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[osdn everything] December 29, 2002

From: <osdn-everything-txt-mm-admin(at)newsfeed.osdn.com>
Date: Sun Dec 29 2002 - 03:45:27 EST

                                         
    O | S | D | N               NEWSLETTER                           
    December 29, 2002                                      EVERYTHING SERIES  

      The 'Everything Series' Newsletter is developed to bring Open Source    
      related content to a user with a focus for everything Open Source we    
    have to offer. If you'd like to receive more content relating to 
	Open Source subscribe at 
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Slashdot
New Amazon Patents on Content Personalization http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/2147252

[0]theodp writes "Defending its decision to [1]concoct recommendations
    to steer customers to buy items at Amazon's new Apparel Store, a     spokeswoman said Amazon "felt it would be evident to people that since     the store was so new, we wouldn't have the transaction history to     create database similarities." But in this [2]just-published patent     applicaton, Amazon earlier told the USPTO it's able to use product     viewing histories to determine the similarity or relatedness between     products for which little or no purchase history data exists. So which     claim should you believe?"
Links

    0. mailto:theodp@aol.com
    1. 
http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20021204S0009
    2. 
http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&u=/netahtml/PTO/search-adv.html&r=1&p=1&f=G&l=50&d=PG01&S1=20020198882.PGNR.&OS=dn/20020198882&RS=DN/20020198882

U.S. Pushing Conservative Science
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/2132223

    mozumder writes "Does abortion lead to breast cancer? Does condom use     lead to increased sexual activity? According to the government, the     answer is now inconclusive. The New York Times has a [0]story on how     the government is altering low-level scientific conclusions to satisfy     conservatives. Will this lead to a mistrust of the government? Or is     the government now correct?"
Links

    0. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/27/politics/27ABOR.html

New Phrack
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/2046258

[0]Anonymous Coward writes "A new issue of the Phrack Magazine, #60 has
    been released today. It details some decent technique about kernel     exploitation (OpenBSD), Cisco remote exploit, how to backdoor a core     bzimage kernel and other stuff. The ascii based magazine is available     at [1]phrack.org."
Links

Do you need help?X

    0. mailto:rm@ingsoc.org

  1. http://www.phrack.org/

Forty-two Inch Plasma Monitor
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/2011217

    An anonymous reader writes "PCstats has a review of what should have     been under my Christmas tree - a [0]42" plasma display from Samsung     Since Santa couldn't have possibly brought this monster down the     chimney, we'll just have to be satisfied with the review. They even     hooked it up to a computer and played games on it...." Links

    0. http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=1309

What's Your Earliest Memory?
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1924216

    spazoid12 writes "I've been curious lately about memory. For example,     why is it that my earliest memory is from about 7 years of age? (I'm     mid-30's now) Most people I know remember much further back. How far     back can a person remember? Is there a theoretical limit? What are the     requirements for acquiring memories? I've read that oxygen is one; as     in actual breathed-in stuff. This is supposed to explain why you can't     remember anything from within the womb. That seems silly to me. My own     theory (with nothing to back it up) is that language is required. We     spoke mostly Brasilian Portuguese and some Russian in the home up until     I was about 5 or 6. We moved to Brasil for a year when I was 8 and I     barely remember anything from that trip. I really don't know either     language today-- could this explain why I have no memories of those     years? What if I re-learned those languages now, 30 years later? Would     memories flood back?"

Techies Working for Peanuts
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1922212

    The San Francisco Chronicle has a story about laid-off techies getting
[0]desperate and going to work for, well, nothing. No offense to these
    people, if you're up against the wall you do whatever you can, but I     hope they're aware that most of them are not going to get even the     slightest compensation for their time. Links

Do you need more help?X

    0. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/12/22/BU63139.DTL&type=tech

The Year in Technology
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1824239

[0]bedessen writes "It's that time again, when we look back on the year
    in summary. New Scientist has an article [1]"2002, The Year in     Technology", as well as [2]"The Year in Medicine and Biology." Popular     Science brings us [3]"The 15th Annual Best of What's New."" Links

    0. 
http://www.dessent.net
    1. 
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993215
    2. 
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993212
    3. 
http://www.popsci.com/popsci/bown/

To the Moon and Beyond
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1752254

[0]isorox writes "The BBC is [1]reporting that 'Europe is considering
    sending humans to the Moon, Mars and beyond within the next few     decades', although the UK government 'does not support human space     flight and will not fund UK citizens to go through the official     European astronaut training programme'. However while plans are made     for the next 30 years, [2]Rosetta is due to launch in 2 weeks time,     ready to rendevous and land on a comet in 2011. Assuming it doesn't
[3]blow up on launch."

Links

    0. mailto:slashspam@isorox.co.uk
    1. 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2580817.stm
    2. 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2558107.stm
    3. 
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/11/233233&tid=160

Hardware Bytes
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1751258

    Zygo writes "Hey everyone Merry Christmas! (Yes I'm a bit too late)     Here's some Hardware & Modding news! : At [0]WinHQ the Xoxide X450     Case, Some pretty Cold Cathode lights [1]over here, nice MX mouses at
[2]LANParty, At [3]ClubOC the Swiftech MCX462+T, Some shocking
    Shockwave Fangrills over at [4]ExtensionTech, Playing Mp3 with the     iRock 530 [5]here, a Big cooler [6]here, [7]OCIA brings you the     Solarism LM-1711 17" LCD screen, Vantecs Fan Controller at
[8]ExtremeMHz, and a 8x GF4 Ti4200 at [9]Viper's Lair"
Links

