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                      4: <title>OpenBSD Media Coverage</title>
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                     13: <p>
1.18      deraadt    14: <h2><font color=#e00000>Media Coverage</strong><hr></h2>
1.1       deraadt    15:
1.18      deraadt    16: <h3><font color=#e00000>English press coverage</font></h3><p>
1.17      deraadt    17: <dl>
1.16      louis      18:
1.48      louis      19: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.53      louis      20: <a href="http://www.msnbc.com/news/353999.asp?cp1=1">
                     21: Mudge, the halo and the 2.4 sticker</a>, MSNBC, January 6, 2000.
                     22: </strong></font><p>
                     23:
                     24: The beastie sticker from OpenBSD 2.4 was spotted on Mudge's laptop cover
                     25: in a file photo for this story about L0pht joining with corporate heavyweights.
                     26: <p>
                     27:
                     28: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.55      deraadt    29: <a href="http://www.northernjourney.com/opensource/linside/li006.html">Canadian open source projects</a>, The Computer Paper, January 2000
1.53      louis      30: </strong></font><p>
                     31:
                     32: OpenBSD is featured in a year-end review of Canadian Open Source projects
                     33: in <a
                     34: href="http://www.canadacomputes.com/cc/section/pub/1,1100,33,00.html?pub=1&iss=52">The Computer Paper</a>.
1.55      deraadt    35:
1.53      louis      36: Linux columnist Gene Wilburn gets it right. Unfortunately, the article isn't on
1.55      deraadt    37: the Computer Paper's site, but it is available at the author's site.
1.53      louis      38: <p>
                     39:
                     40: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.51      deraadt    41: "Info.sec.radio" radio show.  11:00AM, Monday, January 10, 2000<br>
1.52      deraadt    42: <A href="http://www.cjsw.com">CJSW 90.9 FM campus radio in Calgary</a> in
1.51      deraadt    43: association with <a href="http://www.securityfocus.com">SecurityFocus</a>
                     44: </strong></font><p>
                     45:
                     46: In the inaugural show of <strong>Info.sec.radio</strong>, Dean Turner of
                     47: Security Focus interviews Theo de Raadt about OpenBSD, security,
                     48: and cryptography.
                     49: <p>
                     50:
                     51: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.54      deraadt    52: <A href="http://www.casselman.net/artlist/OpenBSD.htm">
1.51      deraadt    53: A Home-Grown Operating System?
                     54: </a>, Alberta Venture Magazine, January/February, 2000
                     55: </strong></font><p>
                     56:
                     57: Grace Casselman interviews Theo about the development process of OpenBSD.
                     58: <p>
                     59:
                     60: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.50      louis      61: <A href="http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayNew.pl?/security/991108sw.htm">
1.48      louis      62: OpenBSD comes close to security nirvana with a system that is
                     63: 'secure by default'</a>, InfoWorld, November 8, 1999
                     64: </strong></font><p>
                     65:
                     66: Security Watch columnists Stuart McClure and Joel Scambray say good things
                     67: about OpenBSD's security stance. &quot;As you've come to expect from us,
                     68: our faith in vendors' attention to security is waning, but OpenBSD
                     69: gives us hope. OpenBSD is a group that has done it
                     70: right -- or at least strives to&quot;.
                     71: <p>
                     72:
1.46      louis      73: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://slashdot.org/interviews/99/11/04/1716225.shtml">UK Royal Family webmaster prefers OpenBSD</a>,
1.48      louis      74: Slashdot, November 4, 1999
1.46      louis      75: </strong></font><p>
                     76:
                     77: Mick Morgan, of the UK's Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency,
                     78: answers Slashdot readers and talks about the design of a high profile
                     79: web site like the Royal Family's. In hindsight, he would have chosen
                     80: OpenBSD for its security aspects.
                     81: <p>
                     82:
1.44      philen     83: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://securityportal.com/direct.cgi?/closet/closet19991027.html">OpenBSD - a secure alternative</a>,
                     84: Security Portal, October 27 1999
                     85: </strong></font><p>
                     86:
                     87: Kurt Seifried
                     88: (<a href="mailto:seifried@seifried.org">seifried@seifried.org</a>), security
                     89: analyst and author of the <i>Linux Administrators Security Guide</i>,
                     90: discusses setting up an OpenBSD firewall.
