Novell’s SUSE Manager 1.2 provides users of the company’s line of enterprise-oriented, Linux-based operating systems with a server management tool built from the ground up with Linux in mind. SUSE Manager, which began shipping in March, is based on Spacewalk 1.3, an open-source project born out of Red Hat’s own server management product, Satellite, the code for which Red Hat freed in 2008. I tested SUSE Manager 1.2 with servers running SLES 11 SP1 and with RHEL 6, using the product to conduct software installation and update tasks, to push down configuration changes, and to monitor services running on the machines. Despite some rough edges, SUSE Manager is well worth evaluating for sites running SLES. For RHEL shops, a move to a combination of SUSE Manager plus Novell-based support for RHEL will be a tougher sell, but having another management and support option can’t hurt.
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This week we re-launched labs.eweek.com to serve as a home base eWEEK Labs team, and as a place to test out some of the products and services we cover in more “real world” setting than what we get within the confines of our San Francisco lab.To that end, we’ve set up shop in the cloud. We intend to move around among cloud services from time to time, but, as with so many of the products we encounter, we’ve begun our cloudy adventures at Amazon’s EC2 service. (more…)
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As a speedy, modern, cross-platform Web browser, Firefox 4 is well worth evaluating for
any organization, particularly those with a heterogeneous mix of client operating systems. On this multiplatform front, however, organizations should also keep an eye on Google’s Chrome, which tends to match Firefox in features and performance, and offers Group Policy-based management support that Firefox 4 lacks. For those already running earlier versions of Firefox, version 4 will be well worth the upgrade—provided that any add-ons on which users rely are compatible with the new version. -
BitNami Cloud Hosting service combines its catalog of integrated open-source Web-application stacks with Amazon Web Services features.
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It’s been a week of copycat allegations, with Google accusing Microsoft of cribbing Google search engine results by monitoring and acting on the browsing habits of Bing toolbar users.
To my mind, it’s a fairly boring flareup, but one which, when combined with the Salesforce.com Chatter tests that my fellow labsman Cameron Sturdevant has been conducting this week, perfectly set the stage for this copycat allegation video from enterprise social collaboration vendor Yammer, which CIO Insight’s Susan Nunziata called to my attention (via Chatter, no less):
Yammer is poking fun here are Salesforce.com for copying its Twitter, but in an enterprise, idea–the situation is a bit different than the Google/Bing dustup, since Google is not claiming that Microsoft has copied the search engine idea, but rather its specific search engine index results.
What the two cases have in common, however, is the alleged copying can’t, in either case, be enough to win the day–ideas are cheap, it’s execution that’s important. I suppose I judge a search engine on the quality of its results–if the results were terrible, I guess I wouldn’t use it–but it wasn’t Google’s results that led me to start using that search engine back when Google was breaking into the business. I used Google because of its spartan interface, and its unobtrusive text advertising. Never have I been invited to punch the monkey over at google.com, and I value that.
Of course, UI isn’t all that matters, particularly in case of a product like Chatter or Yammer, where the capacity for drawing a community of users is most important. Over the past few months, I’ve tried out three private Twitter clones: Status.net, Yammer, and Chatter. Right out of the box, Status.net has most appealed to me–it has great features and I value its open source licensing, but it’s also the service that drew the least sign-up interest from others in the company. For a communication tool, that’s a problem.
Yammer fared better, and offered a nice set of features, but the uptake edge so far goes to Chatter. It’s probable that the Salesforce brand name has a lot of do with this–Google, at this point, has a similar advantage–gravitating toward the big name seems like the way to go, and when a big network matters, that’s a powerful advantage.
You can argue that Salesforce has earned this advantage, even if, when it comes to Chatter, they’re a copycat. Salesforce has established itself as a bedrock enterprise cloud application vendor, and for a potential user base uninterested in signing up for yet another short-lived social network, the brand name matters.
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Back around the turn of the millennium, I had the great fortune of watching the Windows XP, aka Whistler, development cycle unfold. I had so much fun tracking the procession of development releases topped by the shiny gold master copy of Windows XP, that I sought after, and found, an operating system to track that was in perpetual development: Linux!
Over at eWEEK’s main site, I’ve compiled a short gallery of Linux distribution releases set for the first half of 2011 that have caught my eye. Check out the gallery for a peek at the releases and for what it is in each that’s gotten my attention, or simply consult the list below, and let me know which ones I’m missing.
- Ubuntu 11.04: Natty Narwhal :: Expected release date: 2011-04-28.
- Fedora 15 :: Expected release date: 2011-05-10.
- OpenSUSE 11.4 :: Expected release date: 2011-05-10.
- CentOS 6 :: Expected release: imminent.
- Debian Squeeze :: Expected release date: 2011-02-06.
- ChromeOS :: Expected release date: mid-2011.
- Android 3.0 :: Expected release date: February or March, 2011.
- MeeGo 1.2 :: Expected release date: April 2011.
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Tasktop Pro 1.8 stitches together application-lifecycle-management systems with the Web-browsing, document, calendar and e-mail activities that form the context of a specific task.
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This latest release, which is also known by the Toy Story-inspired name “Squeeze,” will play well in server deployments that draw on open-source components, which the Debian project has a knack for packaging up for easy installation over one of the project’s repository mirror sites.
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Organizations with compute capacity to spare can sell it to buyers looking to the cloud to perform short-term compute tasks at lower costs.

