google account
  • Safari works better when connecting through a Microsoft ISA proxy
  • Improved Spotlight search on AFP volumes
  • Improved iCal syncing
  • Fixes issues with authenticated RSS feeds in Mail.app

Plus improvements to Time Machine, Spaces, iChat, .Mac and Parental Controls. Apple is recommending this update for all users, but as always, encourages making backups of important files and folders before installing.

Windows 7 says hello world, then runs and hides away

Windows 7

Last night Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer talked a little bit about Windows 7. But just a little bit. Speaking at the All Things D conference, Ballmer, Gates, and Microsoft’s Julie Larson-Green demonstrated some of the features that will be included, including support for Surface-like multi-touch technology.

Some other programs that utilize multi-touch include:

  • A new photo management application that takes advantage of the multi-touch interface, allowing you to zoom, rotate, and organize your photos
  • A mapping application that combines Windows Live Local, Virtual Earth, and multi-touch zooming features — this application might not make it into Windows 7
  • A multi-touch piano application

In other news, a couple of high profile web sites have been claiming they have some new leaked screenshots of the Windows 7 interface. But as blogger Long Zheng points out, it appears that these images were just concept drawings from someone guessing what the new OS might look like. Aside from last night’s multi-touch demo, the truth is we still don’t know very much about Windows 7, other than the fact that it will be released in about 18 months, and that Microsoft is keeping pretty quiet about it.

In the meantime, you can check out a video demonstrating some of the multi-touch features in Windows 7 after the jump.

http://xazac87.deviantart.com/art/Windows-Seven-December-07-74856618

OLPC Sugar OS takes on a life of its own, will anybody care?

sugar osThe OLPC team yesterday announced plans to load Windows XP on XO Laptops in a handful of countries in June as part of a limited trial. By September, Windows could be available to any developing nation placing orders for XO Laptops. And today, Walter Bender, the former president of software for the OLPC Foundation says the unique software interface that was designed for the XO Laptop will live on. Maybe.

Here’s a little background. The XO Laptop was designed to be a cheap laptop that could be distributed in developing nations to help bridge the digital divide. The original plan for the XO was to use Linux as an operating system because it’s cheap, works well on low-powered devices, and because it’s open source anyone could write software for it easily. A unique desktop environment called Sugar was built to make Linux more user-friendly. But many governments have been reluctant to place orders for the laptops because they don’t run Windows, which is the desktop operating system used by most of the rest of the world. So the OLPC Foundation has been working with Microsoft to bring a low cost version of Windows XP to the XO.

But what does that mean for Sugar? Walter Bender says Sugar Labs, a new non-profit will develop new versions of the software. The goal is to continue developing open source software for the XO so that children in developing nations will be exposed to open source applications and ideals as they learn about computing. The question is, if Windows XP is available for just $3 more than Linux, will anybody buy the Linux/Sugar version? Yes, we know that many Download Squad readers would be more interested in the Linux models, but if the goal is to give school-age children in your country computer literacy, wouldn’t you want them to use the same software that most students in countries like the US are using?

OpenSolaris 2008.05, and other places the sun don’t shine

OpenSolaris Screen shot. A hard fought thing to achieveWay back in the dark ages of 1993, we were introduced to this thing called email. Email in the olden days was not like email now. All the packets traveled uphill no matter where they were going, and usually there was a good three or four feet of snow on the internet backbone. We used these big hulking things called VAX/VMS nodes that were attached to some pretty sweet fourteen inch monochrome VT 100 terminals. There were also these machines that ran something called UNIX, which sounded to us like something that should have been found in the college health center, not the computer lab.

Eons passed, and things changed. Though there were many more email packets flying around, plate tectonics had changed the course of things so that now they traveled downhill, really really fast. The internet backbone became a series of tubes. All the VT 100 terminals banded together and created an archipelago in the South Pacific. And UNIX…

UNIX evolved. Mutated. It trickled down into various UNIX brands and distributions. There were things like BSD UNIX, HP-UX, and AT&T Bell Labs UNIX. There were other branches, too, rogue sprouts on the evolutionary tree: FreeBSD, and OpenBSD. Slightly alien but vaguely reminiscent life forms injected their DNA into the gene pool: Linux, and this weird little UNIX-esque animal called Solaris.

Sun recently let Solaris go open source. OpenSolaris is more a traditional UNIX environment than a Linux type environment, but the appeal of taking a peek at the 2008.05 OpenSolaris release was too great for us to resist. The folks at OpenSolaris knew this, and baked some goodies into the OS that no Linux user could refuse.

We were given a no-strings attached liveCD, so our Linux install would never know we cheated. We had a bash shell, and the GNOME desktop environment, so our eye candy and commands would feel familiar and easy.

Sometimes, though, evolution goes horribly, horribly wrong.We eagerly booted into our OpenSolaris environment on our Athlon64 X2 system. We selected our keyboard layout and language, and OpenSolaris graciously presented us with the X server and GNOME. It was pretty, and we could even activate Compiz, of all things. Yes, it was very pretty. And for a reason we’ll discuss a little later, we thought it would be really beneficial to stop what we were doing with the liveCD, and reboot.

