How Open Source Software Can Improve Our Library

247 days ago
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Eric Hebert wrote to tell us about a new article he’s written for Degree Tutor which surveys various open source software solutions libraries might consider. It’s a great article not only for our nation’s increasingly strapped libraries, but for any organization seeking to lower software licensing expenses.

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OSCON is this week

297 days ago

The Open Source Convention (OSCON) is this week, up in Portland, OR, and underway; and Apress is exhibiting…


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EXCERPTS: The Spring Framework - Reference Documentation

331 days ago

The Spring Framework 2.x is quickly becoming the de-facto open source enterprise meta-framework for J2EE/Java EE and other enterprise developers. If you’re new to Spring or looking for any documentation on Spring 2…


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FAA Considering Switch to Linux and Google Apps

436 days ago
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Google’s array of business applications, perhaps most notably its Docs & Spreadsheets service, have been quietly evolving since it launched a beta version some months ago. As an experiment, I’ve actually used it to manage text documents consisting of 20+ pages, and for the most part it seems to work very well. Chances are it would suit the majority of basic business tasks quite well.

Even so, I was quite surprised to read this Information Week article which discusses the FAA’s (Federal Aviation Administration) announced moratorium on upgrading to Windows Vista, Office 2007, and Internet Explorer 7.

However, having extensively used Office 2007 for over a month now, while I think they have made some nice improvements, although the jury is still out regarding whether its making me any more productive than I was when using Office 2003. As matters currently stand, I’d say it does not. Not to mention, jumbling up the interface of one of the world’s most used applications isn’t exactly going to score brownie points among those having far less patience when it comes to technology than your typical computer geek. Given most users simply want to use a text editor offering a modicum of features and doing so in a user-friendly manner, perhaps it shouldn’t be such a surprise after all that organizations will begin exploring low-cost alternatives to these crucial business applications.

In many ways, Microsoft is in a very difficult situation; they’ve created a suite of applications that have basically defined the way office environments run. Their creation has become the benchmark from which all other competing applications are measured. However in doing so, Microsoft’s efforts to constantly reinvent themselves runs the risk of treading too far away from the very paradigms that defined their success in the first place, allowing competitors to conquer marketshare precisely by not innovating.

Read the Information Week article



The freedom to innovate

605 days ago

Recently I visited the home of a friend who I had converted to Firefox a year or two ago. Using his computer to check my email, I was thrust into a parallel universe when I fired up the browser. His Firefox had a really garish black/green look and feel. There were several additional toolbars I hadn’t seen before. I checked his extensions dialog and, sure enough, he had hundreds installed.

This made using Firefox a curiously different experience, like driving a car that’s the same make and model as yours, but which has been radically personalized and “tricked out” with add-ons and gadgets.

This is the beauty of Mozilla products, of course. But in utilizing a fundamentally modular structure, Mozilla may well have defined the future of desktop software.


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