                     91: <p>
                     92:
1.41      louis      93: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/10/22/1157259&mode=thread">Interview with The Cult of the Dead Cow</a>,
                     94: Slashdot, October 22, 1999
                     95: </strong></font><p>
                     96:
                     97: In between cheeky and rude answers to slashdot reader questions, cDc'ers
                     98: mention OpenBSD's security model and code audit.<p>
                     99:
1.37      louis     100: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://www.lwn.net/1999/1014/security.phtml">The existence of OpenSSH-1.0 has been confirmed</a>,
                    101: Linux Weekly News, October 14, 1999
                    102: </strong></font><p>
                    103:
                    104: Linux Weekly News was the first non-BSD news agency to report the existence of
1.40      deraadt   105: <a href=crypto.html#ssh>OpenSSH</a>, which will ship with OpenBSD 2.6.<p>
1.37      louis     106:
1.36      louis     107: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://www10.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/10/biztech/articles/11code.html">Easing on Software Exports Has Limits</a>,
                    108: New York Times, October 11, 1999
                    109: </strong></font><p>
                    110:
                    111: Peter Wayner takes a closer look at some consequences of the US government's
                    112: restrictions on the export of strong cryptographic software, and finds no
                    113: small amount of irony. OpenBSD is prominently featured, along with a picture
                    114: of Theo de Raadt brandishing CD-ROMs. (No charge registration required to
                    115: read the NY Times on the web).<p>
                    116:
                    117: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href=http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/991006/ny_ntwrk_s_2.html>NSTI announces commercial support services for OpenBSD</a>,
1.34      beck      118: Yahoo News, Oct. 6, 1999
                    119: </strong></font><p>
                    120:
1.36      louis     121: Network Security Technologies press release on the PR Newswire. NSTI
                    122: already uses OpenBSD in their Network Ops Center.<p>
1.34      beck      123:
1.38      louis     124: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.39      louis     125: <a href="http://www.daemonnews.org/199910/openbsd.html">I've been hacked!
                    126: How OpenBSD saved our project</a>, Daemon News, October 1999
1.38      louis     127: </strong></font><p>
                    128:
                    129: Overworked system administrator John Horn tells us about his adventures with
                    130: a publicly-accessible Lynx server.<p>
                    131:
1.30      deraadt   132: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href=http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/technology/stories/990930/2929913.html>Calgarian heads team ensuring OpenBSD security</a>,
1.38      louis     133: Calgary Herald, Sept. 30, 1999
1.30      deraadt   134: </strong></font><p>
1.32      louis     135:
                    136: Technology reporter Matthew McClearn interviewed system administrators and
                    137: security specialists in Calgary and Edmonton who choose OpenBSD for its
                    138: stability and proactive security audit. He also gives some project history.<p>
1.30      deraadt   139:
1.29      louis     140: <li><strong>
                    141: Small town in Kentucky has Internet connectivity unlike the rest of
1.38      louis     142: America<font color=#009000>, MSNBC, Sept. 29, 1999
1.29      louis     143: </strong></font><p>
                    144:
                    145: Jethro reports on the mailing lists that MSNBC aired a segment about a small
                    146: town in Kentucky with high-speed Internet connectivity. During an interview
                    147: with the
                    148: town's teenage security guru, you could read the prompt on his terminal:
                    149: <blockquote>
                    150: <code>Connected to spanweb.glasgow-ky.com.<br>
                    151:   Escape character is '^]'.<br>
                    152:  <br>
                    153:   OpenBSD/mac68k (spanweb.glasgow-ky.com) (ttyp0)<br>
                    154: </code>
                    155: </blockquote>
                    156: <p>
                    157:
