Wei-Meng at the O’Reilly Widnows DevCenter has a great roundup of what is new in Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition. It looks like there are some new display sizes: VGA for the Pocket PC (640×480), QVGA (320×240) for the Smartphone, and a new square 240×240 or 480×480 screen size that could be fun.
Author: Matt Croydon
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Windows Mobile 2003: What Comes Next?
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The Clie has Left the Building
Gizmodo is the first in my aggregator covering the story:
Ill tidings for the Palm world as Sony announces they will be withdrawing the Clie line from the US at least throughout the end of the year.
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G4TechTV Update
I updated my comment from yesterday about G4TechTV.
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Pythonic SSH: paramiko
PyPI listed this little gem this evening: paramiko. What is paramiko? It is an SSH2 implementation in Python. Here’s some more information from PyPI:
This is a library for making SSH2 connections (client or server). Emphasis is on using SSH2 as an alternative to SSL for making secure connections between python scripts. All major ciphers and hash methods are supported.
SFTP client mode is now supported too.
paramiko relies on PyCrypt, which is like a Pythonic Bouncy Castle.
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G4TechTV: So Sad
Wow. I didn’t realize that the G4TechTV “content” was going to be this bad. I hope that for the last few hours I’ve been seeing G4 drek, and that somewhere in all of this mess there still is some TechTV.
Update:
In Lieu of actual programming, the wunderbrains at G4TechTV have decided to nix the re-airing of The Screen Savers at 8am. They also replaced quality TechTV filler with Paid Programming straight through till they pick up G4 crap programming at 9am.
I have to conclude that G4TechTV did not do any research before jumping in to all of this. I’m usually at work when The Screen Savers is on in the evening. I happen to be at home getting ready for work during the 8am re-airing. I’ve been out of my usual schedule recently, but for months on end I’ve been an almost-daily viewer of the 8am show. I can’t be alone. I know that the DC Market was one of the stronger TechTV markets, so the viewers had to be there.
Ahh, it’s okay. The Screen Savers is on the schedule twice a day: at noon and at seven pm. Of course I’m not able to catch either of those times. In these TiVO times aparently I should be able to “deal with it.”
I know that I mourned the loss of TechTV a few weeks ago, but I’m really sad to see it actually happen. I can’t decode the actual content from all the ads on the G4TechTV main page. The, uh, Screen Savers page has about a paragraph and a half of content on it, as opposed to the old feature rich page that had more info than you can shake a stick at.
Maybe I’m growing old and bitter. Maybe I just miss my old friend, TechTV.
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Link Ho!
- CNet notes that there will be several conferences this week.
- Newsforge points to an osViews editorial, which strives to clear up some issues between SpecOps Labs and the WINE/Crossover Office communities.
- Reuters: Nokia Adds Cheap Camera Phone to Ailing Portfolio.
- OSDir points to an Internet News announcement of a new version of Apache Cocoon.
- OSNews reports that Slackware is the last major distro to drop XFree86 for XOrg over licensing issues.
- Chris Davies expands on the question are high end phones a threat to operators? It is common knowledge in #mobitopia that smartphone users spend more per month than non-smartphone users. Chris’ post is definitely worth a read.
- Vladimir notes that ATI has released a new version of their Linux drivers. Unfortunately I don’t see drivers for my mobile ATI chipset. *Sigh*
- Juha is a happy Nokia 6800 user and wonders if more devices will look like it in the future. I’d personally kill for a 6800 form factor series 60 phone.
- RootPrompt links to a Cringley article about the wicked things that can be done with a Linksys WRT54G.
- Speaking of the WRT54G, Rasmus has a good tutorial on installing/setting up Kismet on the WRT54G.
- Russ rants on a Newsweek article that gets mobile phone computing wrong. Can I have one of those pictured 6600s? He also has some Java-related posts after his recent relaunch.
- K5 carries a story about the recent discovery of a new prime that has over 7 million digits.
- I shall mostly abstain from the recent purple numbers meme. #
- El BBC reports about the recently revealed secret D-Day photos.
- This is old news, but the Pivot roadmap is the Best. Roadmap. Evar! More recently, Pivot 1.14 beta 2 is out.
- I must remember to use javadocs.org.
- Wow, Nelson has some info on Unreal Engine 3. It looks impressive.
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Windows XP SP2 and Bluetooth
PocketPC Thoughts links to a PDA Guy post about Bluetooth in Windows XP Service Pack 2. I have the beta of SP2 running on my laptop, though I have not had a chance to check out RC1. I didn’t notice anything different about bluetooth connectivity under the beta of SP2, but I was still running the stack that came with my Belkin F8T003.
There are so many Windows Bluetooth stacks out there, and I was hoping that having One True Bluetooth Stack would make things easier, but if it does indeed not support networking, it is broken. Of course BlueZ rocks my Bluetooth-enabled world under Linux. It Just Works, and it rocks.