    0. 
http://www.winhq.net/showdoc.php?dtype=reviews&id=25&page=1
    1. 
http://www.dvhardware.net/modules.php?name=Reviews&rop=showcontent&id=11
    2. 
http://www.lanparty.com/articles/mx500_mx700/
    3. 
http://www.cluboc.net/reviews/heatsinks/swiftech/mcx462t/index.htm
    4. 
http://www.extensiontech.net/reviews/cooling/accessories/shockwave.shtml
    5. 
http://www.inside-hardware.com/reviews/irock530/
    6. 
http://www.myworld.com.my/v2/reviews/HSF/zalman/cnps3100/
    7. 
http://www.ocia.net/reviews/solarism17/solarism17.shtml
    8. 
http://www.extrememhz.com/nexusfc-p1.shtml
    9. 
http://www.viperlair.com/reviews/video_graph/msi/geforce4/ti42008x/ti42008x_1.shtml

Build a Nuclear Fusion Reactor at Home
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1741222

Can we help you?X

[0]FridayBob writes "For those of you tired of waiting around for
    someone else to achieve the holy grail of physics, now's your chance to     beat 'em all to it. All you need is some basic engineering skills, [1]     this site and the inspiration necessary to make your very own 'fusor'     produce more energy than it consumes. Hopefully, you'll have more luck     than its inventor, Philo T. Farnsworth, who first built it in the     1950's after inventing the television some 30 years earlier. If you run     into problems you'll be able to count on a enthusiastic support group,     as the contraption seems to have developed a cult following over the     past few years. Okay, so I'm skeptical that this approach will ever     really work, but at the very least it sounds like a really cool science     project!"
Links

    0. mailto:jwinius@umrk.to

  1. http://fusor.net/

Freshmeat
Making Presentations with LaTeX and Prosper http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/667

    A number of dedicated presentation programs have been written for Unix     systems, but they may not serve your needs if you have special     requirements, especially the need to display mathematical formulas. The     Prosper package can help you create attractive presentations while     letting you use the full power of LaTeX.

avidemux 0.9pre26
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107761/

    Avidemux is a graphical tool to edit AVI. It allows you to multiplex     and demultiplex audio to/from video. It is able to cut video, import     BMP, MJPEG, and MPEG video, and encode them. You can also process video     with included filters. It requires divx4linux and GTK/GDK.

BoPHP 0.0.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107772/

    BoPHP is a quick and dirty Web interface for bossogg. It uses PHP with     the built-in XML parser.

Can't find what you're looking for?X

Boss Ogg 0.9.0 (Development)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107770/

    Boss Ogg is a Postgres-based client/server ogg player, targeted at     entertainment centers, and people that want to use their spare computer     for full-time music. The idea is to have other people develop all sorts     of different clients for it, but the author is also developing an SDL     client simultaneously, which is perfect for a TV-out card.

Cherokee 0.3.0 beta7
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107764/

    Cherokee is a tiny, ultrafast, lightweight Web server. It is     implemented entirely in C, and has no dependencies beyond a standard C     library. It provides only the most basic HTTP functionality, but is     extremely fast and small.

dlman 0.7 (Development)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107767/

    dlman is a download manager with a command-line interface, written in     Python. It allows you to add to, remove from, and view the list URLs to     download. It also sports a logging function.

eDonkey Monitor 1.3
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107780/

    eDonkey-monitor collects data of some central aspects of an eDonkey     server or client and presents this data in form of detailed time-graphs     over a lean but visual appealing Web interface. It features detailed     stats for donkey workload (upload /download) and active peer     connections, totals for workload traffic, high resolution,     multi-dimensional graphs, and the ability to show stats for the last 12     hours, two days, week, or month (other time windows are possible).

Don't know where to look next?X

empxform 0.2
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107749/

    empxform is a flexible EMP and RMP file processor that allows users of     the emusic service to download entire albums, generate playlists in M3U     and XML formats, play albums directly from the Web, download albums to     an MP3 player, and easily add new actions.

Evolution 1.2.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107753/

    Evolution is the GNOME mailer, calendar, contact manager, and     communications tool. Evolution represents the next step forward in     GNOME applications. The tools which make up Evolution will be tightly     integrated with one another and act as a seamless personal     information-management tool.

flphoto 1.0
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107769/

    flphoto is a basic image management and display program based on the     FLTK toolkit. It can read, display, print, and export many image file     formats, and supports EXIF information provided by digital cameras.

Freecell Solver 2.8.3
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107774/

    Freecell Solver is a 100% ANSI C program that automatically solves     games of Freecell, and several similar Solitaire variants, as well as     games of Simple Simon. It can also be compiled as a library for use     within third-party applications.

Confused? Frustrated?X

gjots 0.8
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107758/

    gjots marshals and organizes text notes in a convenient, hierarchical     way. It can be used for notes, jottings, bits and pieces, recipes, and     even PINs and passwords (encrypted with ccrypt(1)). It can also be used     to &quot;mind-map&quot; larger compositions like manuals, Web pages,     articles, etc. It is a bit like the KDE program &quot;kjots&quot;, but     uses the GTK library and supports a hierarchy of folders. Files can be     output to HTML with an automatic table of contents. Encryption is     supported with ccrypt(1), so that musings can be kept private. It can     also be used to write and organize DocBooks.

Gnusto 0.0.3
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107775/

    Gnusto is a JavaScript-based interpreter for Z-machine adventure games,     as produced in the 1980s by Infocom and in recent times by the Inform     compiler.

grafist 1.3.3
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107768/

    Grafist is a bandwidth utilization viewer. It gets the bandwidth     utilization information for network interfaces from the /proc/net/dev     file in 15-second periods, and stores it in four data files (daily,     weekly, monthly, and yearly). When a request is sent to index.php, it     executes four programs to create graphics (using the GD library) and a     summary for each file. Grafist provides localization support for 24     languages.

kbarcode 1.1.2 (Development)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107766/

    kbarcode is a KDE3-based program for creating, handling, managing, and     printing barcodes for private or business purpose. kbarcode is able to     handle all major types of barcodes, like UPC, EAN, CODE39, and ISBN. It     comes with a label designer to create customized labels and a batch     print function. It's designed to print several thousands barcodes in     one pass, but also allows you to easily print a single label. kbarcode     uses SQL to store all information about articles, barcodes, customers,     etc.