1.16      louis     158: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.38      louis     159: <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?/features/990927hack.htm">Hack this! Microsoft and its critics dispute software-security issues, but users make the final call</a>, Infoworld, Sept. 27, 1999<br>
                    160: <li><a href="http://www.cnn.com/TECH/computing/9909/28/ms.security.idg/index.html">Microsoft: Bad security, or bad press?</a>, CNN, Sept. 28, 1999
1.24      deraadt   161: </strong></font><p>
                    162:
                    163: A scathing look at the Microsoft "Insecure by Default" scheme quotes the
                    164: CDC as saying that "The most secure platform 'out of the box' is OpenBSD,
1.26      deraadt   165: because security is a focus on the project".  Contrast the Microsoft scheme
1.25      deraadt   166: with <a href=security.html#default>ours</a>.<p>
1.24      deraadt   167:
                    168: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.38      louis     169: <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/ctg183.htm">Open source has roots in the Net</a>, USA Today, Sept. 20, 1999
1.19      louis     170: </strong></font><p>
                    171:
                    172: Nice high profile mention of OpenBSD by Will Rodger:
                    173: "Yet backers say the speed and transparency with which open source
                    174: programmers compete to discover and then fix problems separates their
                    175: operations from traditional software shops. OpenBSD -- still another
                    176: open source operating system -- is often called the most secure
                    177: operating system in the world."<p>
                    178: <p>
                    179:
1.43      louis     180: <li><strong>
                    181: Even better than Linux, <a href="http://www.boston.com/globe/">Boston Globe</a><font color=#009000>, Sept 16, 1999
1.16      louis     182: </strong></font><p>
                    183:
                    184: Technology writer Simson L. Garfinkel confesses he prefers the BSDs better
                    185: than Linux and explains why. He writes a nice paragraph or two about OpenBSD
                    186: and its security and cryptography goals. However, reading this, you'd think
1.43      louis     187: all the developers were Canadian (hint: they're not). The article has moved to the archives, free registration required.<p>
1.16      louis     188: <p>
                    189:
1.1       deraadt   190: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.14      louis     191: <a href="http://www.idg.net/idg_frames/english/content.cgi?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww2.idg.com.au%2FCWT1997.nsf%2FHome%2Bpage%2F83CB1A288A3B3EB54A2567E5001FEF41%3FOpenDocument&return=%2fidg_frames%2fenglish%2ffeatures%2ehtml">Microsoft, Linux to become duopoly?</a>,
                    192: ComputerWorld Australia, Sept 8, 1999.</strong></font><p>
                    193:
                    194: Lead developer Theo de Raadt was a keynote speaker at the Australian Unix User
                    195: Group (AUUG) meeting in Melbourne.<p>
                    196: <p>
                    197:
                    198: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.21      louis     199: <a href="http://www.samag.com/archive/0809/feature.shtml">Maintaining
1.38      louis     200: Patch Levels with Open Source BSDs</a>, SysAdmin feature article, Sept. 1999
1.21      louis     201: </strong></font><p>
                    202:
1.23      louis     203: Michael Lucas explains the broad lines of the BSD development model and
                    204: how to keep *BSD systems up-to-date with CVS. The author takes most of the
                    205: examples from FreeBSD, but he takes the time to explain differences
                    206: between the three systems.  (Most of this is technology was originally
                    207: invented by the earliest OpenBSD developers, as described in a
1.22      deraadt   208: <a href=events.html#anoncvs_paper>paper presented at Usenix</a>).<p>
1.21      louis     209:
                    210: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.47      louis     211: <a href="http://www.opensourceit.com/tutorials/990901_openbsd.html">
                    212: My own private IRP</a>, open source IT tutorial, Sept. 1999
                    213: </strong></font><p>
                    214:
                    215: Sean Sosik-Hamor descibes how he built up his own Internet resource provider
                    216: (IRP) and web hosting business out of available hardware and freenix
                    217: software. He chose OpenBSD exclusively for his DMZ and describes the FTP
                    218: installation.
