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Traffic Hackers Hit Red Light. A transit bill signed into law by President Bush cracks down on boxes that can turn traffic signals from red to green, ending the dreams of millions of frustrated drivers. By Kevin Poulsen. [Wired News]
11:32:00 AM
YouTube -- The Flickr of Video?. An anonymous reader writes "A new folksonomy website that seems to be catching on is YouTube, a service similar to Flickr, except that it is for sharing and hosting short video clips instead of photos. Like Flickr, its core functionality is implemented in Flash. Videos can be tagged, searched, discussed, etc through a social network. YouTube has developer APIs, RSS feeds, and the ability to embed videos directly into other web pages. The website was recently profiled on TechCrunch as an up-and-coming Web 2.0 application." [Slashdot]
11:30:22 AM
Pirated version of MacOS for x86 available for install.
(InfoWorld) - Instructions on how to install Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system on any PC with a chip from Intel or AMD posted to the Internet this week, and they could be found on several Web sites on Friday.
Apple has announced that Mac OS X will run on Intel's x86 architecture chips starting in 2006. The Cupertino, Calif., company has been working on a version of Mac OS X for Intel's chips since 2000, even though Macs currently use PowerPC chips from IBM Corp. and Freescale Semiconductor Inc. Apple Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs told developers in June that a switch was necessary to take advantage of the low-power chips Intel is expected to release in the future.
However, several enterprising hackers have figured out ways to bypass the security chip and run the developer's version of MacOS for x86 on any x86-based PC, according to a posting on the Web site of The OSx86 Project (http://osx86project.org/). Posters on that site as well as other sites within the Mac community claim to have used the instructions to run Mac OS X on their Intel or AMD PCs, with some posting pictures and videos of x86 PCs booting Mac OS X.
The process requires a copy of Mac OS X version 4 (Tiger), VMware Inc.'s virtualization software, the PearPC emulator that can run operating systems written for PowerPC on any architecture, Apple's Darwin 8.0.1 software, an x86 processor that supports SSE2 (Streaming SIMD Extensions 2), and two files created by an independent developer that can be downloaded using the BitTorrent file-sharing system.
As of Friday afternoon, detailed instructions were available in a wiki created by The OSx86 Project. (http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index.php/Vmware_how_to) Another site (http://www.xplodenet.com/) had posted instructions for installing Mac OS X without using VMware's software.
Users must be willing to download pirated software, as the two files have been modified to get around the security technology in the developer PCs, according to The OSx86 Project Web site. The site insists that The OSx86 Project does not support the use of illegal software but wishes to offer a forum for users interested in running Mac OS on x86 chips.
Mac OS X users praise its user-friendly design and the scarcity of viruses developed for the operating system. Aside from a brief flirtation with licensing the operating system in the mid-1990s, Apple has maintained control over its operating system by restricting it to hardware made and developed by the company.
11:15:32 AM
Q&A Part 2: IBM exec says curbing open-source license glut is ‘wishful thinking’. Steve Mills, senior vice president and group executive for IBM's software division, weighed in this week on open-source licensing issues and patent reform during in an interview with Computerworld at the LinuxWorld Conference & Expo. [Computerworld News]
11:11:18 AM