Call Pantek today for Open Source Technical Support at 1-877-546-8934 - 24/7/365X

KSocrat 3.0.2
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107757/

    KSocrat is the simple English/Russian and Russian/English dictionary     for the K Desktop Environment.

libchipcard 0.7beta3 (Beta)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107754/

    Libchipcard is a C++ framework for easy access to chipcards/smartcards     via chip card terminals/readers. It uses the CTAPI library provided by     the manufacturer of the reader and provides a filesystem on memory chip     cards. It works under Linux, FreeBSD, and Windows, and has been tested     with Towitoko and Kobil readers even in parallel.

libXMLConfig 1.0.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107762/

    The library libXMLConfig provides a simple interface to process XML     configuration files and some additional helper functions.

Linux-kernel security patch 0.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107741/

    The Linux-kernel security patch includes security improvements that     implement random PIDs, random port numbers for IPv4, NAT, and IPv6, and     enhanced random numbers for networking.

Do you need help?X

Nag 1.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107747/

    Nag is a Web-based application built upon the Horde application     framework. It provides a simple, clean interface for managing an online     task list (i.e. a TODO list). It also includes strong integration with     the other Horde applications.

over5 20021117
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107750/

    Over5 is a program for transferring between c64/vic20 machines and     Amiga/PC/UNIX boxes. It supports serial transfer at 38400 bps using     only a RS-232 level converter and a 3-line standard nullmodem cable. No     special serialport chips are needed. Source code is included. It     features read/write/execute memory, filecopy with wildcards, read/write     raw disk, read/write ZIPCODE archive, the ability to use the     Amiga/PC/UNIX box as a harddisk server ($0801-$f600), builtin     diskturbo, and a fast basic bootstrap for most cbm 8-bitters.

Perl HTTPd 1.0
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107771/

    Perl HTTPd is a very small and simple HTTPd written in Perl. It is by     no means a replacement for Apache. It features request logging and     multiple connections.

Perl webmail 3.0.0
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107748/

    Perl webmail is a CGI script that interfaces with a POP mail server     that you provide. It can check mail, read messages, reply, forward,     delete, send and receive attachments, and it doesn't have to be a local     mail server. This script talks strictly POP3 for receiving and SMTP for     sending mail. It also supports storage for mail folders, contacts, and     calendar notes.

Do you need more help?X

Phavon 0.0.25
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107759/

    Phavon is a 2D vertical scrolling progressive-weapon shoot 'em up,     similar in style to the classic Amiga game, Xenon II. It will include     map and level editors.

PHP LDBI 0.2.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107765/

    PHP LDBI is a library to handle local databases. It supports tables,     sequences, indices, and searches using wildcards. It's primary goal is     to serve as backend for SQL interfaces to local databases. It includes     an SQL parser to execute simple SQL statements.

PHP Weather 2.1.0
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107776/

    PHP Weather makes it easy to show the current weather on your Web page.     PHP Weather retrieves the latest METAR (weather) report and converts     this format into both imperial and metric units, caches the data in a     MySQL, PostgreSQL, or DBA database for fast retrieval, and makes it     easily available in PHP scripts. You can display the data in several     languages by using the included translations. You can also access the     information with a WAP-enabled mobile phone.

Request Tracker 2.1.55 (Development)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107756/

    RT is an industrial-grade trouble ticketing system. It lets a group of     people intelligently and efficiently manage requests submitted by a     community of users. RT is used by systems administrators, customer     support staffs, NOCs, developers, and even marketing departments to     track issues, outages, bugs, requests, and all kinds of other things at     thousands of sites around the world.

Can we help you?X

ShadowJAAS 1.2.0
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107760/

    ShadowJAAS is a JAAS-compliant authentication provider that uses shadow     passwords. It allows Java applications to authenticate using Linux     usernames and passwords.

SpamProbe 0.8
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107763/

    SpamProbe is a spam detection program that uses a Bayesian analysis of     the frequencies of terms used in the email. Because it filters email     based on content rather than on general rules, it easily adapts itself     to the types of email that each individual user normally receives.

The Gallery 1.3.3 (1.0)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107751/

    Gallery is a slick Web-based photo album written using PHP. It is easy     to install, includes a config wizard, and provides users with the     ability to create and maintain their own albums in the album collection     via an intuitive Web interface. Photo management includes automatic     thumbnail creation, image resizing, rotation, ordering, captioning and     more. Albums can have read, write, and caption permissions per     individual authenticated user for an additional level of privacy.

TM4J 0.8.0 alpha 2 (Development)
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107773/

    TM4J is a topic map processing toolkit and a set of topic map     processing tools. Topic maps are an ISO standard for the interchange of     information structures which can be used to represent ontologies,     business data and processes, individual knowledge and opinions, and     more. The goal of the TM4J project is to develop high-quality, Open     Source software for the creation, manipulation, and exchange of topic     maps.

Can't find what you're looking for?X

XiangQi Engine 0.1.1
http://freshmeat.net/releases/107755/

    XiangQi Engine is a software Chinese chess opponent. It provides     interfaces for connecting to chess servers, GUI clients, and a simple     command line tool with or without board printing.

