Finally, a week with a bit more news going on. We’ve talked about a lot of things this week, but there really weren’t any overarching themes or whatever dominating the front page. This is the first Week in Review in a simpler format: a listing of the teasers of the more interesting stories (as opposed to a forced-colloquial recollection). They’re in chronological order for your convenience.
Shuttleworth Offers Canonical Employees to Debian – Earlier this month, we reported that Debian had announced a new release schedule; a freeze during December, a release some time in the first half of the following year. After outcries from the Debian community, the December freeze aspect of the plan was reversed. Since most of the ire about this situation seemed to be directed towards Ubuntu, Mark Shuttleworth decided to step in and offer to put several Canonical employees to work on Debian instead of Ubuntu.
Microsoft ‘Details’ Windows 7 Upgrades – While the tech media are all busy praising Windows 7, the operating system still obviously does have issues, it being Windows and all. Because we are talking about Windows, and not, say Ubuntu or Mac OS X, it comes with one big downside that will mostly hit new users of Windows 7 (meaning, everyone): the incredibly complicated upgrade paths.
‘The Windows Vista Era Never Quite Happened’ – Technologizer has an interesting article about why Windows Vista failed, and it provides 16 reasons why this is the case. A few of those reasons reveal a certain lack of understanding, but a more pressing issue is that while listing these reasons individually is interesting, Vista’s failure in the marketplace can be explained in a much more compact fashion.
Judge Rules Microsoft Infringes XML Patent – In what some will undoubtedly call ironic, Microsoft has been declared guilty of wilfully infringing upon an XML patent held by the Canadian company i4i. The judge has ordered Microsoft to pay a fine of 290 million USD, and has barred Microsoft from selling Word in the United States if the company doesn’t comply within 60 days (a detail omitted by many). Microsoft has already announced it will appeal the judge’s decision.
Dell: Linux Netbook High Return Rate ‘Non-Issue’ – I think we can finally put a certain myth to rest that’s been circling around the web for a while now. Microsoft often claimed that netbooks running Linux saw higher return rates than those running Windows, but according to Dell, this is utter nonsense.
Chrome for Linux Improving at a Brisk Pace – When Google released its Chrome web browser for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X users were left out in the rain, without the ability to enjoy all the goodness that is Chrome. Thanks to the relentless porting efforts of the Chromium team, we now have daily builds of the Chrome/Chromium web browser, and I decided to take a look where the Linux version stands.
Editorial: X Could Learn a Lot from Vista, Windows 7 – Over the past couple of months, and especially over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working very hard to write and complete my thesis. I performed all the work on Windows 7, but now that the thesis is finally done, submitted, and accepted, I installed Ubuntu – and immediately I was reminded of why I do not do any serious work on Linux: the train wreck that is X.org.
Lately every time I have come to OSNews I am getting the cleavage shot evony online ads displaying. Is there any way we can not show these ads as it is a bit much for this site. If i wanted to look at cleavage I would go to Zoo magazines web site, I come here to read industry news.
Yes, those annoy me too.
Now I got “5 ways to loose belly fat” (or sometihng like that) and the ad was from, uh, Goooooooogle.
Edited 2009-08-17 12:07 UTC
They could show the Plants vs Zombies variants instead
http://www.offworld.com/2009/08/the-new-secretness-popcaps-lat.html