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Technology

Novell’s in trouble

Novell could be banned from selling Linux: group – Yahoo! News

Novell is now officially in big trouble for its deal with Microsoft. It may have helped it financially initially, but it earned the ire of the open source community. Now, the Free Software Foundation is mulling blocking Novell from using its code in future versions.

That’s not the end of the road for Novell, since it can still keep on developing on its own, but then that costs R&D money, loads of it.

Two possible scenarios come up. If FSF succeeds, then Novell is smothered, and goes bankrupt / is bought by Microsoft (they’ll call it ‘bailing out’). Thus Microsoft will win with its ‘Embrace, Extend, Exterminate’ approach.

Or Novell might actually spend on R&D and create its own breed of Linux, which effectively splits the open source community. And if other major players like Red Hat start doing that too, then Linux is cooked – divided into multitudes of fragmented pieces.

I’d initially given a bit of cautious support to the Novell-Microsoft deal, but now it certainly seems that it was just an extension of Microsft’s FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, Destruction) plans. It’s not too late for Novell to back out, give up the money guys, and come back to pure open source.

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Reviews

Switching over to Freespire 1.0

Name: Freespire 1.0
Made by Linspire
Price: Free
Versions: 1. With proprietary software support 2. OSS edition
Best for: Newbies

Freespire 1.0, by the Linspire group (earlier known as Lindows), officially became my new OS today, after about four months of being on Fedora Core 5 (by the Redhat group). I simply can’t praise it enough. I’d written a whole review on it, but a stupid bug in Google Toolbar made me lose all of it. So I’m just typing a condensed version now. Never shall I ever trust Google Toolbar again. BOOOOOOOO.

The installation took a breezy eight minutes, and didn’t ask for much technical info. What ROCKS though is the interface, which is really cool. I like the Freespire of philosophy of bundling proprietary codecs, drivers etc too, which gives it out-of-the-box capability to handle various media formats and hardware, unlike other Linux distros.

Another much touted thing is its software updater, called CNR (Click n’ Run). Unlike others, it uses a web interface – you even have to sign in. Definitely more choices than Fedora, and almost matches up with Ubuntu‘s Synaptic. Newbies though, may find the reviews and ratings feature helpful for them.

Freespire has also customized versions of many software like Firefox and Thunderbird, and come with new features. Its music management software, Lsongs, too is better than many offerings dished out by others.

What anyone would seriously enjoy about Freespire is its graphics. It’s a KDE-based system, but it has been subtly tweaked by the Freespire designers to mimic Windows more. If they keep going at the same rate, one day they may seriously challenge Mac for its design crown. Makes you forget all about Vista Aero Glass, really.

In all, Freespire is the perfect Linux distro for the new user, while at the same time it comes with the versatility that experienced users demand (its Debian-based), stability (never really had a software hang in Linux; in fact Ctrl+Alt+Del really doesn’t exist in Linux, speaking in MS terms) and security (ever heard on viruses on Linux?). I’d say this is really worth a try, even if you have to buy the CD. Do check out the Freespire website. It performs exceedingly well as the first version of any OS. It remains to be seen though if it ever reaches the cult status of Ubuntu or Fedora.

Experienced users may find it too easy to use though, after years of other distros, but that doesn’t mean Freespire lacks anything.