Newsforge Reports
Linux Advisory Watch - December 27th 2002 http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/123255

    By:&nbsp; Benjamin D. Thomas Linux Advisory Watch is a comprehensive     newsletter that outlines the security vulnerabilities that have been     announced throughout the week. It includes pointers to updated packages     and descriptions of each vulnerability. This week, advisories were     released for bind, perl, canna, klisa, cyrus-imapd, wget, kde, and     fetchmail.&nbsp; The distributors include Caldera, Debian, Gentoo, and     SuSE.

Asia will be the center of Linux development in 2003 http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/0259244

  • By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller - As most regular NewsForge readers know, I recently traveled to Amman, Jordan to advocate Linux and Open Source use there. This Spring I'll probably be doing the same thing in Mexico. And there are many other Open Source and Free Software advocates, most of them more effective and eloquent then I'll ever be, busily speaking at conferences and workshops all over the world. All these words are having a positive effect. ...

Tracking Tux: Research Round-Up
http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/25/2226214

  • By Barbara French, Tekrati - Directions on Microsoft lists Linux among Microsoft's top ten challenges. Evans Data offers developers a chance at a cash prize, while Dravis Group offers newbies a chance to catch up. IDC Meridien sees Linux as a fringe element in capital markets. Once again, IDC server research found Linux the only operating system type to see positive growth last quarter, this time in Western Europe.

Newsforge Newsvac
Red Hat 8: A glimpse of the desktop future http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/29/0128220

    Anonymous Reader writes "This article looks at Red Hat 8.0 and the     direction that is sets for the future of the Linux desktop. It makes     the case that Red Hat should produce the single best desktop     environment that it can with its limited resources."

Don't know where to look next?X

Open Source, Closed Documentation?
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/28/1510236

    sunset asks: "Recently I was motivated to look at WebGUI which looks     like a pretty cool open source project. However I was having trouble     making it work..."

Interview with the Gnomemeeting Team
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1627226

    mangeli writes: We put the Gnomemeeting team in the Interview Chair to     find out what, and who is behind the program.

A Peek at History, Piracy-Free
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1354223

    Media company British Pathe, which produced 3,500 newsreels between     1910 and 1970, puts its entire collection online. But rather than     adding digital copyright protection, the company simply stamped its     logo on each downloadable clip.

Ex-Computer Hacker Granted Radio License http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1353213

    The man the federal government once labeled ``the most wanted computer     criminal in U.S. history'' has won a long fight to renew his ham radio     license and next month can resume surfing the Internet.

Confused? Frustrated?X

Finding an opening
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1035249

    Open-source databases, including MySQL and PostgreSQL, are marching     into the enterprise via their inclusion in major Linux distributions,     which are quickly growing in usage on middle-tier servers and back-end     clusters.

Raising top-quality rabble
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1032227

    Rick calls himself "a software generalist" in the Linux community, who     answers technical questions on-line, concerning all aspects of Linux.     He does this on the mailing lists of various Linux user groups (without     respect to geographical boundaries - he is very active on the Linux     Users of Victoria list), on Usenet newsgroups, and as a member of the     answer gang of the monthly e-magazine Linux Gazette.

Availinux launches its Online Community
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1026238

    Availinux writes "Availinux has launched its High Availability online     web-portal, www.availinux.com geared towards professional users with     mission critical needs."

Bluefish-gtk2-0.8 At-A-Glance
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/27/1025257

    LPH writes "Individuals wanting to learn a little more about Bluefish     might be interested in this At-A-Glance written by the Tux Reports     Team. Two screenshots are included to show the new file selector and     the syntax highlighting by PCRE."

Call Pantek today for Open Source Technical Support at 1-877-546-8934 - 24/7/365X

IBM Mulls Linux For Its PCs
http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/12/26/213223

    Kolkata: International Business Machines (IBM) may soon start packing     its PCs with the open-source Linux operating system (OS). IBMÃ&#x201a;Â&#x2019;s Linux     initiative has so far been limited to its servers and workstations.

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Gadgets: Forever Flashlight
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Electronics: Hitman 2 for PS2
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Sourceforge
Benchw release 0.5b
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238626

    Benchw provides a toolset to benchmark the capabilities of several     different database engines for data warehouse type activities. It is     designed to provide a simple way to test data loading, index creation     plus query performance in the spirit of TPC-H. This release adds     default index generation and sapdb load capability - so now Oracle,     Mysql, Postgresql, DB2 and Sapdb are supported. The documentation has     been brought closer to completion. The generated form of the queries     has been finalized (it has changed from the alpha releases). A BSD     style license file has been included.

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Gallery v1.3.3 bugfix release
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238913

    Gallery is a slick, intuitive web based photo gallery (written in PHP)     with authenticated users and privileged albums. Easy to install,     configure and use. Photo management includes automatic thumbnails,     resizing, rotation, etc. User privileges make this great for     communities. This release includes a security fix and a number of small     bugfixes. This release is primarily aimed at fixing a variety of small     bugs that have existed in Gallery for a few releases, as well as a     couple of fairly serious bugs (including a very serious SECURITY bug     that can lead to a remote exploit) that were introduced in the version     1.3.2. If you are using the 1.3.2 release we STRONGLY RECOMMEND that     you upgrade to 1.3.3 as soon as possible to minimize the possibility of     a web server compromise. Bugs fixed: - Fix SECURITY HOLE introduced in     the Windows XP Publishing feature introduced in 1.3.2 (as of 1.3.2     build 27) See http://gallery.sourceforge.net/article.php?sid=64 for     specific details. - Hiding all elements in an album causes those     elements to get permanently detached from the album (making it     inconvenient to recover them). - Fixed minor bugs regarding supporting     Nuke 6's user database - Fixed minor bugs in the slideshow code.     Feature additions/changes: - The config wizard now allows you to select     an option to print via Shutterfly without making a (very small)     donation to the Gallery project. - Convenience function allows you to     access a sub-album's permission dialog without opening the album. For     more detailed information, you can read the Gallery changelog:     http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/gallery/gallery/ChangeLo     g?rev=HEAD&content-type=text/vnd.viewcvs-markup regards, The Gallery     Dev Team

gwc 0.18-0 released
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238621

    This release contains no new bug fixes, but has a much faster click     detection algorithm, and up to 200 markers. Gnome Wave Cleaner is a     digital audio restoration tool for CD quality audio wavefiles. Dehiss,     declick and decrackle in a GUI environment. Have fun. Please let me     know of any problems. jw (aka weltyj at yahoo.com)

