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Samsonite
Polaris Retail Infotech Ltd. (PRIL), a Retail Software provider and a wholly owned subsidiary of Polaris Software Lab Ltd, today announced the launch of Linux powered Retail Store Management solution "iStore Linux". PRIL has signed up Samsonite to rollout iStore Linux in its 60 exclusive brand outlets across India. iStore is available on all Linux flavors present in the market. The combination of SOA based iStore application on Linux system can potentially bring down the set-up and running cost of retail store software by 50%. read more
Can Crowdsourcing Curtail Patent Abuse?
Some of the biggest players in the technology industry complain that the U.S. patent system is broken -- putting too many patents of dubious merit in the hands of people who can use them to drag companies and other inventors to court. Blaise Mouttet, a small inventor in Alexandria, Va., thinks he knows why. The problem, he said, is that "there are too many lawyers and not enough inventors involved with the patent system."
*Interview with Tom Wickline, of the Bordeaux Project*
Bordeaux is a commercial User Interface to the Wine software that allows Linux systems to run Windows software. The Bordeaux Technology Group distributes this software and provides professional support to companies and individuals running Windows apps on Linux (and soon FreeBSD). I interviewed Tom Wickline to get some details and find out what they're up to now. Read more on this exclusive OSNews article...
Windows 7 May Get Family Pack Discount (PC World)
PC World - Microsoft may be introducing a Family Pack for Windows 7 Home Premium, with a shared license for three computers in the same household. The license details in the latest build of Windows 7 have the following clause under ‘Installation and Use Rights': "If you are a ‘Qualified Family Pack User,' you may install one copy of the software marked as ‘Family Pack' on three computers in your household for use by people who reside there," according to ZDNet's Ed Bott.
Rethinking the Taskbar
Back when Microsoft's Julie Larson-Green demonstrated Windows 7's multitouch framework during the All Things Digital conference, many noted the different taskbar that she was using on the demo machine. When Walt Mossberg asked her about it, she smiled and replied "It's something we're working on for Windows 7 and I'm not supposed to talk about right now, today..." Personally, I was quite intrigued by this revamped taskbar, seeing how static and old the current one already is (Windows 95, people). Microsoft has remained mum on the issue ever since, but last Tuesday, the silence was broken when Microsoft's Chaitanya Sareen posted a detailed entry on the taskbar on the Engineering Windows 7 blog.