OpenSolaris desktop. Pretty. A really, really pretty paperweight.

OpenSolaris had other ideas. It just didn’t want to tell us what those other ideas were.

GRUB would launch, and we could select the standard OpenSolaris boot option. The splash screen showed its mug, and we’d be dumped on to a screen with the standard trademark and legal disclaimers. And the cursor would blink, and blink, and blink. We waited. Patiently.

But it was clear that the optical drive was no longer reading, and the hard drive was inactive. Keyboard presses did nothing. Trying the whole process again with a text console GRUB selection played out the same way.

Certain things disturb us much more than they probably should. Humanoid puppets, hyper-intelligent birds, and when our computers behave irrationally for no apparent reason are the big three. OpenSolaris had thrown down the first gauntlet, and by honor, we could not walk away. We had to know not only why it booted once, but why it didn’t seem to want to again.

The condensed version of the next 21,600 seconds (six hours, for those not wanting to do the math) went something like this:

It’s a 64-bit versus 32-bit problem. We’ll edit our GRUB boot lines so we boot into 64-bit no matter what.
It’s a 64-bit versus 32-bit problem. We’ll edit our GRUB boot lines so we boot into 32-bit no matter what, then.
Does this piece of crap have an issue with SATA drives? How can it? That makes no sense!
Take out a stick of RAM? Are they kidding? This is based on Solaris. How can it freak at 2 gigs of RAM?
Let’s disable PnP in the BIOS. Oh. It already is.
Let’s mess with our memory timing. Reduce by half, they say. We laugh in the face of unstable systems.
We have got to be crazy. We’ve got to. Why is it so damn important if this thing ever boots again?
Why is our IDE controller on in the BIOS anyway? We don’t have any IDE drives. Not that it affects anything anyway.
Let’s try every ACPI setting there is. Twice. Let’s disable ACPI APIC. Let’s enable it again.
Who would realistically ever go through this to boot an operating system? What is wrong with us?
Oh, hey, there is a switch for kernel debugging and a verbose switch in GRUB! Edit kernel line with -k -v and boot.

At the six hour mark, we approached the solution:

ehci is having an issue. That’s… USB stuff? Why does it say it is ignoring the error? Duh. Obviously it isn’t.
Hey, BIOS! It’s us again. Bye, auto legacy support.
That didn’t work. Do we have any USB devices even attached? The printer. The printer isn’t on. Or plugged in.
Let’s boot with -k -v again. There, it’s talking about the keyboard, and then ehci freezes–

They have got to be kidding. Seriously. Our mouse? It is a USB mouse. Fine. We’ll put a PS/2 adapter on it. If this works, we will renounce the idea that technology operates on any sort of logic. Let’s reboot ‘er.

Dear readers, all that technology you see on the desk in front of you today? Apparently, it is a collection of happy accidents. Putting a PS/2 adapter on our mouse allowed us to reliably boot into OpenSolaris.

This confounds us on a few levels. Solaris is a UNIX derivative. UNIX is (at heart) a command line that has the ability to run a GUI. It doesn’t have to. We could have booted without a mouse. But booting with a mouse that wasn’t necessarily fully recognized as such is apparently disastrous. Is it an input device issue? A USB issue?

Linux, which is also at heart a command line that is able to run a GUI, does on occasion have issues with various mouse types. USB support on Linux has also been historically buggy, though it is much better than it was even two years ago. However, we’ve never had a Linux machine hang indefinitely because the pointer device was somewhere the OS didn’t want it. We’ve had plenty of experiences with non-working mice.

Non-working mice are a lot easier to troubleshoot than non-working systems.

We tried out a Zen outlook (we’ve learned so much through this agonizing enlightening process!) and began playing with OpenSolaris in earnest.

Remember the history of email we touched on at the beginning of this post? Slow, uphill both ways? Snow on the backbone? Migraine inducing VT100 terminals? They are all still more effective than trying to connect an OpenSolaris machine to the internet.

We admit that Linux has a long way to go with wireless support. However, we can not remember the last time we had a modern, full-bodied distribution have any real issues with a wired connection. The most we might have to do in Linux is activate the appropriate device, or point it at the right gateway.

Schrodinger's Driver in the Device Driver Utility. It works. It doesn't work.

OpenSolaris does have this nice Device Driver Utility. Utility is a bit of a misnomer. Unless you write device drivers, it doesn’t really do much, except tell where on the system the device driver is located and whether the driver is supported and working.

Our ethernet connection is located at nge0 (as opposed to the Linux eth0). Good to know. Our driver is working for the ethernet card. Awesome. Er, so why can’t we get online?

nge0 is active in Network Settings. Lies! All lies!

We can’t reconfigure our card. OpenSolaris knows best. It uses this little Network Auto-Magic daemon. It thinks it is connected. It clearly isn’t. Disabling the Magic is just different enough for a seasoned Linux user to feel a bit like they’re in a bizarro universe, but at least the command line concepts between UNIX and Linux aren’t horribly different.

Network Auto-magic dialog. It is neither a network, or magical.

