Governments around the world told Microsoft they need more information sooner regarding patches and other security-related incidents, and the company complies.
<b>Phoronix:</b> "Over on the GCC mailing list is a rather lively discussion (especially for being a Friday evening) that only started earlier today...A developer is asking why you don't participate in contributing to GCC? "
Tying all of your various channels of communication together makes running your small business ecommerce site -- from anywhere -- easier and more effective.
The search giant's efforts to become a viable alternative for enterprises looking to store and manage their data in the cloud will largely be determined by its ability to provide ironclad security.
<b>Developer.com:</b> "Thanks to a number of well-designed tools, MySQL simply is a very easy database to "talk to," a convenience which is particularly important because developers often are tasked not only with constructing very complex schemas and queries, but also with monitoring overall server health and performance."
<b>PACKT Publishing: </b>"MySQL Replication has been supported in MySQL for a very long time and is an extremely flexible and powerful technology. Depending on the configuration, you can replicate all databases, selected databases, or even selected tables within a database."
<b>Linux.com:</b> "Mozilla has launched a contest to spur on development of add-ons for its recently-released Firefox for Mobile browser. Between now and April 12, developers are encouraged to create extensions or other add-ons tailored for the mobile browser."
<b>Information Week:</b> "Mark Shuttleworth, Founder, Canonical and Ubuntu Linux on why he thinks Ubuntu will succeed on the desktop, where other equally famed competitors have failed "
<b>The Register:</b> "If businesses want to run Microsoft Office's new web-based apps on Linux machines, they'll need a buy a full Office license for each user - even though the suite's desktop apps don't run on Linux."
A report from Broadpoint makes the argument that both CPU makers will do better than expected because x86 server sales are poised to take off. No doubt IBM, HP and Dell are hoping that's the case.
<b>nixCraft:</b> "My xorg.conf file is missing as I deleted accidentally for some reason. Now, Xorg try to probe my hardware on every startup. How do I configure Xorg under Debian or any Linux distro / operating systems?"
After a year of spiraling toward the ground, server sales may be pulling out of the dive, with x86 servers leading the pack. Revenue continued to fall, yet it's still progress.