Linux and Open Source

Dana Blankenhorn & Paula Rooney

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Dana Blankenhorn

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

Paula Rooney

Biography

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney has covered the technology industry for more than 15 years, starting with semiconductor design and mini-computer systems at EDN News and later focused on PC software companies including Microsoft, Lotus, Oracle, Red Hat, Novell and other open source and commercial software companies for CRN and PCWeek. She received a silver award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors in 2005 for her profile on Linus Torvalds and edited and co-authored "Partnering With Microsoft," a book about Microsoft's channel published by CMP Publishing in 2004. Rooney graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1997. In her off time, she enjoys scuba diving, sailing, sun worshipping, running and reading. She resides on the shores of Scituate, Massachusetts.

About Linux and Open Source

Covering all aspects of the shared software, shared processes business model, including open spectrum, an open Internet and the implications of open source values on politics and society.
  • Mono going mobile with Visual Studio

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 30, 2010, 12:16pm PDT

    Mono is going to make embedding easier, so people can bundle Mono with application and devices

  • Snort adds Razorback and Sourcefire adds profits

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 30, 2010, 5:50am PDT

    Sourcefire, which supports Snort through products and services, is reporting record earnings and a new open source security framework called Razorback.

  • Can Oracle control supercomputing by not revealing itself?

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 30, 2010, 5:05am PDT

    CEO Brent Gorda admits Oracle has representatives at his user groups and talks to his customers. Not much there, but more love than what the folks at OpenSolaris say they’re getting.

  • Why patent consortia are a good thing

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 29, 2010, 9:09am PDT

    When the subject of patents and cross-patent consortia comes up everyone is a troll. They have to be because courts do not recognize the legal requirements of open source.

  • Imminent Piwik 1.0 release may pose challenge to Google Web Analytics

    By Paula Rooney | July 29, 2010, 7:34am PDT

    A Frenchman living in New Zealand may give Google its latest greatest challenge with the release of Piwik1.0 in two weeks. Piwik is an open source web analytics platform that requires PHP-MySQL....

  • Firefox 4 beta 2 arrives as open source browser use grows

    By Paula Rooney | July 29, 2010, 6:37am PDT

    Firefox 4 beta 2 release on Tuesday —  a fulfillment of its developers’ plans to offer up more frequent releases during the development process — demonstrates the project’s...

  • Why is our electrical system resisting open source?

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 29, 2010, 5:04am PDT

    Open source, and open processes, deliver open standards that make solutions more affordable. Yet utility companies resist, and so far they are getting away with that resistance.

  • Why Android won

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 28, 2010, 5:00am PDT

    The OS wars in the mobile space appear to be over and there are two left standing, the iPhone and Android, a Linux distro.

  • Billington opens new DMCA loopholes

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 27, 2010, 6:14am PDT

    James Billington may be the most important person you never heard of, having headed the Library of Congress since well before the Web was spun or the DMCA was even a glint in the RIAA’s eye.

  • The military-industrial open source complex

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 27, 2010, 5:41am PDT

    Have the people sworn to protect us from fanatics in caves suddenly gained open source religion?

  • Novell opens a gallery for SUSE builds

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 27, 2010, 5:00am PDT

    The site will prove very useful to ISVs, who can now build client mirrors and then point customers to a one-click installation service.

  • The Inevitability of Wikileaks

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 26, 2010, 9:55am PDT

    Open windows work both ways.

  • Sourceforge invites corporations to the new forge

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 26, 2010, 6:06am PDT

    Sourceforge has been rewritten, from the ground up, and Adobe has moved its open source development to Open@Adobe.

  • Open source is filled with freeloaders

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 26, 2010, 5:48am PDT

    Free software leaves us free to create more knowledge, to spread the benefits of Moore’s Law to more people at lower price points. It has been a lever on knowledge and the capability of the...

  • Drupal and the enterprise

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 23, 2010, 6:38am PDT

    Dries Buytaert wants Drupal to become mass market enterprise software. Trouble is, unless your name is Microsoft, those goals are contradictory.

  • China finally getting the open source message

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 23, 2010, 5:29am PDT

    The open source ethos is finally translating to Chinese, where the first private code repository has been opened by Taobao, an online mall operator.

  • Rackspace, Google, Facebook and Microsoft battle for spotlight at Open Source Convention

    By Paula Rooney | July 22, 2010, 11:06pm PDT

    Proprietary brand names Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Rackspace battled for dominance at OSCON 2010 this week. Sound odd? Rackspace, of course, garnered the most credibility at the open source...

  • OSCON highlights rising expectations

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 22, 2010, 9:11am PDT

    Open source has created a mass movement of rising expectations, and keeping those expectations rising is the key to its future success.

  • Red Hat plays the cloud alliance game

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 21, 2010, 6:27am PDT

    While we’re big fans of Red Hat the enterprise cloud space is The Show, and right now BTC Logic has Red Hat listed behind IBM and Amazon.com.

  • Who will trust open source security from the government

    By Dana Blankenhorn | July 21, 2010, 5:47am PDT

    The Open Information Security Foundation, headed by Mark Jonkman of Emerging Threats and Victor Julien of the Vuurmuur firewall project, are offering an intrusion detection and prevention engine...

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