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Important Site InformationPLEASE NOTE - Anonymous posting temporarily disabled due to the spambot attack. It will be turned back on as soon as I can block this current wave of spambots. Sorry. Did you know this site's content is primarily - YOURS? Yes, the site owner occasionally contributes an article (in between playing around with the Scoop stuff). But mostly, it is up to you our readers and members to write the articles about IP that you want others to know about. General ArticlesBy JCausey, Section General Articles
As readers are aware, one of the cases that I have been following the past couple years is a case brought by Eagle Broadband against several message board posters. The posters were accused of engaging in a short and distort scheme with their messages on the Yahoo! Finance Message Boards evidence of that attempt.
On December 14, 2007, the California Court of Appeals ruled in favor of two of the defendants. In one appeal, Eagle Broadband was appealing the award of legal fees to one of the defendants as excessive. The defendant had succeeded in his anti-SLAPP attempts and had the claims against him stricken. In that appeal, Eagle lost and has been ordered to pay defendant the amount the trial court had ruled. (1 comment, 366 words in story) Full Story By JCausey, Section General Articles
I actually wrote this for a different blog, but figured I would cross-post it here. I suspect there may be a slightly improved chance that someone might post something that would help me.
As those who know my computer preferences well are aware, I'm a big advocate of the Linux operating system along with a host of free and open-source software solutions(F/OSS). By using these tools, I think I've been able to build a small business with minimal cost and I have a much better network and resources available to me. Plus, it is rock solid. While I've watched others dealing with a variety of problems related to their Windows servers crashing, my Linux box chugs happily along (I even did an upgrade on it with minimal fuss). With my new job, I'm now faced with a major challenge. They are a Windows shop with a mix of servers running locally and some hosted, including their major ERP package. Although I've only been working there for about a month, it looks like the overwhelming majority of people confine their work to using e-mail(via a web interface), a web browser, and office productivity suites (e.g. MS Word or Excel, some Powerpoint sprinkled in). There are a few people using tools like MS Project and Visio (and they have a license for Project Server, but I can't tell that they are actually using it). I'm guessing the corporate communications employee is using some graphic packages and some desktop publishing, but I'm not sure what yet. And our fraud investigator, who also manages security, has some apps for creating employee id badges and access cards for doors. Beyond those, I'm not sure there is anything else in use (granted, I haven't even attempted a census of applications yet). (3 comments, 1194 words in story) Full Story By JCausey, Section General Articles
Those who know me well enough to know about the software that I use are aware that I am not only an advocate of free and open source software, I'm also a big user. So I'm always on the lookout for news and stories about open source successes. In a similar vein, I try to keep up with education issues, especially early childhood education and K12 education. Combining those two interests led me to get a subscription to T.H.E. Journal which is a niche publication focusing on the use of technology in education, especially K12. A couple issues ago (yes, that tells you how far behind on some stuff I am) they ran an article titled Opening A New Door about the possibility of schools switching to open source software.
The opening of the story is quite telling as it starts with the question, "To Vista or not to Vista". The question was one faced by a school district in Illinois - going forward, would they stick to the Microsoft platform or look at a Linux platform. I raised the same issue with one of my clients a few months - although no action is needed at the present time, eventually they will be forced to upgrade to Vista or try an alternative. Many other people I work with continue to struggle to get PC's with XP loaded instead of Vista - seems you pretty much have to order them on-line as retail stores don't have anything with XP loaded (I'm guessing they are prevented for contractual reasons even if they did want to sell something customers want). (1 comment, 1175 words in story) Full Story By JCausey, Section General Articles
Just received an e-mail from the Zimbra Team announcing that they had been acquired by Yahoo! I've been loosely monitoring Zimbra as a potential workgroup solution to replace Exchange. Unfortunately, I've never had any luck in getting running in a test environment to really try it out, although I had been considering doing so now that I had recently upgraded my server. My other issue has been my dislike for web-based/browser-based e-mail. I suppose I'm too set in my ways, but I seem to really like having a dedicated e-mail client. Perhaps I need to work on breaking that paradigm.
You can read Zimbra's announcement on their web site.
Thanks for reading, (5 comments) Comments >> By JCausey, Section General Articles
Of course we all know it can really happen - a company being delisted from the stock exchange where they normally trade. In fact, it seems to happen all the time. But I am going to guess most readers are like me - the particular companies they follow seem to avoid delisting forever. Many of us have been waiting and waiting and waiting to see The SCO Group (SCOX) be delisted from the NASDAQ. With that stock consistently trading below $1 for a couple weeks now, my understanding is that some triggers may be getting ready to occur.
Anyway, another company that I have followed due to their legal shenanigans is Eagle Broadband (EAG on the AMEX). I first started following them about 1.5 years ago when I was alerted to the fact that they had filed a lawsuit against message board posters over at Yahoo! alleging the "negative" posting history of some posters was evidence that they were engaged in a "short and distort" scheme to drive the stock price down. (5 comments, 723 words in story) Full Story By JCausey, Section General Articles
As I'm sure many readers are aware, Dell recently setup a site they called IdeaStorm in an effort to get feedback from customers or potential customers. After only a brief period of time, a couple of the ideas that quickly rose to the top were requests for Dell to sell PC's with Linux pre-loaded and another was to install OpenOffice.org on PC's that are sold (even Windows PC's).
In response to that, the OpenOffice.org project released a PR and an open letter to Michael Dell urging Dell to install OpenOffice.org on PC's sold by Dell. I'm sure you will see this news showing up shortly via some of the major media outlets. In the meantime though, I have gone ahead and reproduced a copy of the open letter here. (413 words in story) Full Story By ColonelZen, Section General Articles
Been a while since one of these has been front page. Of course we haven't had much interest here of late and I've been too busy to write much.
