MyLifeBits Project

“The MyLifeBits project aims to put all personal documents and media online, to allow time-shifting, and location independence when you are connected to MyLifeBits.” (Microsoft Bay Area Research Center Media Presence Group), http://research.microsoft.com/barc/MediaPresence/MyLifeBits.aspx. This pointer came in via OSCOM mailinglist.

With CONESYS, one could even decide which of his personal data he wants to share with the public or a certain group of people.

Numbers and Facts

David A. Wheeler: “This paper provides quantitative data that, in many cases, using open source software / free software is a reasonable or even superior approach to using their proprietary competition according to various measures. This paperâ??s goal is to show that you should consider using OSS/FS when acquiring software. This paper examines market share, reliability, performance, scalability, security, and total cost of ownership. It also has sections on non-quantitative issues, unnecessary fears, usage reports, other sites providing related information, and ends with some conclusions. An appendix gives more background information about OSS/FS.”
http://www.dwheeler.com/oss_fs_why.html

Universal PHP Authentication Replication System

“The rationale for Universal is web applications such as Phorum, phpBB, WebCalendar, PostNuke, Xaraya, Drupal are unable cooperate because there is no data sharing. Universal is an attempt at bridging these islands of data by providing means for PHP applications written by different people to work better together. As a PHP developer, you can help make PHP web applications interoperate by implementing a shared sign-on mechanism based on the specs described here.”
http://php.weblogs.com/universal

Special Interest Group Open Source

It was the first time that the Special Interest Group Open Source met in Stuttgart/Germany at February 6th. ZZ/OSS has been there, as well as 20 other representatives from companies like MySQL or Oracle. It is the aim of this task force to foster the communication flow and knowledge transfer between the participants, as well as co-operations amongst those. The meeting was organized by bwcon.

Booth and Session at CeBIT 2003

ZZ/OSS will be represented at CeBIT 2003, the worldâ??s largest IT and telecommunications fair. We will present CONESYS, the COntent NEtwork SYStem side by side with Open Source projects like Apache or PHP at the OpenBooth. From March 18th – 19th, we will answer your questions at hall 6, A52, together with our partner d-serv Digital Services. Furthermore, ZZ/OSS CEO Sandro Zic will do a presentation on CONESYS at the LinuxForum March 18th, 9.15-10.00 am.

Xopus as Apache Project?

In a recent post to the Xopus mailinglist, Q42 (the company behind Xopus) announced that they will concentrate on the commercial (closed source) version of Xopus and try to make the open source version an Apache project. While Xopus is an XML WISIWYG editor mainly for the IE Microsoft browser, there’s another XML WISIWYG editor working with Mozilla called Bitflux Editor. We are very excited to see, which of those editors will first become IE and Mozilla compliant, as this might be a decisive aspect concerning their use.

ZZ/OSS implemented Bitflux Editor in oc4ware 0.4.2 as a proof of concept.

ZZ/OSS CTO Christian Zonsius did a comparison of both editors a while ago in the oc4ware mailinglist: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?thread_id=1137299&forum_id=8231

MotusNet: A Content Network

MotusNet is a content network in which addressable objects, contents, are decoupled from the physical nodes that carry them. The content names in MotusNet are hierarchical, so that they can be aggregated in the routing tables to support a larger number of contents. Further, the process of content replication improves availability, performance, and defends against denial of service attacks by localizing their effect. Additionally, using content migration, similar contents can be placed closer together in order to improve the degree of aggregation. A networking class at Harvard University has built a prototype of MotusNet.

http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~htk/publication/2001-cs244-content-network.pdf

Distributed National Electronic Resource (DNER)

The Distributed National Electronic Resource (DNER) is a managed information environment for accessing quality assured Internet resources from many sources. These resources include scholarly journals, monographs, textbooks, learning objects, abstracts, manuscripts, maps, music scores, still images, geospatial images and other kinds of vector and numeric data, as well as moving picture and sound collections.

http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/distributed-systems/jisc-ie/arch/dner-arch.html