Email Alerts
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Step-by-step how-to, part one: OpenOffice 2.0's new mail merge tools
OpenOffice 2.0's vastly improved Mail Merge Wizard 2.0 has the chops, and it's pretty cool, says OpenOffice expert Solveig Haugland. Find out how to use it in this step-by-step tour. Tip
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Competition and growth in open source
Open source issues and strategies expert Maria Winslow explains marketing strategies that keeps firms competing with open source. Ask the Expert
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Acquisitions expert: What's behind Oracle's open source buys?
Find out what's behind Oracle's open source vendor buying spree in this interview with mergers, funding, and acquisitions due diligence expert Douglas Levin, CEO of Black Duck Software. Article
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Terpstra: Don't choose or pitch Linux, open source just for cost savings
In this interview, Samba team co-founder and author of "Hardening Linux," John H. Terpstra, advocates finding the best fit for your IT organization. Article
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Kusnetzky: IT shops' needs drive Open-Xchange's new Outlook
Former IDC analyst Dan Kusnetzkyconnects the dots between the Open-Xchange Server 5 updates and trends in corporate IT strategies. Article
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SCALE Linux Desktop 10 news revisited, revised
Novell's Linux desktop 10 will include improved file sharing, security and interoperability features, plus support for Visual Basic macros in Excel. Article
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Scalix founder: New e-mail release MS-friendly and MS rival
Scalix 10 is both Microsoft-friendly and bad news for Microsoft, says Scalix's founder in this interview. Scalix 10, a new Linux-based e-mail release, was unveiled today at the Open Source Business Conference in San Francisco. Article
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Migrating from MS Works database
Office suites expert Solveig Haugland describes how to update data in a text database to migrate files from MS Works to OpenOffice. Ask the Expert
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Restricting user access to home directories
Security expert James Turnbull describes how to restrict user access to home directories through the use of the "chroot" command. Ask the Expert
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Mozilla issues Firefox mega-fix
The digital underground could exploit as many as seven flaws to bypass security restrictions, compromise sensitive data and launch cross-site scripting attacks. Article