On a liveCD such as OpenSolaris, manually configuring the ethernet device isn’t a walk in the park either. There’s that whole root password thing. Where it seemed we should be able to manually enter nameserver information, and our gateway, and all sorts of things, it didn’t let us. We are not root, or remotely worthy.

We finally dug up the “pfexec su” command, and tried to get online that way. We could add our nameservers, and gateway, and we could activate it all, now that we were disguised as root. Apparently, though, OpenSolaris has a problem with our router, and the way it assigns various addresses. We may be activated. We are not connected. Where is VAX/VMS when you need it?

We’d just spent six hours getting OpenSolaris to boot. To hell with the internet connection. We are determined to the point of amazing stupidity, but even stupidity has limits. At least ours does.

Don’t get us entirely wrong, there are some nice things about OpenSolaris. It is very light on pre-installed applications. There are the applications that come with GNOME, like gedit, some games, and system administration tools. There are a few multimedia apps, GIMP, and gtkam. That’s about it. It’s a nice way to build a system that does exactly what you’d like. (We are puzzled by the inclusion of Compiz, frankly, because it’s a feature that doesn’t contribute a whole lot of function to the desktop. It seems illogical to be there by default given what else is and isn’t included.)

Despite our USB mouse woes, flash drives mount automatically and work as expected. Our audio drivers exist and supposedly function, but they’ve gone to ground with our network connection. So system sounds won’t play through GNOME’s esd. Because there are some gstreamer plugins that require installation via the packaging system, we couldn’t try out any media files.

If we were hardcore software developers with a keen interest in UNIX-type environments, we’d go ahead and install OpenSolaris on our computers. We’d just rely heavily on the ol’ VAX/VMS set up and the cutting edge Mosaic browser for our networking needs.

For the desktop Linux user who is simply curious about UNIX derivatives, we’d have to advise taking a pass on this release, anyway. We’d probably tell you to check out OpenBSD, or FreeBSD, for a shot at a more successful change of pace.

Splashtop Linux interface coming soon to every Asus motherboard

Splashtop

Want an instant-on PC? Good luck with that. But just because it takes 2 minutes to boot up your desktop doesn’t mean that you can’t start surfing the web within a few seconds of hitting the power button. Last year Asus began adding the Splashtop embedded Linux operating system to some of its high end motherboards. The OS boots almost instantly, and lets you access a handful of applications like Firefox and Skype without waiting for Windows, Ubuntu, or another full desktop environment to load.

Now DeviceVM, the company behind Splashtop, says Asus has committed to adding the software to every Asus motherboard, which means the company will be putting out 1 million motherboards a month with the Splashtop interface. The companies won’t be going all out right away. But Asus has already brought its number of motherboard models with Splashtop up to 12 by adding the software to its new P5Q line.

[via Engadget and Geek]

Fedora 9 released

Fedora 9

Fedora 9 is out today. The latest version of the popular Linux distro packs a bunch of updated and new features. Like Ubuntu 8.04, Fedora 9 includes the latest updates to the KDE and GNOME desktop environments, PulseAudio, and Firefox 3 beta. But unlike Ubuntu, the Fedora 9 LiveDVD weighs in at a hefty 3.33GB. Ubuntu distros typically fit on a single CD.

Fedora 9 also has several other major improvements, including:

  • Experimental support for the Ext4 file system

  • Spins, which are different versions of Fedora built with specific groups of software

  • You can now download installation media using Jigdo

  • Gnome 2.22, KDE 4.0.3 and Xfce 4.4.2 available on the LiveDVD

  • Anaconda installer now supports resizing ext2, ext3, and NTFS file systems a well as creating and installing the OS to encrypted file systems

  • Live USB installer now supports persistence, so you can run Fedora 9 from a USB flash drive and save your changes

  • OpenJDK 6, an open source Java enironment is installed by default

Fedora 9 also comes with OpenOffice.org 2.4 and Firefox 3 beta 5.

Ubuntu release schedule: Right on schedule, and then some

Ubuntu release schedule

You can practically set your watch by Canonical’s release schedule for the Ubuntu Linux operating system. Every six months, the organization releases a major upgrade. While open source developers are constantly tweaking and improving Ubuntu, these major releases typically include better hardware support, new software, and the latest kernel and desktop environment updates.

Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth says the team is now going a bit further. Not only will Ubuntu 8.10, 9.04, 9.10, and 10.04 be released at regular intervals, but Canonical will be releasing point upgrades for Ubuntu 8.04 every three months. Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron gets this special treatment because it’s an LTS or Long Term Support release. That means Ubuntu 10.04, which will be released in April, 2010, will get the same kind of support.

Shuttleworth does suggest that he’d be willing to throw out the release schedule (or at least amend it a teensy weensy bit) if another major Linux distributor like Red Hat, Novel, or Debian were willing to collaborate on a coordinated release.

For our part, we’d like to see Apple and Microsoft enter into that agreement. If there was a new version of Windows, OS X, and Ubuntu out every 6 months, or even every 2 years, consumers would always have the option of picking among the latest, and most up to date operating systems, whether free and open source or commercial and closed source. Not that this will ever happen, but sometimes it’s nice to dream.

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