The changed title is to reflect how these articles are used here, a pointer to external articles with comments which will not be arbitrarily edited. -- TWZ (59 comments) Comments >> By JCausey, Section General Articles
There has been some "action" recently related to the Eagle lawsuit in which they were suing several posters to the Yahoo! EAG message board. After much speculation in the last couple months, some declarations have been filed explaining how one of the attorney's, Broiles, abandoned one of the defendents - Doe 2.
We also now have a declaration from Doe 2 and a Supplemental Reply in Support of the Motion to Strike. Combined, I found these the most interesting reading as they appear to lay the groundwork for getting the Motion to Strike granted on behalf of Doe 2. As we now learn, Doe 2 never owned any EAG stock nor was Doe 2 ever employed by a competitor or part of any stock scheme. Although I read through it pretty quickly, I thought Doe 2's attorney made some pretty good arguments in the Supplemental Reply in Support of the motion to strike. Nevertheless, I'm sure Eagle will provide arguments to counter at least some of this (they are attorney's after all). I have not had time to really go through these items in depth - just a quick scan as I am about to head out of town. I also do not know how they relate to the document/item numbers maintained on Al's site documenting this case. Perhaps he will pick these up and figure out where they belong. In the meantime, I'm making them available here with some temporary names.
Thanks for reading, Defendant Doe 2's Supplemental Reply In Support Of Motion To Strike Declaration of David Mowers In Support Of Doe 2's Supplemental Reply In Support Of Motion To Strike (16 comments) Comments >> By JCausey, Section General Articles
Well, the January breaking news has scrolled off for me, so time for a new article to be able to post OT threads to. Why now? Well, I have something OT to post and nowhere easy to do it. Now I do!
Jeff (53 comments) Comments >> By JCausey, Section General Articles
I would have preferred to have been able to reproduce The ConsortiumInfo's article here to help spread the word. However, a link will do I suppose. I had an e-mail come across one of the OOo mailing lists this morning to announce that the Open Document Format is now an international standard. As the e-mail indicated,
the OASIS Open Document Format spec is now an international standard. Its designation is ISO/IEC 26300. It passed without oppostion[sic]. (There were a few abstentions.) There was very broad support worldwide.There is more information at TheConsortiumInfo.org web site and a press release(pdf) issued by the ODF Alliance. As Simon Phipps indicates on his weblog, we can now draw a base-line across the productivity tools market and tell our suppliers we will not tolerate further competition and lock-in below that line. Innovation above that line is desirable - expected, even - but attempts to force upgrade, lock out competition, control my own use of my own data, are all now unacceptable. We have the tools of freedom in our hands. Time to use them.Obviously I think this is great news at it will now introduce a new "pressure point" to encourage adoption of software tools that comply with an ISO standard. At the present time, that would not include Microsoft, so a definite opportunity exists.
Thanks for reading, (7 comments) Comments >> By JCausey, Section General Articles
Well, I was reviewing posts over at the Yahoo! SCOX message board this morning and spotted several posts regarding Pamela Jones over at Groklaw. Seems she has a new article out about Linspire announcing a new version of their take on the Linux OS - Freespire. From the press release, it appears Linspire is planning to offer a distro that is either 100% pure F/OSS or one that includes some proprietary components. These components would include things like nVidia drivers (which I use to get this nice dual screen setup I have), Adobe stuff, Flash stuff, Java, and others. From the little bit I can tell, one thing that seems to get folks really riled up is the inclusion of pieces of code that improve the ability of the Linux distro to handle multimedia. Now, I'm not real sure why this is really news outside of Linspire's attempt to raise awareness of their product. I run SuSE on my PC's and laptops and the install process always asks whether I want to include some of the proprietary components that are available (mainly Flash and Acrobat as I recall - been a while since I've had to do an install). And last I checked, Novell has been one of the primary parties involved in trying to stop The SCO Group from co-opting Linux.
Anyway, every time I get suckered into visiting Groklaw (and I admit, I fell for it this time) I am always reminded of just how much Ms. Jones does not seem to walk the talk she is so fond of publishing. This reminded of an old post I made here regarding open source principles. I've been wanting to repost it as an article as I felt it warranted more than a comment. Readers should keep in mind that my approach to open source principles probably differs greatly from someone in the software development community. Much of my background was in the public sector where we focused on trying to keep information open and available for citizens. Likewise, as a manager, I found it to be a constant struggle to try to keep information flowing through an organization despite the efforts of so many to bottle it up in an attempt to amass power. Below I've built upon that earlier comment (and removed most of the references to Groklaw). (6 comments, 1258 words in story) Full Story By JCausey, Section General Articles
A couple of the regular visitors to this site might know that I have been spending some time over at the Yahoo! message board for Eagle Broadband, Inc. (EAG) I started following them after a report surfaced in October of last year about EAG suing Internet posters on message boards. The company is alleging that the posters were engaged in a short-selling scheme and the posts were all part of an effort to drive the price of the stock down.
From the research I've been doing into the company, it appears to me to be obvious they are losing money because they don't have good products to sell and they have been doing a bad job of executing their business plan. One interesting thing is that the current CEO, David Micek, appears to be making several "right" moves to try to save the company. This lawsuit to some extent seems to be an anamoly. I say that as it appears EAG approached the problem from the point of "if there are people critical of the company, they must be engaged in short-selling" instead of figuring out that short-selling was occuring and the posts were evidence of that. As those familiar with IPW are aware, some of us in this world just like exposing bad business when we find it. (20 comments, 1437 words in story) Full Story
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