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Editorial

Submission + - Linus latest interview--On Tech, Kernel & Indi (openitis.com)

rahulclicks writes: "A BRILLIANT interview by Linus Torvalds on openITis.com — a GNU/Linux/OSS website from India that got launched today. The site's launch got pre-poned to coincide with the day (15th Aug) when India celebrates its 60 years of independance :-) Linux answers around 35 questions put forth by the open source community (the interview was organised by EFYTimes.com). Truly, an amazing, frank interview. Topics discussed range from what textbooks students should read to why there aren't any many notable Indian contributors to the Linux Kernel."

iPhone Root Password Hacked in Three Days 311

unPlugged-2.0 writes "An Australian developer blog writes that the iPhone root password has already been cracked. The story outlines the procedure but doesn't give the actual password. According to the story: 'The information came from an an official Apple iPhone restore image. The archive contains two .dmg disk images: a password encrypted system image and an unencrypted user image. By delving into the unencrypted image inquisitive hackers were able to discover that all iPhones ship with predefined passwords to the accounts 'mobile' and 'root', the last of which being the name of the privileged administration account on UNIX based systems.' Though interesting, it doesn't seem as though the password is good for anything. The article theorizes it may be left over from development work, or could have been included to create a 'false trail' for hackers."
Announcements

Submission + - Slackware 12.0 Released!

lazyeye writes: Pat Volkerding and the rest of the Slackware team have graced us with a brand new version of Slackware, version 12.0. From the release announcement:

Among the many program updates and distribution enhancements, you'll find two of the most advanced desktop environments available today: Xfce 4.4.1, a fast and lightweight but visually appealing and easy to use desktop environment, and KDE 3.5.7, the latest version of the award-winning K Desktop Environment. We have added to Slackware support for HAL (the Hardware Abstraction Layer) which allows the system administrator to add users to the cdrom and plugdev groups. Then they will be able to use items such as USB flash sticks, USB cameras that appear like USB storage, portable hard drives, CD and DVD media, MP3 players, and more, all without requiring sudo, the mount or umount command. Just plug and play. Properly set up, Slackware's desktop should be suitable for any level of Linux experience.
Businesses

Submission + - The Wonder of Plastic Gift Cards (uk.net)

Thear492 writes: "Many retailers now have gift card schemes and run them in conjunction with their paper-based gift voucher scheme. Plastic gift cards are the latest innovation in vouchering to hit the UK high street. A plastic card is issued in place of vouchers. When a customer wishes to buy a gift card, he chooses whatever value he chooses to put on the card — eliminating the need for cards of various pre-printed denominations. The value is held on a central database, not the card, and is only activated at the time of payment. A gift card scheme has various benefits for retailers — mainly in the areas of cost reduction due to the elimination of the need for secure handling and fraud/pilferage. The US retail market, where plastic gift cards were first introduced, has also seen significant benefits in terms of sales uplift over paper vouchers, mainly due to increased promotional opportunities provided by the gift cards. PCC, a plastic card manufacturer in the UK supply Woolworths with their plastic gift cards. Alan Kellock Retail Development Manager at Woolworths says "Woolworths is constantly striving to improve its customer experience and a gift card scheme was seen as a way to greatly improve our voucher offering to our customer base, as well as having significant benefits for the business. The plastic cards and the carriers on which they are presented are a vital part of the whole operation and we needed a card partner we could rely on to supply these key elements in a timely manner, without errors". PCC was selected as that card partner and has been working with Woolworths since the gift card scheme was launched. "Whatever volumes and timescales we have challenged them with, PCC has delivered each time, without compromising service or quality" said Alan. "Their service levels have been consistently high and their advice in this area has made a significant impact on the success of the scheme". "PCC is very pleased to be working with one of the key names on the UK high street" said Nick Cahn, managing director of PCC. "Woolworths is a constantly changing, progressive retailer and we look forward to helping them develop and increase sales through the gift card program". For further information visit http://www.pcc.uk.net/"
Biotech

Submission + - Open-Source Biology? (nybooks.com)

kripkenstein writes: In an interesting article by the physicist Freeman Dyson, he discusses the history and future of biology in terms that many Slashdotters would be familiar with,

[We can speculate about] a golden age [...] when horizontal gene transfer was universal and separate species did not yet exist. Life was then a community of cells of various kinds, sharing their genetic information [...] Evolution could be rapid, as new chemical devices could be evolved simultaneously by cells of different kinds working in parallel and then reassembled in a single cell by horizontal gene transfer.