                    219: <p>
                    220:
                    221: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.17      deraadt   222: <a href="http://www.lti.on.ca/cw/archive/CW15-17/cw_wtemplate.cfm?filename=c1517n8.htm">
1.12      louis     223: A Secure and Open Society</a>,
1.38      louis     224: ComputerWorld Canada, Aug 27, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.12      louis     225:
                    226: The article starts off as a personal story about lead developer Theo de Raadt,
                    227: but if you read carefully, it does explain a lot about the origins and goals
                    228: of OpenBSD.<p>
                    229: <p>
                    230:
                    231: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.8       deraadt   232: <a href="http://www.computermags.com/CCP/Pub/Story/1,1080,715,00.html">
1.10      deraadt   233: 1999's Technically Excellent Canadians</a>,
1.38      louis     234: COMPUTERMAGS.COM, Aug 10, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.8       deraadt   235:
                    236: "CCW is very pleased to name our five Technically Excellent Canadians,
                    237: who are significantly impacting on technology both at home and
1.20      louis     238: abroad. Thanks to our readers for your involvement and nominations."
                    239: The publisher of Canadian Computer Wholesaler (August 1999) and
                    240: The Computer Paper (September 1999) presented this award
                    241: to Theo de Raadt for his part in OpenBSD (the sub-article is half
                    242: way down the page).
1.8       deraadt   243: <p>
                    244:
                    245: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.3       deraadt   246: <a href="http://www.nationalpost.com/financialpost.asp?f=990525/2636405&s2=canadianbusiness">
1.10      deraadt   247: Operating system designed to foil hackers</a>,
1.38      louis     248: National Post, May 25, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.3       deraadt   249:
1.20      louis     250: The Post's technology reporter David Akin interviews Theo de Raadt for
                    251: in a story that ran on the front page of the business section.
1.3       deraadt   252: <p>
                    253:
                    254: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.6       deraadt   255: <a href="http://www.msnbc.com/news/292376.asp">
1.20      louis     256: The Net's stealth operating system</a>, MSNBC, July 22, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.6       deraadt   257:
                    258: "The OpenBSD group, which did a line-by-line security audit of BSD
                    259: code, and now has what is widely regarded as the most secure OS
                    260: available."
                    261: <p>
                    262:
                    263: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.33      louis     264: <a href="http://www.data.com/issue/990607/ipsec.html">IPsec Tech Tutorial</a>,
                    265: Data Communications, June 1999</strong></font><p>
                    266:
                    267: "IPsec may be an open standard, but that's no guarantee that different
                    268: vendors' gear will work together. To assess interoperability, we put an even
                    269: dozen products through their paces." OpenBSD 2.4 and commercial IPsec
                    270: implementations were tested by an independent lab for interoperability
                    271: and ease in setting up tunneling gateways.
                    272: <p>
                    273:
                    274: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.39      louis     275: <a href="http://www.pioneerplanet.com/reprints/051799tech.htm">
                    276: OS Also-Rans: After Windows 98, Mac OS and Linux, what's left for your
                    277: Macintosh or Intel PC? Lots</a>, St.Paul-Minneapolis Pioneer-Planet, May 17 1999
                    278: </strong></font><p>
                    279:
                    280: Despite the terrible title, staff writer Julio Ojeda-Zapata gives fair
                    281: treatment to the alternatives.<p>
                    282:
                    283: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.23      louis     284: <a href="http://www.daemonnews.org/199905/open-japan.html">In Search of OpenBSD</a>, DaemonNews, May 1999</strong></font><p>
                    285:
                    286: Ejovi Nuwere in Japan: three days, three locations, one operating system.<p>
                    287:
                    288: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    289: <a href="">Safe and friendly read-only chroot jails for FTP and WWW</a>,
                    290: DaemonNews, May 1999</strong></font><p>
                    291:
                    292: "Ruffy" explains how to set up safe and friendly read-only FTP and WWW services
                    293: with OpenBSD's ftpd as an example.<p>
                    294:
                    295: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.2       deraadt   296: <a href="http://www.computerbits.com/archive/19990300/bsd.htm">
1.38      louis     297: Why to BSD in a Linux world</a>, March, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.2       deraadt   298:
                    299: Description of the OpenBSD development process, and arguments as to why
                    300: Linux probably cannot achieve the same level of security audit.