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Java MessagePort Library
Via freshmeat, the Java MessagePort Library implements a lot of transport methods:
The Java MessagePort Library is a general abstraction for many different stream- or message-based APIs, including UDP, TCP, JMS, JXTA, BEEP, J2EE MessageBeans, SOAP, Mach IPC, SysV IPC, QNX4 SRR IPC, and shared memory. The available transport encodings include none, RMI, AltRMI, XML-RPC, SOAP, and JRML.
It is released under the LGPL, whose definition as it pertains to Java code changes almost weekly. I’ve glanced at the javadocs, and there sure are a lot of transport protocols and message types implemented. If you’re thinking about reinventing the wheel and LGPL works for you, this looks like an excellent library to make use of.
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Link and Run
- O’Reilly ONLamp: A Day in the Life of #Apache
- WebServices.Org: Sun Announces Java Web Services Developer Pack (Java WSDP) Version 1.4
- Scripting Clinic: Dissecting a Live Python… Script
- Guardian: Put the tab on my mobile (via moco.news)
- Internet News: Food Lion Checking Out With Wi-Fi
- DailyWireless: Social Networking Roundup (covering SmallPlanet’s CrowdSurfer)
- Yahoo/Reuters: Cingular Lags Rivals in High-Speed Wireless Data
- Reiter points to Digital Photography Hacks by O’Reilly.
- Cory reads Red Mars after several years. I really liked Red Mars, but Green Mars and Blue Mars didn’t do as much for me. I’m slowly getting through The Years of Rice and Salt, which I bought for a plane trip to California months ago. Kim Stanly Robinson has a new one out too: Forty Signs of Rain.
- According to Reuters, it’s going to be a long hurricane season.
- OSNews points to PEAK, the Python Enterprise Application Kit.
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Clearing the Linkcache
- After Russ pointed to a press release, I’m going to have to start tracking GIS User (using their RSS of course)
- Edd has updated some 2.6 Debian BlueZ things. I’ll have to give it a go.
- Activewin links to some videos about Visual Studio 2005.
- Howard Forums has some awesome coverage of the latest T-Mobile numbers.
- In my free time, I must stroll through the Brief Tour of the (Python) Standard Library.
- I must also spend some time at the Java Almanac.
- A new release of MythTV is out. The scheduler has been redone and it no longer relies on xmltv for schedule parsing.
- Via Mark: iTunes server using FreeBSD.
- With web services, Interop is key. Does all this WS-* BS make interop easier or harder?
- Python 2.3.4 is go for launch.
- Linux Journal: Scripting in the GNU environment and parsing HTML in bash.
- Via Jenny, Dodgeball has come to DC. I’m less excited about it now than I was at ETech. Maybe I’m just too old and grumpy.
- IBM developerWorks: Using Eclipse as a development environment with Jakarta Tomcat.
- Blojsom 2.15 is out.
- Mark Pilgrim: How to make a linkblog in Atom.
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Merry Christmas: Wonderfalls on DVD
Hoorah! Via Keith, it looks like we’ll be getting Wonderfalls on DVD for the holidays. I caught bootlegs of Episodes 6 and 7, and they’re doozies. I’ll be waiting in line at midnight somewhere on this one.
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Access Point Infrastructure on a CD
An article on Slashdot about open source hotspots has a lot of information that I was unaware of. Most importantly, there are two livecd Linux distributions for Wi-Fi infrastructure that I did not know about. First, Knoppix begat Morphix which begat PublicIP, which makes setting up and administering a free hotspot as easy as possible. The second, LESS Networks, allows users to download and install a hotspot on their hardware. LESS seems to be a bit more techie oriented, but that’s okay too.
Also of note in the linked article is a French hotspot distro called Sesame. It looks like at least some of these distros are building on top of well known free Wi-Fi projects like NoCat. If mesh networking is more your bag, don’t forget to check out the Meshbox. A less sophisticated version of a lot of the wi-fi hotspot distributions can be accomplished on a Linksys WRT54G and third party firmware.
I’m so glad that we live in a world that includes niche Linux distributions for free wi-fi hotspots.
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Treo 660: Subtle Changes for the Better
While this prototype that may or may not be a Treo 660 does not look significantly different than the Treo 600, take a closer look. The phone-first design is starting to come out even more. Not only does it look like a flattened Sony Eircsson T616, but the overall look and feel of the phone is about as trimmed down as a phone with a qwerty keypad can be.
It just screams “phone that also happens to be a PDA” so much more than the Treo 600 does.
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Tomorrow is Towel Day
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Unit Testing for Symbian C++
NewLC points to SymbianOSUnit, an open source unit testing architecture for Symbian C++. This is awesome. More information can be found at the project summary. I’m glad that someone finally just did this, as it’s something that I had been thinking about off and on for quite some time.
