Twitter

Saturday, March 31st, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

I also trying Twitter.com

My only friend is scoble and he does a lot of things every day. He posts every 20minutes what he does. not really interesting …nevertheless a good timekiller..

www.twitter.com .. check it

rumors on the blog that it could be the next myspace

Will Open Xml vanqish?

Saturday, March 31st, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

On every website the Linux guys compare the product and everytime they claim the advantages from ODF but technically OpenXMl should be better…

Is there any neutral comparison? The political arguments we know from all OSS battlefields..

how do i get rich with google ads.. i does not work

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

Nokia N95 will be shipped next week

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

http://kosso.wordpress.com/2007/03/22/nokia-finally-ships-n95-multimedia-phone-with-gps/

..but I bought a O2 XDA, I hope that this was not the wrong decision…

does anybody know if i could do automatical GPS tagging of the photos?

List of open source games if somebody does not want to work today

Monday, March 26th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

just found on Wikipedia, most of them are better than the normal shareware games and are going to be improved:

 :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open_source_games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 Open source games are computer games assembled out of, and are themselves, open-source software and open content. For freely available games without or with a partial public license, see List of freeware games.

Contents
0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

[edit] A

A screenshot of Alien Arena

A screenshot of Alien Arena

  • Abuse is a side-scrolling action game by Crack dot Com.
  • Adventure is the original text adventure game by Crowther and Woods.
  • Alien Arena is a free standalone deathmatch game based on the id software source code.
  • Allegiance is a multiplayer, online-only RTS/SpaceCombat hybrid originally developed by Microsoft Research.
  • Anagramarama is a word game where the player forms as many words as possible with the available letters in a given time period
  • Armagetron Advanced is a multiplayer, 3D Tron lightcycle racing game.
  • Attal: Lords of Doom is a 3D turn-based strategy game.

[edit] B

[edit] C

Screenshot of C-evo

Screenshot of C-evo

[edit] D

[edit] E

[edit] F

Screenshot of FreeCol

Screenshot of FreeCol

[edit] G

GNU Chess 4.2.7

GNU Chess 4.2.7

[edit] H

  • HoverRace is an online multiplayer hovercraft racing game that was once shareware.

[edit] K

  • Several games are included in KDE; for instance:

[edit] L

Screenshot of Lincity-NG

Screenshot of Lincity-NG

[edit] M

[edit] N

[edit] O

Screenshot of OpenArena

Screenshot of OpenArena

[edit] P

  • Pingus is a real-time puzzle game inspired by Lemmings.
  • Project: Starfighter is a two-dimensional, non-linear space shooter with an intricate plot.
  • PySol is a card based game with many features.

[edit] R

[edit] S

Screenshot of Scorched 3D

Screenshot of Scorched 3D

[edit] T

Screenshot of Tile World

Screenshot of Tile World

[edit] U

[edit] V

[edit] W

[edit] X

Screenshot of XEvil

Screenshot of XEvil

  • XBlast is a multiplayer Bomberman-like game.
  • XEvil is a 2D side scroller with an excessive amount of violence.
  • X-Moto is a 2D motorbike game.
  • XPilot is a multiplayer asteroids-like game.

List of open source games if somebody does not want to work today

Monday, March 26th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

but in germany the weather is too good for playing games at home

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open_source_games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Open source games are computer games assembled out of, and are themselves, open-source software and open content. For freely available games without or with a partial public license, see List of freeware games.

Contents
0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

[edit] A

A screenshot of Alien Arena

A screenshot of Alien Arena

  • Abuse is a side-scrolling action game by Crack dot Com.
  • Adventure is the original text adventure game by Crowther and Woods.
  • Alien Arena is a free standalone deathmatch game based on the id software source code.
  • Allegiance is a multiplayer, online-only RTS/SpaceCombat hybrid originally developed by Microsoft Research.
  • Anagramarama is a word game where the player forms as many words as possible with the available letters in a given time period
  • Armagetron Advanced is a multiplayer, 3D Tron lightcycle racing game.
  • Attal: Lords of Doom is a 3D turn-based strategy game.

