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Linux in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition

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News from Jun 18, 2009

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- HP is business Linux friendly, Jun 18, 2009

HPHP has long had a love/hate affair with Linux. On the one hand, HP has long supported Linux on servers. For example, they're the one major server company that supports Debian. On the other hand, it took HP forever to finally start shipping pre-installed desktop Linux. Recently, for business users anyway, HP has been making it a lot easier to get Linux on their desktops and servers.
- Canucks buy 300 teraflops Blue iDataPlex super, Jun 18, 2009
EducationThe University of Toronto's SciNet consortium, which provides supercomputing oomph for colleges, universities, and research hospitals across Canada, will today announce that it has selected IBM's iDataPlex servers using Intel's new "Nehalem EP" Xeon 5500 processors to create the most powerful supercomputer in Canada.
- Red Hat's Virtualization Steps Forward, Jun 18, 2009
Red HatVirtualization is a key technology for Linux vendor Red Hat which earlier this year outlined a broad new virtualization roadmap including new products and technologies.
- Linux learns multi-touch, Jun 18, 2009
GeneralA team of developers from the Interactive Computing Lab at the ENAC (Ecole Nationale de l'Aviation Civile) aeronautics academy in Toulouse, France have successfully created proof-of-concept multi-touch drivers for Linux.
- Growing demand for Linux on mainframes, Jun 18, 2009
GeneralBig companies are increasing how much they spend on putting Linux software on mainframes, according to a global study.
- SCO vs. Linux: New investor rescues SCO from bankruptcy, Jun 18, 2009
SCOIn yet another bizarre twist in the interminable legal dispute over source code allegedly illegally copied from UNIX System V into Linux, the SCO Group, which claims ownership of the disputed code, has secured a last-gasp reprieve from the threat of liquidation. Immediately before the crucial liquidation hearing in the bankruptcy court, SCO CEO Darl McBride signed an agreement with a company by the name of Gulf Capital Partners, backed by well-known investor Stephen Norris. Caught out by the surprise development, all parties have agreed to postpone the liquidation hearing until the 16th or the 27th of July.

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