Cisco buys into automated software license analysis
June 1, 2005Embedded Linux user Cisco Systems has licensed Palamida's automated license management software, in what Palamida calls “the largest [deal] to date in the new market for automated IP management and compliance.” Cisco will integrate Palamida's IP Amplifier — including the Compliance Library and Detector modules — into its development process, (more…)
Nokia will offer its Linux-based Internet tablet to developers at a discount, and donate proceeds to the GNOME Foundation, it announced at GUADEC (GNOME User and Developer European Conference). The “developer device program” will make 500 Nokia 770 Internet Tablets available at 500 Euros, Nokia says.
Nokia's move last week to exempt existing Linux kernels from patent litigation could hurt free software, writes GNU project founder Richard M. Stallman (rms) in this guest editorial. Stallman founded GNU.org in 1984, and remains among its most idealistic and fervent supporters. Enjoy. . . !
[Updated Jun. 1, 2005] — Cavium and Airgo are demonstrating a hardware/software reference design for 108Mbps wireless broadband gateways at the Computex tradeshow this week in Taipei, Taiwan. The design includes embedded Linux, Cavium's MIPS32 Nitrox Soho security processor, and “True MIMO” wireless cards from Airgo.
InterVideo will demonstrate new capabilities in its embedded Linux multimedia boot environment for Windows laptops and PCs at Computex in Taipei this week. The company says InstantOn now supports DVD burning on select notebooks, as well as DVB-T (digital video broadcasting-terrestrial), a standard popular in Europe. 
This installment in LinuxDevices.com's “Executive Interview” series explores PalmSource's plans with respect to morphing Palm OS into a middleware and application stack that runs on top of Linux, with an aim of targeting mobile phones and…
Via's next-generation x86-compatible processor will start production in an IBM facility in Q2, Via says. Via calls the C7 “the world's smallest, lowest power, and most secure native x86 processor.” It targets thin and light notebooks, mini-PCs, green clients, personal electronics, and high-density servers and appliances.