                    301: <p>
                    302:
1.7       deraadt   303: <a name=anzen1>
1.2       deraadt   304: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.11      ericj     305: <a href="http://www.anzen.com/research/research_perform.html">
1.20      louis     306: NFR Performance Testing</a>, report written by
1.38      louis     307: <a href="http://www.anzen.com">Anzen</a>. February, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   308:
                    309: This report compares the network monitoring performance of the
                    310: <a href="http://www.nfr.net">NFR (Network Flight Recorder)</a> package at
                    311: handling flat-out 100Mbit ethernet monitoring, running on OpenBSD, BSDI,
                    312: Linux, and Solaris.  OpenBSD comes out as a clear winner just for raw
                    313: performance; even before you consider the superior security of OpenBSD
                    314: which you probably would want for a network-monitoring station.
                    315: <p>
                    316:
                    317: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.15      louis     318: <a href="http://www.daemonnews.org/199902/samba.html">
                    319: DaemonNews: Serving NT filesystems from an OpenBSD server</a>
1.38      louis     320: February, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.15      louis     321:
                    322: A system administrator debunks the myth that you must use NT as a file server
                    323: when you run Windows clients. Squeezing performance out of vintage hardware and
                    324: adding in some scripts to automate the setup of new projects won management
                    325: over to OpenBSD.
                    326: <p>
                    327:
                    328: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
1.1       deraadt   329: <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayNew.pl?/security/990215sw.htm">
                    330: Security Watch, end of year Golden Guardian awards.</a>
1.38      louis     331: February, 1999</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   332:
                    333: "Finally, we'd be remiss in ignoring OpenBSD in any discussion of top
                    334: open-source security products. It registered high in our e-mail
                    335: survey, and we promise to take a more active look at it in future
                    336: columns."
                    337: <p>
                    338:
1.2       deraadt   339: <li><font color="#009000"><strong>
                    340: <a href="http://www.daemonnews.org/199811/security.html">
1.38      louis     341: OpenBSD and IPSec, leading the pack</a>, November, 1998
1.2       deraadt   342: </strong></font><p>
                    343:
                    344: A two-part article by Ejovi Nuwere focusing on OpenBSD's IPSec Development.
                    345: Part one is an introduction to OpenBSD's Photurisd and its current
                    346: Implementation, including a brief interview with
                    347: Photurisd creator Neils Provos.
1.1       deraadt   348: <p>
                    349:
                    350: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    351: <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/news/business/story/12035.html">
1.10      deraadt   352: Usenix coverage, Wired Magazine</a>, May 1, 1998</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   353:
                    354: Mention of OpenBSD with regards to our involvement in the
                    355: Freenix track held at Usenix in New Orleans.
                    356: <p>
                    357:
                    358: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    359: <a href="http://webserver.cpg.com/reviews/r1/3.4/index.html">
1.5       ian       360: WebServer Online</A>, reprinted in
                    361: <A href="http://sw.expert.com/R/WS4.JUN.98.pdf">
                    362: Server/Workstation Expert (formerly
1.38      louis     363: SunExpert Magazine)</a>, June 1998, page 81</strong></font><p>
1.5       ian       364:
                    365: A glowing four-page description of OpenBSD emphasizing its use
                    366: as a server and an OS that ships with security in the box
                    367: (the SunExpert version is in PDF but includes their own
                    368: graphic - a cross between Superman&#153; and the BSD Daemon, which
                    369: the WebServer version in HTML does not).
1.1       deraadt   370: <p>
                    371:
                    372: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    373: <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayArchive.pl?/98/28/o03-28.40d.htm">
                    374: Security Watch: Monthly Editorial.</a>
1.38      louis     375: July, 1998</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   376:
                    377: Points at our <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/security.html">security page</a>
                    378: calling it "OpenBSD's mantra".
                    379: <p>
                    380:
                    381: <li><font color=#009000><strong><a href="http://www.wired.com">
1.38      louis     382: Wired Magazine</a>, June 1998, page 96 (paper edition only)</strong></font><p>
1.18      deraadt   383: A half-page description of what OpenBSD is, with a strange picture
                    384: of project founder Theo de Raadt (Wired loves Photoshop).