Furthur 1.7.1 Released
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238383

    Furthur is a peer-to-peer cataloging and music sharing tool that     allows: fully enforcable legal sharing model, instant downloads with no     waiting lists, in-depth cataloging functionality, and detailed     attribute searches. Upgrade to this version is recommended for all     existing users. This release includes fixes for known memory leaks,     high CPU usage issues, and an improved search system. Hello again, The     Furthurnet team is proud to announce the release of: Furthurnet 1.7.1     (http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=39429&release_id     =129955) A great deal of hard work has gone into this release. Due to     the nature of some of the bugs that are fixed here, we highly recommend     that everybody upgrade. Version Notes - Notable changes include: a)     Fixed the rest of the major memory leaks and high CPU usage bugs b)     Fixes free disk space display for Mac OS X c) Improved search d)     Improved connectivity Thanks again for your patience and ongoing     support. - The FurthurNet Team -

sylpheed-0.8.8claws released
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238415

    Sylpheed-Claws is a GTK+ based, lightweight, and fast e-mail client and     newsreader. Supports POP3, APOP, IMAP, SMTP, SMTP AUTH, NNTP, LDAP.     Features multiple accounts, spell-checking, address book, SSL, GPG/PGP,     filtering, scoring, and i18n. This is a bugfix release.

    ############################################################# 26th
    December 2002 Version: 0.8.8claws SYLPHEED-CLAWS RELEASE NOTES     <http://claws.sylpheed.org> This release of sylpheed-claws is based on     version 0.8.8 of the main Sylpheed branch. Notes for this release:
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This release fixes a bug which would run into
    an infinite loop and eventual crash when invalid characters were     encountered in MIME header encoding. New features in this release:
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * add 'Locked' flag to possible filtering
    / matcher conditions * Bug fix: [bug #633443] 'Crash on deleting     messages' * updated translations Bulgarian and code reorganisation,
    cleanups, and more. CLAWS' EXTRA FEATURES ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * pop
    before smtp authentication * Automatic saving of message when composing
  • signature in the message view can be coloured * built-in gdb crash handler * Customisable toolbars * quick search function * Folder color setting * 'Dynamic' signatures * Font configuration * Icon theming * Spell checking (with aspell) * filtering/processing mechanism * automatic account selection * 'smart' wrapping * message scoring * hide read messages * mbox support * IMAP over SSH Tunnel * addressbook: import Mutt addressbook * addressbook: import Pine addressbook * addressbook copy and paste * harvest addresses for addressbook * Request Return-Receipt * extra Folder Properties: Return-Receipt, save messages, default To:, default address for replies, subject simplification, folder CHMOD, default account * revised compose window
  • manual selection of MIME type and encoding for attachments * 'ignore thread' * improved clickable URL support * new mail notification * selective download * 7bit and 8bit encoding of attachments * NNTP: auto-mark cross-posted messages * configurable (non-)display of images
  • online/offline modes * User-definable quotation characters * export addressbook to html file * display url in statusbar on single-click * message priority setting * new message cache system * new sort function
  • controllable size of log text in log window * ability to select part of a text mime-part to reply * reply flag gets set on sending of a reply * sylpheed man page * allow user to 'Save all' attachments in a mail with multi-attachments * GnuPG signatures can now be verified by double-clicking [application/pgp-signature] in the text view * GnuPG users are informed of expired signatures and keys. * save 2 or more selected files to a single file * MH folder drag 'n' drop support * Cc and Bcc Template definitions * --online and --offline command-line switches * Automatic message drafting and cache saving on kill * SSL certificate management * 'on-the-fly' changing of the type of GnuPG encryption and/or signing used (MIME/ascii) * Logging can be stopped * user-definable newsgroup names abbreviation length * Manual and FAQ remote and local links * Powerful Extended Search * Indication of unread answers to marked mails: '(!)' is appended to the folder name when a marked message has a response * Customisable message view toolbar * Actions: trailing ">" syntax to insert command's output without replacing old text (in contrast to trailing "|"). * Address book: 'Edit Group Details' dialog allows multiple selection in either pane * Warning dialog is displayed when the user attempts to save incomplete rules in scoring, filtering and processing. * .mh_sequences file is created in new MH folders * 'tools' directory that contains various scripts: calypso_convert.pl import mbox files exported by calypso eud2gc.py convert a Eudora (v.3?) addressbook to vCard (GnomeCard) format filter_conv.pl convert sylpheed main's filter rules into claws' filtering format gif2xface.pl convert a gif file to an xface google_msgid.pl Actions script to lookup selected message-id in google using mozilla. gpg-sign-syl GnuPG cleartext-signing script for use with Actions kmail2sylpheed.pl convert a Kmail addressbook to a Sylpheed addressbook kmail2sylpheed_v2.pl new version of the address book conversion script for newer versions of Kmail/Kaddressbook newscache_clean clean up old files and directories in the newscache directory OOo2sylpheed.pl enable OpenOffice to send documents through sylpheed outlook2sylpheed.pl convert an Outlook contacts list to a Sylpheed addressbook sylpheed-switcher enable quick-switching between claws and main in a non-destructive way sylprint.pl process a Sylpheed mail and print it using enscript if available or lpr if not tb2sylpheed convert an addressbook exported from The Bat! into a Sylpheed addressbook update-po translators' tool that eases the creation of *.po files uudec decode UUencoded mails, for use with Actions ...and more.
    • See ChangeLog.claws and README.claws for full information regarding changes in this release. Also see ChangeLog[.jp] for changes synchronised from sylpheed main. Sylpheed-Claws GnuPG key: Sylpheed-Claws <twb@users.sourceforge.net> KeyID:D04C2EEF Fingerprint: 830D 8455 329F DD31 7ADA 71D7 7D22 7E77 D04C 2EEF
libggi 2.0.2/libgii 0.8.2 released
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238414
Can't find what you're looking for?X

