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InternetNews November 8, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Novell Launches Linux on the Desktop Novell today announced Linux Desktop 9, its first corporate enterprise Linux desktop product.  |
InternetNews November 8, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Microsoft Settles Antitrust Charges With Novell Microsoft cleared more legal cases off its plate Monday by settling with Novell and the Computer & Communications Industry Association over antitrust and other charges.  |
InternetNews November 8, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
New Fedora Core Big on Community Red Hat's community Linux project released Fedora Core 3 today. Fedora Core 3, codenamed Heidelberg, is loaded with the latest versions of many open source applications and represents the bleeding edge of Red Hat's Linux efforts.  |
InternetNews November 8, 2004 Clint Boulton |
OASIS Blesses E-Document Standard OASIS has ratified the first version of the Universal Business Standard, a common XML library of business documents that enable global electronic trading, as an official standard.  |
InternetNews November 8, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
OSRM Tracing Linux Patents in EU As the EU approaches a vote on software patent law, open source group starts tracing source of Linux patent infringements.  |
InternetNews November 5, 2004 Jim Wagner |
'Tiger' Bares All on Latest J2SE Sun releases the source code and binaries of its latest iteration of J2SE, version 5.0, on two open source licenses.  |
InternetNews November 5, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft Betas Software for Smallest Businesses Microsoft Office Small Business Accounting will ship in late 2005 and is looking to steal market share.  |
InternetNews November 5, 2004 Jim Wagner |
For Innovation's Sake Although today's raft of companies suing other companies over intellectual property rights may give the impression that creative thought is getting muzzled, many industry experts agree that software innovation is alive and well.  |
InternetNews November 5, 2004 Jim Wagner |
SCO Caps Legal Fees Officials at the SCO Group put a $31 million cap on legal fees, as they continue their controversial litigation against several high-profile companies over parts of the Linux kernel.  |
The Motley Fool November 5, 2004 Seth Jayson |
Mo' Music From Microsoft Redmond positions itself for the future of digital content. The company is rolling out its long-predicted multinational music strategy. Microsoft shareholders shouldn't hope for an immediate windfall.  |
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