by Andy Oram
| @praxagora | 8 May 2011
Red Hat's usual modus operandi is the precise inverse of most companies based on open source. This drives what I heard at Red Hat Summit and JBoss World, solid progress along the lines laid out by Red Hat and JBoss in previous years.
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Germany gets a case of Mono, lots of mobile maneuvering, and Java junkies are jilted.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh | 4 May 2011
Recently, Attachmate gave their US-based Mono developers the pink slip, there was much ado about mobile, and Chrome puts Java on the back burner.
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Suing your suppliers, tracking your customers, and giving away your assets.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh | 22 April 2011
In the latest Developer Week in Review: Everyone sued everyone else, the iPhone's location abilities instigated lots of discussion, and Oracle let Open Office fly away home.
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While developing countries may benefit from Open Compute, bigger issues need to be addressed first.
by Jenn Webb
| @JennWebb | 21 April 2011
The potential for Open Compute to benefit developing countries was mentioned during a
panel discussion that followed the project's announcement. Intrigued, I turned to Benetech CEO Jim Fruchterman for more on Open Compute's utility in developing nations.
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The Open Data Protocol is a promising approach for uniform APIs.
by Jon Udell
| @judell | 20 April 2011
What if blogs had come of age in an era when a uniform kind of API was expected? We could then ask questions of blogs in the same way we could ask questions of event services.
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CS enrollment grows, the vocabulary of technology is translated in courtrooms, and dancing algorithms.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh | 13 April 2011
In the latest Developer Week in Review: Computer science enrollment grows, lawyers and judges get crash courses in software vocabulary, and sorting algorithms are explained through dance.
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