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Differenze tra le versioni 6 e 95 (in 89 versioni)
Versione 6 del 02/12/2008 21.46.34
Dimensione: 4522
Autore: AldoLatino
Commento: Issue 18 completata
Versione 95 del 10/07/2011 13.20.31
Dimensione: 356
Autore: MarcoBuono
Commento:
Le cancellazioni sono segnalate in questo modo. Le aggiunte sono segnalate in questo modo.
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=== Testo originale ===

Ubuntu Confirms Linux Netbook Returns Higher than Anticipated

Joanna Stern reports on remarks made by MSI concerning a higher rate of return on Linux installed netbooks than with Windows XP installed netbooks.
Gerry Carr, marketing manager at Canonical, has confirmed that the rate of return appears to be higher than average. There are still some questions about what manufacturers, what distributions, and most of all what figures are actually involved. Carr highlighted a few reasons why Ubuntu-running netbooks are returned more often.
"Unclear selling is happening, typically online. The customer will get their netbook sent to their home, and they expect to find something like a Microsoft desktop, but they see a brown Ubuntu version.”
Carr stressed that, in these cases, it doesn’t matter how good, or bad the Linux OS is. These customers just don’t want to try something new.
Source: Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #112

Linux On Brazilian Voting Machines

130 million Brazilian voters were turned into users of one of the largest Linux deployments worldwide: the 400,000 electoral sections in all of the 5,563 Brazilian municipalities were running electronic voting machines, and the Linux kernel was running on all of them.
These voting machines have been used in Brazil since 1996, and are rugged, self-sufficient low-spec PCs. Technical details about this Linux deployment and implementation are available elsewhere (and more will come, for sure), but I thought it would be interesting to show some pictures and a movie - shown at the source link below - of Linux booting on these voting machines, so I asked for official permission (thank you, TRE/SC!), and was helped by a technician while I took some quick pictures and made a small movie showing the boot process.
Source: http://br-linux.org/english/linux-voting-machines/

Linux As a Model For a New Government?

A hedge fund investor who prided himself on achieving 1000% returns, Andrew Lahde, wrote a goodbye letter to mark his departure from the financial world. In it, he suggests people think about building a new government model, and his suggestion is to have someone like George Soros fund a new government that brings together the best and brightest minds in a manner where they're not tempted by bribery. In doing so, he refers to how Linux grows and competes with Microsoft. An open source government. How would such a system work, and could it succeed? How long before it became corrupt? Would it need a benevolent dictator?
Source: slashdot.org

FULL CIRCLE NEEDS YOU!
A magazine isn't a magazine without articles and Full Circle is no exception. We need your Opinions, Desktops and Stories. We also need Reviews (games, apps & hardware), How-To articles (on any K/X/Ubuntu subject) and any questions, or suggestions, you may have.
Send them to: articles@fullcirclemagazine.org

OpenOffice.org Update Sets Downloads Record

OpenOffice.org 3.0 was downloaded 3 million times in its first week, with about 80% of the downloads by Windows users, an official with the group said in a blog post last week.
The successful introduction of the open source office suite came despite the group's download servers being temporarily overwhelmed by demand for the new software last week.
Only 221,000 downloads by Linux users were recorded, leading John McCreesh, head of marketing for OpenOffice.org, to suggest a massive undercount. McCreesh said 90% of Linux users traditionally receive OpenOffice.org updates straight from their Linux distribution's vendor, which would explain the relatively low Linux count.
With the undercount included, OpenOffice.org 3.0 may already be installed on up to 5 million computers worldwide, McCreesh said in a blog post.
Source: PCWorld.com

Ubuntu OpenWeek

Monday 3 November to Friday 7 November on IRC in #ubuntu-classroom

Ubuntu Open Week is a series of online workshops where you can:
• learn about the Ubuntu landscape
• talk to some of the key developers from the Ubuntu project
• find out about the Community and its relationship with Canonical
• participate in an open Q&A with Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu
and much more...

Ubuntu Open Week Timetable:
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