Fellow PLUGgers,

I haven't read this as I'm running late for school, but it sounds quite
catchy. I wonder how valid this is. And will Intel's C compiler properly
compile the Linux kernel? Hmm. Interesting interesting.

 --> Jijo

--
Federico Sevilla III  :: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Network Administrator :: The Leather Collection, Inc.
GnuPG Key: http://jijo.leathercollection.ph/jijo.gpg

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 20:55:57 -0500
From: Open magazine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Open Subs 2 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: CPU Power Blowout

EXCLUSIVE VIEWING FOR OPEN MAGAZINE SUBSCRIBERS

"May GNU C Compilers rest in peace." That was the hushed pronouncement
coming from surprised OpenBench Labs analysts this week after completing
performance tests using the new Intel C Compiler on Windows and Linux.
Performance is also on the minds of European telecom players as they
struggle to show evidence that their own IT environments guarantee
customer service reliability at an affordable cost. In Finland, a virtual
server approach at Sonera Entrum is a compelling sign of the times of
server consolidation in the telecom sector.

Click <http://www.open-mag.com/eopen15.pdf> to download this week's
e-Open. And don't forget to send a copy to your friends mired in
proprietary systems. If you are running IE 6.0 and have discovered that
you can no longer download a PDF file because Netscape-style plug-ins are
not supported, click <http://www.open-mag.com/download.htm> and follow the
instructions.

Coming in future issues: data mining in its latest phase of evolution;
trademark disputes under expert views; and the agenda of strategists
behind NetBSD.

Regards,
The editors of Open magazine

_
Philippine Linux Users Group. Web site and archives at http://plug.linux.org.ph
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