Articles by Timothy R. Butler

Timothy R. Butler is Editor-in-Chief of Open for Business. He also serves as a pastor at Little Hills Church and FaithTree Christian Fellowship.

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Jan 11, 2005

Apple Launches Mac mini, iWork

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 1:55 PM

UPDATED. According to live coverage of MacWorld in San Francisco by Mac enthusiast sites as well as official Apple information, three of the most pervasive Mac rumors in recent weeks will come true and soon. In his keynote speech today, Jobs announced the company's new office suite, low-cost Macintosh and USB key iPod would be available on January 22.

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Dec 23, 2004

Tim's Site Dies

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 8:23 PM

Tim's personal blog, asisaid.com, has died. Until it returns, this OfB post will serve as a way to leave comments regarding the announcement of the blog's death. This article will be deleted after the blog returns to the world of the living… hopefully later today, but maybe not.

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Dec 16, 2004

The Five Gifts of Christmas

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 1:26 AM

With just a short time before Christmas, you may be wondering what little stocking stuffer you can get for your technically obsessed co-worker, computer savvy boss or geeky family member. It is not too late to pick out a gift that will stay out of the closet of useless gifts after the party's over. OfB's Timothy R. Butler looks at five great gift ideas below.

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Dec 11, 2004

Microsoft: Plodding Behind Into Eternity

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 12:04 AM

Perhaps in the long term, the MSN Music Store will come to overshadow Apple's iTunes Music Store. But even if it does, Apple already made it's mark on the industry. Many analysts compare today's music battle with Microsoft's war against the Netscape Web browser, which was seen as a challenge to Windows. Microsoft feared that software engineers would gravitate to developing applications on Netscape, thus circumventing Windows. The same possibility with iTunes is throwing a shadow over Microsoft's media hub plans for Windows.

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Sep 24, 2004

RadTech's Tech Makes Good on Promises

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 12:47 AM

Here is a scenario that probably sounds familiar if you have owned a laptop. You buy a sparkling new laptop and, no doubt, you would like to keep it in good shape — this is a machine that will be traveling with you for a long time. But soon, the case becomes marred and, if it is a particularly compact unit (such as an Apple PowerBook), your screen may start to show the impression of the keyboard on it. How could this have happened to your trusty companion? How can you prevent it next time? RadTech seems to offer some of the best solutions we have seen for these problems.

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Aug 13, 2004

The MySQL License Question

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 11:15 AM

MySQL AB's namesake database is a package that many would list among the crown jewels of Free Software. The Swedish company's database has been deployed over five million times by the company's own count. Yet, some, quite legitimately wondered if certain wording on the MySQL site might indicate the company is backing away from Free Software, and, more specifically, the GNU General Public License. We wanted to know if this was an actual concern or simply a misunderstanding, so OfB contacted MySQL AB to find out more information.

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Jul 30, 2004

Why GNOME's Got it Right

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 2:17 AM

Last week, some developers disagreeing with the direction of the GNOME Project decided to create what appears to be the beginning of a fork of the project — GoneME. Like many from KDE Project and elsewhere in the community, GoneME's major complaints boil down to what has proven to be GNOME's most controversial move: simplifying the user interface. While naysayers, including the GoneME developers, seem to feel that the simplification of the interface, undertaken with the encouragement of such GNOME leaders as Havoc Pennington of Red Hat, is actually just “dumbing down” the interface, I think these critics are actually missing the point completely.

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Jul 05, 2004

Rendezvous with the Desktop

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 11:23 PM

This past week a number of exciting developments toward the popularization of Open Source desktops occurred. Novell heralded the arrival of Mono 1.0. Mandrakesoft announced the acquisition of a French IT services firm, further indicating its return to financial health. Real Networks inked deals to bundle Helix and Real Players on major GNU/Linux desktops. Out of the noise and clammer, nevertheless, there are two announcements that I believe are the best tickets to moving the GNU/Linux desktop forward, and they both had a name other than Red Hat, Novell or Mandrakesoft attached to them. They both involved Apple.

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Jul 01, 2004

Sim-Fireworks: A Treat For The Fourth

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 7:08 PM

Everyone loves fireworks, right? Well, at least most everyone does. If money and a safe place were not considerations and you were free to produce the show of your dreams, what kind of show would you produce? Would you want to plan it down to the minute details or would you prefer just to select the varieties of fireworks? This fourth of July, what if you could do all of that — on your Macintosh computer? Read on to find out how.

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Jun 28, 2004

Fire Internet Explorer and Outlook Express With Mozilla Alternatives

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 5:56 PM

With new security holes appearing every day and spy/ad-ware spreading rampantly, the combination of Internet Explorer and Outlook Express are becoming increasingly dangerous choices for safe web browsing and e-mail. Yet what is one to do if they can't or won't switch from Windows to another operating system? It's simple: bring the security and power of Open Source applications to Windows. The Mozilla Project's Firefox web browser and Thunderbird e-mail client do just that, and do it without sacrificing the easy-to-use, clean interface users demand. As associate editor Ed Hurst noted in his OpenCD review earlier this year, many of the Open Source community's best applications are available conveniently packaged for Windows, and the Mozilla Project's applications are no exception.

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