    The GGI project is pleased to announce that new versions of LibGGI and     LibGII have been released. LibGGI is a graphics API which focuses on     portability between operating systems and graphics back-ends. LibGII is     a stand-alone system for handling input devices which follows the same     general design principles as LibGGI. Through a run-time modular system,     a single application binary can be run on many different display     systems. In addition, LibGGI and it's interchangeable run-time binary     "targets" can be compiled on many architectures (like ia-32, ppc32,     sparc, sparc64, arm, s390, etc.) and operating systems (like Linux,     *BSD, Darwin, Solaris, etc.) and environments (like X11, fbdev,     svgalib, aalib, etc.) The LibGGI core itself is a basic API meant for     low level programming abstracting the simplest of primitives common to     most display systems. When properly written, LibGGI applications can be     made to work well in various bit-depths and to function on display     systems that differ quite drastically in their implementations (e.g.     backbuffered client/server systems like X11 versus direct hardware     systems like linux framebuffer.) LibGGI includes an extension system     which allows API sets to be added to the core LibGGI API. For example,     two popular extensions are LibGGIWMH, allowing manipulation of parent     window properties when a LibGGI program is running under a window based     display system, and LibGGIMISC which supplements the LibGGI API with a     few features like raytrace syncronization and VGA-style splitline which     are familair to demo coders. Our team is working on future extensions     which aim to bring the GGI philosphy of generic abstraction to graphics     systems features such as Z/Alpha buffers, overlays, and ROP/BITBLT,     allowing such features to be used by application developers without     falling into the trap of writing code that is inextricably entangled to     the display system used for development and testing. Like every Open     Source project, we are always glad to receive help and new team     members. This release represents a step forward not only in that     several enhancements have been made but also in our release process. We     now have a stable and developemnt tree system such that experimental     features will no longer butt heads with bugfix releases. We expect this     to improve our release interval for both development and stable     projects. More detailed news, project contact information, online     documentation, and much more is available at     http://www.ggi-project.org/

SOURCEFORGE.NET UPDATE - 2002-12-18 EDITION http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238394

    0. Intro 1. SF.NET Support Update 2. DevChannel Launch 3. NNTP Beta     Continues 4. WebSphere on Compile Farm 5. Site Statistics --- Sponsored     by: Buy Holiday Geek Toys Now! Thinkgeek is the holiday shopping mecca     for geeks, technophiles, and anybody who enjoys computers, gadgets, and     just plain old fun stuff. Whether you're looking to shop for the new     geek in your life, or if you're looking to finally get the gifts you     actually WANT this year, Thinkgeek is your one-stop-shop.     http://www.thinkgeek.com/sf/ ---- Hello SourceForge.net user, Happy     Holidays! It's been quite a year. We just had our 3rd year anniversary     of SF.NET's existence and in the past 12 months we've added 225,000     registered users and 22,000 new Open Source projects (525,000 Users and     52,000 projects total). It's great to see that the community continues     to grow. We've moved. You may or may not have noticed, but we     physically moved last month. SourceForge.net has migrated to a new     Cable & Wireless facility in Santa Clara, California (formally Exodus).     Besides the shinny new racks, power and bandwidth, we have consolidated     all our OSDN sister sites under one roof (Slashdot.org, Freshmeat.net,     Linux.com, OSDN.com, Thinkgeek.com, etc). This move makes it easier for     our Sys Admins to get their hands around all 250+ servers (all of OSDN)     which use to be spread out over two coasts in the United States.     December 2002's SF.NET project of the month is phpMyAdmin. Please check     out the interview we did with them. Good stuff.     http://sourceforge.net/pom_1202.php Our IBM DB2 transition continues to     move forward. We will have SF.NET fully converted to the database in     early 2003. On a related note, today we are announcing 3 new IBM     WebSphere application servers on the SF.NET compile farm. This will     allow you to test out any J2EE applications you might have.     Instructions to access the compile farm are below in this email. On     behalf of the SF.NET team, I want to wish you and your family very     Happy Holidays. We are looking forward to working with you to make     SourceForge.net and the Open Source Community even more successful in     2003. As always, if you have any questions or concerns, feel free to     email me directly at pat@sf.net. Thank you. Pat- Patrick McGovern     Director, SourceForge.net email: pat@sf.net 1. SF.NET Support Update

