Filed under: Security, Utilities, Productivity, Google, Novell, Commercial, Open Source, Social Software
Google Wave lives on -- as Novell Pulse

Granted, the majority of us will never use it since it's an enterprise solution, but Wave is still alive and kicking in many ways as the underlying base for Novell Pulse. Due to be released sometime in the second-half of the year, the project is nearly ready for its debut into the exciting world of conferences, collaborative document editing, and boardroom stick-figure doodling.
Though largely unheard of, Pulse has been in development for quite some time now. Novell had planned to make it a suit-wearing, time-is-money sort of corporate version of the very generic original. To that end, it's not unlikely that more Wave derivatives may crop up in the near future, since the original Wave Federation Protocol is still available and begging for attention.
Pulse is set to be available as a cloud service at first, with "on-site deployment" planned as a later option. Big selling points for the service seem to be all the same things that Google said were great about Wave, with a big added dose of corporate INFOSEC. It's certainly not the happy Wave we all knew and neglected, it's all business.
It's only been days since the announcement of Wave's impending demise, so it'll be interesting to see just how many organizations actually start using Pulse later this year, given that Wave was so ill-received by the masses. Those same masses may well carry their dislike for the protocol with them to their newly Pulse'd workplaces should their employers choose to utilize Novell's new baby.

You've surely heard of Silverlight, Microsoft's shinier and altogether more-fluffy answer to Flash. 



OpenSUSE has always been an odd sort of Linux distribution. It's always been reasonably user friendly, very stable, and quite nicely pulled off the not-so-easy task of being good for new users while offering advanced and power users the flexibility and freedom they require.

Please, allow me to explain. This week's FTLS was not at all what I intended it to be. For weeks now, I've been toying with idea of dual-booting a Debian based distro with a RPM based distro. 
Today,
The open source Mono Project, which is sponsored in part by Novell, Inc. announced today that it has developed a Visual Basic compiler which allows software written in Microsoft's most widely used application programming language to be compiled and run on any platform which Mono supports. Until this announcement, Visual Basic applications could only be run on the Microsoft Windows family of operating systems. 
I love World of Goo. I bought it a while back, and it's one of the most addictive games I've played.
That's part of the reason why I was so excited to find Moonlights. It shares a lot of elements with World of Goo, but is very different, too.
Like in World of Goo, you have to construct something stable out of unstable elements, and your structure needs to get to a certain destination. But that's where the similarities end, really.
Where World of Goo has a ton of personality, Moonlights is minimalistic, almost austere. ...