1.1       deraadt   385: <p>
                    386:
1.38      louis     387: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    388: <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/5943.html">
                    389: Beyond HOPE coverage, Wired Magazine</a>, Aug 11, 1997</strong></font><p>
                    390:
                    391: Completely bogus (but quite amusing) description of what
                    392: OpenBSD is.
                    393: <p>
                    394:
1.17      deraadt   395: </dl>
                    396: <p>
1.1       deraadt   397:
1.27      deraadt   398: <hr>
1.45      philen    399: <h3><font color=#e00000>Swedish press coverage (in Swedish)</font></h3><p>
1.1       deraadt   400:
1.17      deraadt   401: <dl>
1.1       deraadt   402: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    403: <a href="http://www.datateknik.se/arkiv/98-20/28.html">
1.39      louis     404: Datateknik</a>, Nov 20, 1998</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   405:
                    406: An article on the swedish <a href="events.html#ipsec98">IPSec interop</a> event
                    407: mentions OpenBSD as one of the successful participants, and has a
                    408: mini-interview with OpenBSD developer Niklas Hallqvist.
                    409: <p>
                    410:
                    411: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    412: <a href="http://www.datateknik.se/arkiv/98-13/1.html">
1.10      deraadt   413: Datateknik</a>, Nov 13, 1998 and
1.1       deraadt   414: <a href="http://www.datateknik.se/arkiv/98-14/1.html">
1.39      louis     415: Datateknik</a>, Nov 14, 1998</strong></font><p>
1.1       deraadt   416:
1.20      louis     417: Two published letters talking about OpenBSD's role in MacOS X.  The first
                    418: one has some misconceptions which are corrected by the second which
1.1       deraadt   419: explains the licensing issues and points to our
                    420: <a href="policy.html">copyright policy</a> page.
                    421: <p>
                    422:
1.17      deraadt   423: </dl>
1.1       deraadt   424:
1.27      deraadt   425: <hr>
1.20      louis     426: <h3><font color=#e00000>Japan press coverage (in Japanese)</font></h3><p>
                    427:
                    428: <dl>
                    429:
                    430: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    431: <a href="http://www.ascii.co.jp/books/bsd/index.html">BSD Magazine</a>,
                    432: Sept. 28, 1999
                    433: </strong></font><p>
                    434:
                    435: ASCII Corporation is launching a Japanese language magazine that covers the
                    436: freenix BSDs, BSD/OS and related subjects. The magazine will also be
                    437: translating and reprinting articles from
                    438: <a href="http://www.daemonnews.org/">Daemon News</a>, the BSD ezine.
                    439: <p>
                    440:
                    441: </dl>
                    442:
1.50      louis     443: <hr>
                    444: <h3><font color=#e00000>Germany press coverage (in German)</font></h3><p>
                    445: <dl>
                    446:
                    447: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
                    448: <A href="http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/odi-02.12.99-000/">
                    449: OpenBSD 2.6 ist da</a>, heise online newsticker, December 2, 1999
                    450: </strong></font><p>
                    451:
                    452: Brief summary of the OpenBSD 2.6 press release.
                    453: <p>
                    454: </dl>
                    455:
1.20      louis     456:
1.1       deraadt   457: <hr>
1.56    ! deraadt   458: <h3><font color=#e00000>Russian press coverage (in Russian)</font></h3><p>
        !           459: <dl>
        !           460:
        !           461: <li><font color=#009000><strong>
        !           462: Byte Magazine, Russia,
        !           463: November/December 1999 issue.
        !           464: </strong></font><p>
        !           465:
        !           466: A review of OpenBSD 2.5.
        !           467: <p>
        !           468:
        !           469: <p>
        !           470: </dl>
        !           471:
        !           472: <hr>
1.1       deraadt   473: <a href="index.html"><img height=24 width=24 src=back.gif border=0 alt=OpenBSD></a>
                    474: <a href=mailto:www@openbsd.org>www@openbsd.org</a>
1.56    ! deraadt   475: <br><small>$OpenBSD: press.html,v 1.55 2000/01/19 00:37:21 deraadt Exp $</small>
1.1       deraadt   476:
                    477: </body>
                    478: </html>