Title:
In ICT
Cross platform
-Linux is a generic term referring to Unix-like computer operating systems based on the
Linux kernel. Their development is one of the most prominent examples of free and open
source software collaboration; typically all the underlying source code can be used, freely
modified, and redistributed by anyone under the terms of the GNU GPL and other free
licenses.
Linux is predominantly known for its use in servers, although it is installed on a wide variety
of computer hardware, ranging from embedded devices and mobile phones to supercomputers
Linux distributions, installed on both desktop and laptop computers, have become
increasingly commonplace in recent years, owing largely to the popular Ubuntu distribution
and to the emergence of netbooks.
The name "Linux” comes from the Linux kernel, originally written in 1991 by Linus
Torvalds. The rest of the system usually comprises components such as the Apache HTTP
Server, the X Window System, the K Desktop Environment, and utilities and libraries bfrom
the GNU operating system (announced in 1983 by Richard Stallman). Commonly-used
applications with desktop Linux systems include the Mozilla Firefox web-browser and the
OpenOffice.org office application suite. The GNU contribution is the basis for the Free
Software Foundation's preferred name GNU/Linux
-Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX, sometimes also written as UNIX with small caps) is a
computer operating system originally developed in 1969 by a group of AT&T employees at
Bell Labs, including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Douglas McIlroy, and Joe Ossanna.
Today's Unix systems are split into various branches, developed over time by AT&T as well
as various commercial vendors and non-profit organizations.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, the influence of Unix in academic circles led to large-
scale adoption of Unix (particularly of the BSD variant, originating from the University of
California, Berkeley) by commercial startups, the most notable of which are Solaris, HP-UX
and AIX. Today, in addition to certified Unix systems such as those already mentioned,
Unix-like operating systems such as Linux and BSD are commonly encountered. Sometimes,
"traditional Unix" may be used to describe a Unix or an operating system that has the
characteristics of either Version 7 Unix or UNIX System V.
3. The Latest Open Source Application Software
Open source application software is application software that is developed and maintained
by the open source community, rather than a software company. It also defined as computer
software for which the source code and certain other rights normally reserved for copyright
holders are provided under a software license that meets the Open Source Definition or that is
in the public domain. This permits users to use, change, and improve the software, and to
redistribute it in modified or unmodified forms. It is very often developed in a public,
collaborative manner. Open source software is the most prominent example of open source
development and often compared to user-generated content.
BitComet (originally named SimpleBT client from versions 0.11 to 0.37) is a cross-protocol
BitTorrent, HTTP and FTP client written in C++ for Microsoft Windows and available in 52
different languages. Its first public release was version 0.28. The current BitComet logo has
been used since version 0.50.
BitComet's chief features include an embedded Internet Explorer window for the purpose of
allowing users to search for torrents within the program. Along with the features typical of
contemporary BitTorrent clients, it supports UPnP gateway configuration, bandwidth
scheduling, Webseeding, selecting downloads inside a torrent package, and NAT traversal.
When downloading, BitComet prioritizes the first and last portions of media files so that files
may be previewed before they are completely downloaded. BitComet also allows users to
share their torrent files on a searchable P2P network. BitComet uses the Kademlia (mainline)
DHT to operate even when the tracker is offline. BitComet is capable of downloading files
over HTTP and FTP as well as bittorrent, and it includes download plugins for Firefox,
Internet Explorer, and Maxthon.
An optional plugin is available to connect to the eD2K network. The plugin is a modified
version of the GPL eMule program. When installed, it connects automatically to a server.The
software includes an application to play Flash Video files (.flv and .swf files).[
Mozilla Firefox
-is a free and open source web browser descended from the Mozilla Application Suite and
managed by Mozilla Corporation. Firefox had 22.51% of the recorded usage share of web
browsers as of May 2009, making it the second most popular browser in terms of current use
worldwide, after Internet Explorer.To display web pages, Firefox uses the Gecko layout
engine, which implements most current web standards. in addition to a few features which are
intended to anticipate likely additions to the standards.
Firefox features include tabbed browsing, a spell checker, incremental find, live
bookmarking, a download manager, and an integrated search system that uses the user's
desired search engine (Google by default in most localizations). Functions can be added
through add-ons, created by third-party developers, of which there is a wide selection, a
feature that has attracted many of Firefox's users.
Firefox runs on various versions of Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and many other
Unix-like operating systems. Its current stable release is version 3.5, released on June 30,
2009. Firefox's source code is free software, released under a tri-license GNU GPL/GNU
LGPL/MPL. Official versions are distributed under the terms of a proprietary EUL
4. The Latest Development in ICT
4.1 Hardware
The Radeon X800 series is a set of GPUs currently scheduled for future release, developed
by AMD graphics products division. The existence was spotted on a presentation slide from
AMD Technology Analyst Day July 2007 as "R8xx".
