In Brief: Progeny adds to Linux toolkit; PKZIP adds RSA BSAFE traits and more
- By Scott Adams
- February 3, 2003
[February 4, 2003 - ADT's Programmers Report] - At the recent LinuxWorld expo in New York City, Progeny announced that it has
been working with Hewlett-Packard to enhance the Linux Programmer's Toolkit
(PTK), an integrated development framework for developing Linux applications on
IA32 and Itanium systems using Red Hat or Debian Linux. PTK allows registered
users to download more than 1,000 packages targeted at developers and ISVs
creating applications in Debian and Red Hat Linux environments. Recent PTK
developments include access to Itanium 2 machines for testing and optimizing
applications; integration of Java tools, including the Eclipse platform; the
addition of GCC 3.2 compilers; and incorporation of the KDE 3 desktop, Gnome2,
OpenOffice, plus authentication and installation upgrades.
Meanwhile, debugging software provider Etnus announced that Etnus TotalView 6
has shipped with improved support for HP UPC 2.0, C++ and Java debugging through
Etnus's CodeRoad JNI Bridge. Also available: support for GNU GCC 3.2, and the
Intel C++ and Fortran compilers for Linux Version 7.0 ... Compression software
pioneer PKZIP Inc. bolstered its PKZIP data compressor with the addition of IBM
Lotus Notes integration and a new Desktop Security module with advanced
cryptographic capabilities powered by RSA BSAFE software. PKZIP 6.0 Professional
Edition integrates top-shelf data compression and encryption technologies,
including 256-bit AES. The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is a Federal
Information Processing Standard (FIPS) developed for use by U.S. government
organizations to protect sensitive information and it is said to be gaining
broad industry support ... Sun Microsystems has turned to Embarcadero
Technologies Inc. to provide Describe for SunONE Studio for model-driven design
and development ... XML management software maker Ipedo said that, in testing at
IBM's Solution Partnership Center, the Ipedo 3 platform demonstrated a 200%
query throughput improvement, industry-leading XML data set scalability and
multi-CPU concurrency across 32 processors. The tests were conducted using
XMark, a new XML benchmark from the XML Benchmark Project.
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About the Author
Scott Adams is a senior software engineer for TeamQuest.