November 2007 - Posts

    MindTouch DekiWiki: open source, cross-platform wiki...
    by jcannon on November 27, 2007

    For those who've been participating on Port 25 since the beginning, you may have noticed two recurring themes. One, Microsoft has a focus on generativity - or the ability for technology to be extensible to others, be they community or commercial developers. Windows, Office - the Live APIs - are all examples of this ability for technology to serve a purpose, and allow others to build new purposes simultaneously... more

    • Tuesday, November 27, 2007
    • in: Community
    • jcannon
    Technical Analysis: Recovering Data from Windows systems by using Linux
    by jcannon on November 20, 2007

    We have all run into cases where Windows fails to load for one reason or another. The problem may be hardware or a software failure, and the problem may seem to be irrecoverable. Yet often Linux can be used to help recover data that otherwise might be lost. Another application of using Linux recovery is in the creation of disk images for post-mortem analysis of security breaches.... more

    Sam chats with Bitrock on Open Source Installation and Package Management
    by Sam Ramji on November 09, 2007

    Sam recently interviewed Daniel Lopez, Founder and CTO and Erica Brescia, CEO of Bitrock from their Spain headquarters. Daniel and Erica discuss their experiences and challenges developing open source applications and launching the BitNami project.... more

    • Friday, November 09, 2007
    • in: Media
    • Sam Ramji
    The Imperative of Participation
    by Bryan Kirschner on November 09, 2007

    I blogged awhile back about “Microsoft and open source growing together”—more in the sense of concurrency rather than causality. Today I’m blogging about the latter. I’ve found the graphic below to be one of the most powerful visual representations of a basic fact that is often forgotten. The surface area of the globe below represents the total number of the people working in the technology ecosystem... more

    • Friday, November 09, 2007
    • in: Community
    • Bryan Kirschner
    Accessibility on Windows and Linux
    by Sam Ramji on November 08, 2007

    Back in Windows 95, Microsoft made a major contribution to accessibility to computers for people with vision and hearing impairments: MSAA, or Microsoft Active Accessibility. At that time it was an additional download, but from Windows 98 on this technology was built into the OS. MSAA allows users to run screen readers, Braille devices, and other accessibility technologies that work across multiple... more

    • Thursday, November 08, 2007
    • in: Community
    • Sam Ramji
    Hank Janssen & John Bocharov: Introduction to SQL Server Driver for PHP (SQLPHP)
    by jcannon on November 08, 2007

    Our own Hank Janssen gives the Channel9 team an update on the work that has been done to provide a native driver to SQL Server for PHP. SQL Team Says: "The SQL Server Driver for PHP (October 2007) Community Technology Preview (CTP) is designed to enable reliable, scalable integration with SQL Server for PHP applications deployed on the Windows platform. The Driver for PHP is a PHP 5 extension that... more

    • Thursday, November 08, 2007
    • in: Community
    • jcannon
    10th European Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (ECSCW) Conference - Limerick, Ireland
    by Paula Bach on November 07, 2007

    I’ve been on the road..In September, I went to Limerick, Ireland for the 10th European Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (ECSCW) conference. Computer-supported cooperative work is a sub-sub-discipline of computerscience and a sub-discipline of Human Computer Interaction (HCI). CSCW researchers look at groupware, how people collaborate, and tools that support collaboration... ... more

    • Wednesday, November 07, 2007
    • Paula Bach
    Alvidaa
    by kishi on November 06, 2007

    I have been working as a Senior Program Manager with the Open Source Software Lab since the fall of 2005. After spending two of the most eye-opening and fantastic years here, sadly, time has come for me to move on. I am taking on a role in a different division inside of Microsoft but having been attached to Port25 for such a long time, I didn’t want to leave without writing my parting thoughts.... more

    • Tuesday, November 06, 2007
    • in: Community
    • kishi
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