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T-Mobile and Cingular Cut Ties
CNet:
Wireless carriers Cingular Wireless and T-Mobile USA said Tuesday they will shelve a three-year-old network infrastructure joint venture, based on the former’s pending buyout of AT&T Wireless.
Does that mean that my reception with T-Mobile is going to get worse when I’m in San Francisco, or better? I’m hoping for the latter.
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Visual Studio 2005 Team System
A lot of bloggers in the .NET sphere are realy excited about Visual Studio 2005 Team System. The overview of the Team System look quite promising. I love to see words like “unit testing” make its way in to product pitches. That really is A Good Thing. The system looks solid and extensible.
Time will tell if this is a cool whizbang or a real time saver.
Update: The Early Adopter weblog has links to video of this new feature.
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Rawdog 1.12
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The Monkey Links
- There is a new version of mjabber, a J2ME jabber client, out and about.
- This blog software breakdown is a nice at-a-glance comparison of some popular blogging platforms.
- From the WS-Whatever department, Infoworld covers WS-MessegeDelivery. In related news, Sam Gentile is excited about WSE 2.0.
- Steve Olechowski notes the release of some new Moto iDEN MIDP 2.0 phones. I for one knew that the i830 was on its way. It’s a polished i730, which is A Good Thing. I wonder if the other new phones are any good.
- OSNews notes the torrentability of Mandrake 10 Official. *Slurp*
- CNet: Mobile customers want streaming video. I’d settle for working streaming audio on my 3650.
- Wi Fi Networking News links to Wi-Fi penetration and demographics. Also worth reading is the story of how Glenn got the scoop on the Cometa story.
- I must listen to The FCC Song later.
- OSNews links to a CNet story about CA open sourcing its Ingres database as well as partnering with several open source communities.
- There are licensing issues with MySQL 4.x.
- Mark deals with the aftermath of Freedom 0. He was also slashdotted today.
- Game Daily interviews Nada Usina about all things mobile gaming (via the awesome moconews)
- El Reg reports that Sun is going to share Project Looking Glass Real Soon Now.
- Simon Fell meditates on tool-generated WSDL.
- Erik had a pulse today.
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Which Linux Certification?
The first time I installed Linux, I downloaded individual disk images of Slackware over 14.4 or 28.8 dialup. I was able to snag an image or two from my dial-up shell account each night. A, AP, D, K, L, N, etc. It took forever. LILO and I managed to roach the MBR of the family Pentium 60 a few times. Oops. Sorry.
What I’m trying to say is that I’m not a Linux newb. I’ve installed and tinkered with pretty much every major distro that is out there. I have an extra machine under the desk as a testbed, just so that I can take a look at the latest and greatest distro that just came out. I’ve got quite a bit of real-world Linux experience, just not in a corporate environement, and not on paper.
I’d like to change that. I’d like a Linux cert of some kind or another that can back up what I already know: I know my way around Linux. Unfortunately, I’m not sure which cert to go after. A year ago, I would not have been asking this question. It would have been RHCE, and don’t look back. They’ve gone for the high end enterprise clients and left the small to medium guys out in the cold. Hey, it’s a business decision, it had to be done, but Red Hat is no longer the de-facto distro. Therefore, a RHCE isn’t worth what it used to be.
I flipped through a Linux+ practice exam in the bookstore the other day. I correctly answered 18 out of 20 that I looked at. I’m sure with a little cramming I could have nailed the other two. I’m confident that with a few weeks and a good book, I can fill in the holes to pass a Linux+ with no problem. But do I want a Linux+ cert? Is it taken seriously? Should I be looking at other certs?
After doing a little bit of research, it looks like there are four major Linux certification programs out there. Here’s what I’ve learned about them so far:
- RHCE: It used to be the only cert worth having. Nowadays, I’m not so sure.
- CompTIA Linux+: This one looks easy to pass, which is good but bad. Exam cost is around $200 or so, and there’s only the one.
- Linux Professional Institute currently offers three levels of certification with two exams for each. It is interesting to note that SUSE is basing their certifications as supplemental to the LPI certs. I’m a big picture guy, and I think that Novell/SUSE/Ximian could be the next standard platform. For that reason, I see the LPI certs as attractive. I could be a SUSE Linux Professional after passing two LPI exams and a SUSE exam. SUSE has cool logos.
- SAIR Linux: They have two certification programs: Linux Certified Administrator and Linux Certified Engineer. The roadmap reminds me a lot of MCSE. It looks like you have to pass four exams for each cert. This is the cert that I know the least about.
So whcih one of the above certs is best? Which is most worth having? I’m inclined to go the Linux+ route in order to make my resume look more attractive in the short term, but I don’t want to waste my money if it’s a total joke. Longer term, I can see the LPI/SUSE certs being valuable. If you have some insight, please email me (<%radio.macros.mailTo ()%>) or stop by the wiki page WhichLinuxCertIsBest.