But then, one evil day, a cell resembling a primitive bacterium happened to find itself one jump ahead of its neighbors in efficiency. That cell, anticipating Bill Gates by three billion years, separated itself from the community and refused to share. Its offspring became the first species [...] reserving their intellectual property for their own private use. With their superior efficiency, the bacteria continued to prosper and to evolve separately, while the rest of the community continued its communal life. [...] And so it went on, until nothing was left of the community and all life was divided into species.

[This period] has lasted for two or three billion years. It probably slowed down the pace of evolution considerably.

[But] now, as Homo sapiens domesticates the new biotechnology, we are reviving the ancient [...] practice of horizontal gene transfer, moving genes easily from microbes to plants and animals, blurring the boundaries between species. We are moving rapidly into the post-Darwinian era, when [...] the rules of Open Source sharing will be extended from the exchange of software to the exchange of genes. Then the evolution of life will once again be communal, as it was in the good old days before separate species and intellectual property were invented.
Certainly an unexpected context in which to see Open Source and Bill Gates mentioned in. Are biology and software more similar than we might think? And if so, what does the history of biology portend for the longevity of Microsoft's dominance?

Encryption

Submission + - 5 million dollar cracking challenge. (ghostphrase.com)

Tord writes: "Sweden — June 30, 2007 —
The Swedish software company HJALT Computing
presents a cracking challenge of
its email encryption software GHOSTPHRASE.
5 million USD will be awarded to anyone
who correctly deciphers the specific challenge
message currently posted at the company's web site
ghostphrase.com.

The event is open now and ends in December 2007.
To view/download the message is free and anonymous.
To compete, there is an entrance fee of USD 500.
Contestants are also allowed to buy hints, such
as the first word, or size of the message.

GHOSTPHRASE is unique in its use of a 6000-digit
internal key generated by rolling 20-sided dice.
GHOSTPHRASE is also using features to block
keyboard loggers.

Unlike most common corporate email encryption
software, GHOSTPHRASE does not allow master keys
or password retrieval options.

GHOSTPHRASE currently runs on Windows 98/2000/XP.
It can be used with almost any email client like
Outlook, Gmail, or Skype. Messages
can also be up- and downloaded anonymously,
without email clients.

The challenge is presented at this link:
http://www.ghostphrase.com/challenge_details_terms .html

###
Evaluation (full version) copy of a GHOSTPHRASE SILVER
available for Slashdot editor on request.
Screen shots and logos available on request.

Thanks!""

Unix

Submission + - Sun makes its Cluster code open source (CDDL) (regdeveloper.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: Sun will remove the lock-and-key for its Open High Availability Cluster package in three stages over the next 18 months. The first release, which is out now, delivers code for most of the high availability agents offered with the Solaris Cluster product. Sun has made code available for the Solaris Cluster Automated Test Environment (SCATE) and 24 agents that have already been created for Solaris databases — along with documentation to assist in the creation of new ones. The agents released include Solaris Containers agent, the BEA Weblogic agent, and PostgreSQL.
Networking

Submission + - Anatomy of the Linux Networking Stack

LinucksGirl writes: Explore the structure of the Linux networking stack from the perspective of its layers and also examines some of its major structures. Its interfaces range from the protocol agnostics, such as the common sockets layer interface or the device layer, to the specific interfaces of the individual networking protocols.
Media (Apple)

Submission + - Apple iPhone VS Nokia N95 (lbszone.com)

gletham writes: "iPhone or N95 which one would you want? Given North America's infuatuation with everything "Apple" and the mobile device users' passion for music it seems that the iPhone may win this battle, however, which device is really the best bang for the buck? Upon a closer look at the specs it really does seem like a simple question to answer although will it matter to the consumer? The 2 devices are examined in this feature and comments regrding the bundled mapping application and developer environment are discussed."
Handhelds

Submission + - Linux Handheld Recommendations

David Greene writes: My trusty iPaq 3955 took a nosedive last month and is now all but unusable. It's time to consider a new device. I see that the landscape of Linux handheld software has changed dramatically. Familiar appears all but dead, handhelds.org is in the doghouse and new distributions like Angstrom are on the rise. Opie has been scrapped for OpieII, which seems to be not much past the concept stage but GPE rolls along. What can my fellow Linux handhelds enthusiasts recommend for well-supported hardware (WiFi is a must, GPS would be nice but not necessary and cost is a big factor) and a good distribution that's usable for day-to-day work? Bonus points if development tools are available and easy to use.
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Why is Monty Python Funny? 1

pipingguy writes: What is the appeal for nerds to Monty Python? Is it the general wackiness, obvious humour? What makes MP so funny? I have my own ideas (I think there's a lot of social commentary involved with fish-slapping and funny walks), I was just wondering what others think. The video of Graham Chapman's funeral pretty much illustrates the fun the guys have (not to mention the reunion where they "accidentally" knock over his ashes). I think that the Python guys' humour is timeless in many ways but it might have been overlooked in America.
Businesses

Submission + - Dealing with recruiters and other opportunities?

