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Murphy’s Law: 98 Percent of Companies Use Open-Source, 29 Percent Contribute Back. What?

A recent survey hit my radar this weekend and, I must say, I’m not that surprised by the results. Contrary to my usual columns, I won’t bury the lede: Accenture polled 300 large organizations in both the public and private sectors and—surprise! [...]

Five Freeware Apps for Extreme File Management

It takes a special kind of finesse to manipulate the various files scattered across your system like Minority Report’s John Anderton. Was there only a piece of freeware that allowed one to transform one’s monitor into a touchscreen for such a purp… [...]

Freeware Files: Five Free Distributed Computing Projects for your Idle PC!

Distributed computing is one of the wonderful ways that you can use your PC to contribute to more thoughtful, worldly causes than keeping your room warm during a cloudy summer day. These projects, made up of members from all corners of the world (even Maximum PC’s own forums), make use of your computer during its idle periods. Whether they’re come as a screensaver that launches after a set period of time, or a background application that launches after a certain period of CPU inactivity, these free applications divvy out the tasks of a large, complicated project to a number of people at once.

Why should you care? Because distributed computing is a nice way to use a minimal amount of your system’s resources–resources that you wouldn’t be using anyway–to contribute to something greater than yourself. It’s entirely altruistic in its purpose. Very, very few distributed computing projects have some kind of monetary award attached to the work, and you’d have to score a major knock-out in your individual contribution to the project to see the result. That is, your computer would have to be the one that finds the next huge prime number, or major breakthrough in protein analysis, or something to that effect. If you’re in it for a reward, you might as well develop a program that estimates lottery odds.

You’ll find that entities like Maximum PC, amongst others, have teams of people contributing to these distributed computing projects. It’s a great way to make friends and (Read more...)