Ground-Breaking Speed
Radeon X800 Graphics Technology Delivers frame rates that surpass all previous graphics
processors and up to two times the performance of the acclaimed Radeon 9800 PRO. Radeon
X800 graphics technology provides an extremely smooth, responsive HD gaming
experience, putting capable gamers in complete control of even the most demanding game
titles. A new Architecture based on the latest .13 micron, low-k manufacturing process with
ultra fast and efficient GDDR3 memory combine to produce extreme data rates and
unbelievable acceleration in a quite, cool, single-shot solution.
The Radeon R700 is the engineering codename for a Graphics Processing Unit series
released by AMD Graphics Product Group, sold under the ATI brand. The foundation chip,
codenamed RV770, was announced and demonstrated on June 16, 2008 as part of the
FireStream 9250 and Cinema 2.0 Media launches, with official release of the HD4800 series
on June 25, 2008. Further products including enthusiast-class RV790, mainstream product
RV730, RV740 and entry-level RV710 products were released throughout 2008 and the first
quarter of 2009.
Execution units
The RV770 extends the R600's unified shader architecture by increasing the stream
processing unit count to 800 units (up from 320 units in the R600), which are grouped into 10
SIMD cores composed of 16 shader cores containing 4 FP MADD/DP ALUs and 1
MADD/shift/transcendental ALU. The RV770 retains the R600's 4 Quad ROP cluster count,
however they are faster and now have dedicated hardware based AA resolve in addition to
the shader based resolve of the the R600 architecture. The RV770 also has 10 texture units
each of which can handle 4 addresses, 16 FP32 samples, and 4 FP32 filtering functions per
clock cycle.
RV770 features a 256-bit memory controller and is the first GPU to support GDDR5
memory, which runs at 900 MHz giving an effective speed of 3600 MHz and memory
bandwidth of up to 115 GB/s. The internal ring bus from the R520 and R600 has been
replaced by the combination of a crossbar and an internal hub
4.2 Software
was a version of Mozilla Firefox, a web browser released on October 24th 2006 by the
Mozilla Corporation. Firefox 2 uses version 1.8 of the Gecko layout engine for displaying
web pages. The release contained many new features not found in Firefox 1.5, including
improved support for Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) and JavaScript 1.7, as well as user
interface changes.
On March 22, 2006, the first alpha version of Firefox 2 (Bon Echo Alpha 1) was released. It
featured Gecko 1.8.1 for the first time. Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.x is the final version supported
on Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 98. Mac OS X 10.5 support was added October 18, 2007
with version 2.0.0.8 .
Firefox 2.0 featured updates to tabbed browsing environment, the extensions manager, the
GUI, and the find, search and software update engines; a new session restore feature; inline
spell checking; and an anti-phishing feature which was implemented by Google as an
extension, and later merged into the program itself.
Overview
Mozilla Firefox 3 is a version of Mozilla Firefox, a web browser released on June 17, 2008
by the Mozilla Corporation.
Firefox 3 uses version 1.9 of the Gecko layout engine for displaying web pages. The new
version fixes many bugs, improves standard compliance, and implements new web APIs
compared to Firefox 2.0. Other new features include a redesigned download manager, a new
"Places" system for storing bookmarks and history, and separate themes for different
operating systems.
Firefox 3 had 5.67% of the recorded usage share of web browsers by July 2008, and had over
8 million unique downloads the day it was released, setting a Guinness World Record.
Current estimates of Firefox 3's global market share are generally in the range of 20-30%.
It was codenamed Gran Paradiso during its development, which included 8 alphas, 5 betas,
and 3 release candidates released over 2007 and early 2008. Development continued with a
planned 3.1 version codenamed Shiretoko during the summer of 2008.
5. Pervasive Computing
Persavive computing is the technology that is gracefully intergrated in our everyday life.
Pervasive computing is the trend towards increasingly ubiquitous (another name for the
movement is ubiquitous computing), connected computing devices in the environment, a
trend being brought about by a convergence of advanced electronic and particularly, wireless
technologies and the Internet. Pervasive computing devices are not personal computers as we
tend to think of them, but very tiny even invisible devices, either mobile or embedded in
almost any type of object imaginable, including cars, tools, appliances, clothing and various
consumer goods all communicating through increasingly interconnected networks.
Ambient Devices produced an "orb", a "dashboard", and a "weather beacon": these decorative
devices receive data from a wireless network and report current events, such as stock prices
and the weather.
"Dangling String," installed at Xerox PARC This was a piece of string attached to a stepper
motor and controlled by a LAN connection; network activity caused the string to twitch,
yielding a peripherally noticeable indication of traffic.
Conclusion
The open source model of operation and decision making allows concurrent input of different
agendas, approaches and priorities, and differs from the more closed, centralized models of
development. The principles and practices are commonly applied to the peer production
development of source code for software that is made available for public collaboration. The
result of this peer-based collaboration is usually released as open-source software, however
open source methods are increasingly being applied in other fields of endeavor, such as
biotechnology.