An anonymous reader writes: I'm currently in an unstable situation. My job could disappear within the next 15 days or so due to downsizing. So I started looking for a new job. I got more than I asked for and the market seems to be really good at the moment. I'm currently working with one recruiting firm even though I think recruiters can be jackals sometimes. One of the opportunities I interviewed with from the recruiter looks like they're going to bite. I also have another opportunity that also could come through as well but it's one that I found and it could possibly be better. However I won't find out for another two weeks about that opportunity. The recruiter is insisting that I drop all other opportunities if the company he's representing wants to hire me. I for one would like to keep it to see what kind of deal I would get. If I accept the job from the recruiter, give my two week notification and within that two week period I'm given a better offer from the other job that I found. Will I be forced to keep the recruiters job? When do recruiters get paid their fee? Will I be liable in any legal way for the recruiter losing his payday? How do you deal with recruiters who insist that you drop all other opportunities? How would you deal with a situation where you were offered a better deal for a job that wasn't from the recruiter?

Google Maps Now Does Interactive Re-Routing 188

An anonymous reader writes "Remember how cool it was the first time you used MapQuest or Google Maps or Google Earth? You'll feel like it's the first time again, when you use interactive dragging of routes on Google Maps. Some of the folks from the development team have even whipped up a handy video to explain the concept."
Communications

Submission + - iPhone or iCarrot? (techswot.com)

Stephen Bone writes: "Since the early days of the cellular industry, the justification for multi-year contracts has been handset subsidies. Since the cellular carriers subsidize the cost of the handsets, the argument goes, they need lock-in contracts to guarantee sufficient time to recover the up-front equipment costs. Holes in that story now appear with the iPhone.

Apple and AT&T have both stated that the iPhone is not being subsidized. That is the reason that the device is so awfully expensive. So cell phone consumers need to be asking themselves, "Was the contract-for-handset-subsidy argument legitimate or was it just an excuse to allow the cell companies to avoid short-term competitive pressures and quality service obligations?"

Given AT&T's announcement that their plans for the unsubsidized iPhone will require a two-year contract, it would appear that cell phone contract requirements have indeed been about avoiding competitive pressures and service commitments.

Some might suspect that AT&T is simply trying to earn a few extra dollars from the iPhone excitement. However, AT&T may be thinking much, much bigger then that. What AT&T may be trying to do is to redefine the business model for the entire American cellular industry. They may want to set a precedent for getting rid of handset subsidies altogether. And the reason for the two-year contract with the unsubsidized iPhone is to establish that lock-in contracts remain a part of the deal.

That doesn't have to happen. If consumers say "no" to this Friday's launch of the unsubsidized, two-year-contract-required iPhone, then AT&T will realize that its new business model will not succeed in the American marketplace. They will have to modify the terms of the iPhone plan. If consumers instead say "yes" and buy the iPhone with the two-year contract, then it will only be a matter of time before all handset subsidies disappear and all cell phone users have to pay both the full cost of their handsets and still be locked into multiple-year contacts. Those who purchase iPhones under the current arrangement may very well be sealing that fate for all cell phone users.

Consumers should remember that AT&T is the company that, with its AT&T Wireless service, had the worst service reputation in the cellular industry. AT&T Wireless lost millions of customers in 1994, within the first few months that cell phone numbers became portable. Consequently, AT&T knows how important it is to lock in their customers, because AT&T's previous wireless customers left in droves the moment it became possible to do so. That is why the "new AT&T" is so obsessed with preserving "the contract."

That history, by itself, didn't bode well for iPhone buyers. Now it turns out that the "new AT&T" is just like the old AT&T: willing to cut corners on service in search of a quick buck. Why else would AT&T be so insistent on preserving their two-year lock? It knows that it still risks short-term competitive pressures based on its service quality.

Either way, before American consumers become iPhone users, they need to consider the implications of assisting AT&T in sneaking in this new cell-industry precedent. Yes, the iPhone is an amazing device, but consumers need to understand the very expensive long-term burden they are risking if they acquiesce to AT&T's terms for this tempting electronic carrot. The decision to buy this week doesn't just affect just them: it potentially affects every cell phone user in America."

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