  • The SourceForge.net team has recently completed a set of planning sessions for 2003 goals. We have incorporated much of the feedback received during the 2002 year in to these goals, and are quite excited about the upcoming enhancements to the SourceForge.net site and services. We welcome your continued feedback. The SourceForge.net team may be contacted by submitting a Support Request at: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=add&group_id=1&atid=200001 All SourceForge.net-hosted projects which make use of our VHOST services must update their DNS configuration to reflect our new IP address range. A mailing was sent to all project administrators on VHOST-using projects on 2002-12-05. Instructions for proper VHOST configuration may be seen at: https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=777&group_id=1 A significant amount of effort has recently been directed to improvement of the SourceForge.net Site Documentation. Among the changes, we have completed a significant reorganization of the Site Docs (which are now separated by target audience and grouped by service). Second, significant formatting changes have been made to all existing document for cleaner appearance and more functional navigation (we have added a Table of Contents to most documents). Finally, plan has been established which will ensure documentation is written to cover all previously-identified gaps; in coming months, we will be working to complete the initial rewrite of older content and the generation of new documentation. The SourceForge.net Site Documentation collection may be seen at: https://sourceforge.net/docman/?group_id=1 In conjunction with our work to improve the Site Documentation of the SourceForge.net site, a command-line tool has been developed to automate DocManager (the documentation management feature of the SourceForge.net site) operations. This tool, adocman, is available from the 'sitedocs' project on SourceForge.net. At this time, a tool to automate retrieval of data via our XML data export facility (which requires authentication by a project administrator) is also included. These tools can be used by any project team to establish a comprehensive backup and recovery plan, as described at: https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=6840&group_id=1 adocman (and the xml_export script included in the adocman release) may be found at: https://sourceforge.net/projects/sitedocs/ SourceForge.net now provides documentation regarding security and risk management as applied to the SourceForge.net site and services. We encourage all project administrators to review the documentation provided at: https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=14267&group_id=1 Finally, as requested by many site users, the SourceForge.net team now provides a search facility for Site Documentation. Information about this search facility (and access to the Site Documentation search) is available at: https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=14068&group_id=1 The SourceForge.net team is glad to respond to any issues you may encounter in using SourceForge.net, as a user, as a developer, or as a project administrator. To reach the SourceForge.net team, we ask that you submit a Support Request at: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=add&group_id=1&atid=200001 I welcome feedback regarding our support process and your experiences in using SourceForge.net. I may be reached via email at: moorman@sourceforge.net Jacob Moorman Quality of Service Manager, SourceForge.net 2. OSDN's Newsite DevChannel
  • OSDN is adding to its resources for developers with a new website, DevChannel (http://devchannel.org). DevChannel is the central news and reference resource for developers interested in core technology topics. With original feature articles and interviews, daily news updates, access to SourceForge projects, Freshmeat downloads, and Slashdot discussions, DevChannel opens a channel of communication to developers, organized by topics that matter. We've begun rolling out DevChannel gradually, with four channels featured at present: High Performance Computing (http://hpc.devchannel.org) Web Services (http://webservices.devchannel.org) Development Tools (http://tools.devchannel.org) Hardware (http://hardware.devchannel.org) While SourceForge.net remains the preeminent gathering place for developers on OSDN, you'll find some great content on DevChannel (like Steve DuChene's IPMI article), and some familiar faces (Brian Finley from the Clustering Foundry, and Eugene Kim from the Distributed Computing Foundry). So be sure to add DevChannel to your list of OSDN destinations; we look forward to seeing you there. If you have questions/comments please email Mark Stone at mstone@osdn.com 3. SF.NET NNTP Beta Test Continues ---------------------------------------- In October we launched an early beta release of a new feature on SourceForge.net. We are continuing this beta test, and here again are the details in case you missed it the first time: Our NNTP server makes it possible to view and post data to forums using a simple newsreader (exactly like using USENET newsgroups). Here's the information to login and try it out. The hostname of the NNTP server is 'nntp.sourceforge.net' and the port NNTP is listening on is 563. (nntps, SSL-protected NNTP) We allow only SSL connections. You need to use your SourceForge user name and password to login. The currently supported clients are Mozilla and Outlook, however we've followed the NNTP RFC; any client that does NNTP over SSL /should/ work. Please let us know if you have problems with a specific client. (Please see below) Posting works, with one caveat: to limit SPAM we limit the amount of posts to 10 in a 5 minute period, after which we deny posting for some time for that user account. NOTE: This is real data. Posts will show up in your forums! Please keep this in mind. Here is an example of the NNTP naming we've chosen, it is much like the project web tree. "sf.a.al.alexandria.open_discussion" will get you the "Open Discussion" forum for project "alexandria". Mailing lists are currently _not_ available but will be available in the near future. If you would like to report bugs, ideas, or anything else please subscribe to the beta mailing list at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mcgoo-nttpbeta Please keep in mind that the server is beta and will more than likely crash. Please don't send 1000 emails to list saying the server is offline; we'll fix it as soon as we get a chance. Please send any bug reports, odd behavior, or problems to this list. Thank you. Issue reports regarding this new beta feature should not be submitted as Support Requests; please direct all inquiries to the list. 4. IBM WebSphere on Compile Farm ---------------------------------------- The SourceForge.net Compile Farm now features