[edit] B

[edit] C

Screenshot of C-evo

Screenshot of C-evo

[edit] D

[edit] E

[edit] F

Screenshot of FreeCol

Screenshot of FreeCol

[edit] G

GNU Chess 4.2.7

GNU Chess 4.2.7

[edit] H

  • HoverRace is an online multiplayer hovercraft racing game that was once shareware.

[edit] K

  • Several games are included in KDE; for instance:

[edit] L

Screenshot of Lincity-NG

Screenshot of Lincity-NG

[edit] M

[edit] N

[edit] O

Screenshot of OpenArena

Screenshot of OpenArena

[edit] P

  • Pingus is a real-time puzzle game inspired by Lemmings.
  • Project: Starfighter is a two-dimensional, non-linear space shooter with an intricate plot.
  • PySol is a card based game with many features.

[edit] R

[edit] S

Screenshot of Scorched 3D

Screenshot of Scorched 3D

[edit] T

Screenshot of Tile World

Screenshot of Tile World

[edit] U

[edit] V

[edit] W

[edit] X

Screenshot of XEvil

Screenshot of XEvil

  • XBlast is a multiplayer Bomberman-like game.
  • XEvil is a 2D side scroller with an excessive amount of violence.
  • X-Moto is a 2D motorbike game.
  • XPilot is a multiplayer asteroids-like game.
Contents: Top0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Some Music from Hendrix at Berkley

Saturday, March 17th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

Online Videos by Veoh.com

music…

Saturday, March 17th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

<embed src=”http://www.veoh.com/videodetails.swf?player=videodetails&type=v&permalinkId=v289829JGshbqhn&id=1” width=”540″ height=”438″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” pluginspage=”http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer”></embed><br/><a href=”http://www.veoh.com/”>Online Videos by Veoh.com</a>

   

Open source myths

Friday, March 16th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

from: http://www.olliancegroup.com/opensource/myths.php

Open Source Myths

Throughout its history there have been many inaccuracies, legends, and myths actively developed by both commercial technology companie, that fear the market impact of Open Source, and many of the core founders themselves. Here, we attempt to address the more commercially oriented myths.

Myth – There is no quality control in free software

It is true the there is typically little fixed quality control processes but generally only stable code is accepted into an Open Source application by the project maintainers. Also, with sometimes hundreds of developers reviewing code, this exemplifies the phrase, “Many eyes make for shallow bugs”. And, because Open Source developers know that their code is going to be publicly available for review they tend to put extra effort into is robustness and stability.

Myth – There is no product direction

Open Source project maintainers typically start an Open Source project to solve a specific need and grow the project to meet other or increasing needs over time. They tend to have very specific roadmaps and accept feature and functionality input from other interested developers.

Myth – Open Source/Linux projects will splinter like Unix did

Although there is a possibility of this occurring the major interested commercial parties and some key customers are supporting standard Linux base and have received the cooperation of every main Linux distributor.
Additionally, when it comes to Open Source applications, the community promotes common platform development through the very well defined and organized Open Source project development model.

Myth – No support/lack of support

In the earlier days of Linux and Open Source’s commercial adoption this might have been the case, but today there are a number of support options. All major Linux distributors and most major OEM’s provide comprehensive support plans. An example of deep support is Oracle’s recently announced “Unbreakable Linux” where Oracle is taking full support for any problem on a Linux platform that has Oracle products deployed. Additionally, the Open Source community provides support for many major applications and there are numerous independent companies that provide technical support. And one of the biggest benefits of Open Source is the ability to provide self-support if desired.

Myth – Open Source Software costs nothing

Although there are fully functional versions of Open Source applications that do cost nothing, these generally are not commercially supported and may not have adequate documentation or technical support. To develop, deploy, and maintain Open Source software costs, just like any other software. In many cases the advantages enumerated previously significantly reduce costs but financial expenditures must be taker into account.

cool OSS business blog

Friday, March 16th, 2007 by Michael Altendorf

http://robertogaloppini.net/