The AMA, which recommended a review of the current video game rating system, also said it would leave it up to the American Psychiatric Association and other experts to decide whether video game addiction should be designated a mental illness.
Today is Labor Day, a legal holiday in the US that also serves as our unofficial "last gasp of summer" three-day weekend. We'll be back on a regular posting schedule tomorrow.
From the presentation, you might imagine that Adobe's announcement of the Open Screen Project was major news. According to the news release, the project's goal is "to enable a consistent runtime environment" by relaxing some restrictions on the Flash format and releasing some specifications. However, in the free Flash community, the small group of developers dedicated to producing non-proprietary Flash tools, the reaction to the news was polite at best -- and serves as a much-needed reality check to the over-enthusiastic announcement.
Black Duck Software, a company best known for its services and software for the procurement and re-use of open source software, has acquired Koders, and with it the popular Koders.com search engine for free and open source software code (FOSS). Black Duck plans to integrate Koders' search technology into its own product line, while promising to enhance the Koders search engine while leaving its basic nature unchanged.
Lisa talks about stories from the past week while broiling in the sun.
Lisa takes a look at Linux.com articles from last week, talks about open source news around the community, and proves she makes a better tech geek than artist.
Today is St. Patrick's Day, a national holiday in Ireland that's celebrated by people of Irish lineage worldwide. Like Ireland itself, the holiday is associated with the color green -- as are many things in the Linux universe.
Lisa was at the Kennedy Space Center for this week's launch of the STS-122 crew aboard space shuttle Atlantis. While they counted down to liftoff, she recapped this week's news and stories.
Lisa Hoover still hasn't ventured into the "cold" Florida weather, so she's reporting from the office. Find out what the top stories were and what went on around the open source community this week.
Once again, Lisa Hoover looks back over the previous week's articles -- and gives us a little glimpse into the future by telling us about a few we can expect to see next week.
The Linux Foundation has announced a new series of podcasts called Open Voices. Jim Zemlin, the foundation's executive director, plans to interview notable members of the Linux and open source communities, such as Novell CEO Ron Hovsepian, MySQL CEO Marten Mickos, and Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth. The first podcast, an interview with Linux creator Linus Torvalds, is available on the Linux Foundation site in MP3 and Ogg formats.
Lisa Hoover talks about highlights from the past week -- and a little about next week's stories, too. This is our first Weekly Wire for 2008. The holidays are over. It's time to get back to work!
Many religions have some sort of holiday during this season, and many companies close down or work short hours until the current year ends and the next one begins. We, too, will be taking time off to spend with our families and friends, so Linux.com will be on a reduced posting schedule between now and January 1. We'll still cover breaking news, and you'll see a trickle of feature articles and NewsVac links, but not as many as you're used to.
Lisa Hoover talks about highlights from the past week -- and a little about next week's stories, too.
Lisa Hoover talks about highlights from the past week -- and a little about next week's stories, too, including a "sneak peek" at the Asus EeePC.
A settlement has been reached in the case filed last month against Monsoon Multimedia by the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) on behalf of two BusyBox developers.
The OpenTaal project (Dutch for "OpenLanguage") has published the first open source word list to be certified by the Dutch Language Union as corresponding to official spelling. Simon Brouwer, project leader of OpenTaal, says, "This is a milestone. Users of open source software can trust their Dutch spell checker now. They have the guarantee that their word list is consistent with the official spelling."