four systems running IBM WebSphere Application Server Version 5. These systems let you freely deploy J2EE applications for testing and validation on the WebSphere platform. The SourceForge.net Compile Farm is available for use (on an opt-in basis) by developers on any active projects hosted on SourceForge.net. To access these systems, please see the Compile Farm Guide at: http://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=762&group_id=1 5. Statistics ---------------------------------------- Where do SF.NET users come from? The SF.NET team recently ran log files through an application that can translate countries by IP numbers, oppose to domain name extensions. IP numbers provide more accurate statistics. Below are the results. SourceForge.net truly is an International site. Percent / Country 34.0450% United States 09.2114% Germany 04.5754% Canada 04.1249% United Kingdom 04.0632% Sweden 04.0632% Poland 03.4010% France 03.1006% Japan 02.3787% Netherlands 02.2872% Italy 01.9262% Belgium 01.9262% Australia 01.6557% Brazil 01.6259% Spain 01.5951% Russian Federation 01.4449% Norway 01.3842% Switzerland 01.2341% Denmark 01.2341% Austria 01.2341% Argentina 01.0233% India 00.8428% Korea, Republic of 00.7529% Mexico 00.7225% Hong Kong 00.6922% New Zealand 00.6922% Finland 00.6629% Taiwan, Province of China 00.6023% Portugal 00.5718% Singapore 00.5113% Israel On Thursday December 12th, 2002, SourceForge.net served: 4,424,135 Million Page views [SF.NET and Sub-domains] 467,693 Open Source Applications [downloaded] 1,245,123 Emails [SF Mailing Lists] 10,234 CVS checkouts 7,753 CVS Checkins Top 20 projects: 1 POPFile - Automatic Email Classification http://sourceforge.net/projects/popfile/ POPFile is an email classification system that has a Naive Bayes text classifier and a POP3 proxy. It works with any mail client using POP3. 2 Gaim http://sourceforge.net/projects/gaim/ Gaim is an all-in-one IM client that resembles AIM. Gaim lets you use AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, MSN, IRC, Jabber, Napster, Zephyr, and Gadu-Gadu, all at once. Gaim is NOT endorsed by or affiliated with AOL, Yahoo, MSN or Napster. 3 PCGen -- A Character Generator http://sourceforge.net/projects/pcgen/ PCGen is a java character generator and maintenance program. All datafiles are ASCII so they can be modified by users, and are available through the pcgendm project. An XML conversion is underway. 4 BZFlag http://sourceforge.net/projects/bzflag/ OpenSource OpenGL Multiplayer Multiplatform battlezone capture the flag 5 phpMyAdmin http://sourceforge.net/projects/phpmyadmin/ phpMyAdmin is a tool written in PHP intended to handle the administration of MySQL over the WWW. Currently it can create and drop databases, create/drop/alter tables, delete/edit/add fields, execute any SQL statement, manage keys on fields. 6 Tiki http://sourceforge.net/projects/tikiwiki/ Tiki is a CMS system based on a Wiki, it has all the features a regular Wiki application has and a lot more. Tiki uses PHP and templates via Smarty. Many features added or planned 7 ScummVM http://sourceforge.net/projects/scummvm/ ScummVM is a cross-platform interpreter for SCUMM-based games, used by LucasArts in games like: Maniac Mansion, Monkey Island, Day Of The Tentacle, The Dig, etc. It also includes an non-SCUMM interpreter for Simon The Sorcerer 1/2. 8 Hibernate http://sourceforge.net/projects/hibernate/ Hibernate - Relational Persistence for Idiomatic Java 9 SquirrelMail http://sourceforge.net/projects/squirrelmail/ SquirrelMail is a PHP4-based Web email client. It includes built-in pure PHP support for IMAP and SMTP, and renders all pages in pure HTML 4.0 for maximum compatibility across browsers. It also has MIME support, folder manipulation, etc. 10 eMule http://sourceforge.net/projects/emule/ eMule is a filesharing client which is based on the eDonkey2000 network but offers more features than the standard client 11 Fink http://sourceforge.net/projects/fink/ Fink is an attempt to bring the full world of Unix Open Source software to Darwin and Mac OS X. Packages are downloaded and built automatically and installed into a tree managed by dpkg. 12 Compiere ERP + CRM Business Solution http://sourceforge.net/projects/compiere/ Smart ERP+CRM solution for small-medium enterprises (SME) in the global marketplace covering all areas from customer management, supply chain and accounting. For $2-200M revenue companies looking for "brick and click" first tier functionality. 13 Gimp-Print - Top Quality Printer Drivers http://sourceforge.net/projects/gimp-print/ A very high quality package of printer drivers for Ghostscript and CUPS. This project also maintains the Print plug-in for the Gimp from the same code base. 14 XNap - java filesharing client http://sourceforge.net/projects/xnap/ XNap is a plugin-based filesharing client. Currently it includes an OpenNap plugin, with multiple server support, automatic downloading, resuming of incomplete files, chat, hotlist and an advanced media library. Features a Swing GUI and a terminal mode. 15 Bochs x86 PC emulator http://sourceforge.net/projects/bochs/ Bochs is a portable x86 PC emulation software package that emulates enough of the x86 CPU, related AT hardware, and BIOS to run Windows, Linux, *BSD, Minix, and other OS's, all on your workstation. 16 AWStats http://sourceforge.net/projects/awstats/ Advanced Web Statistics (AWStats) is a free powerfull web server logfile analyzer (Perl script) that shows you all your Web statistics including visits, unique visitors, pages, hits, hours, search engines, keywords used to find your site, robots, etc... 17 Fluxbox http://sourceforge.net/projects/fluxbox/ Fluxbox is a X11 windowmanager build for speed and flexibility. 18 Dev-C++ http://sourceforge.net/projects/dev-cpp/ Dev-C++ is an full-featured Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for Win32. It uses GCC, Mingw or Cygwin as compiler and libraries set. 19 MinGW - Minimalist GNU for Windows http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/ MinGW is a set of include files and import libraries that allow one to use GCC to build native Windows applications that use vendor-supplied runtime. 20 JBoss.org http://sourceforge.net/projects/jboss/ The JBoss/Server is the leading Open Source, standards-compliant, J2EE based application server implemented in 100% Pure Java.

Mailman 2.1 rc 1
http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=238352

    This is the release candidate for Mailman 2.1 final. This version is in     production use at python.org. Mailman is the GNU mailing list manager.     It provides standard list management features, integrated with a web     interface. Barring unforseen problems, this is a snapshot of what will     be released before the end of 2002.

Cayenne &quot;Holiday Release&quot;: 1.0a5 http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?foru