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36 found.

Netbook Nightmare: My Experience With the Sylvania g Netbook

  • O'Reilly Broadcast; By Caitlyn Martin (Posted by caitlyn on Feb 13, 2009 7:39 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux, Ubuntu
I would have rated the hardware in this unit highly if it hadn't failed on me on two consecutive systems. I understand that two units is hardly a scientific sample and that I may just have had really bad luck. Unfortunately the software proved to be a disaster as well.

LVM with Debian 5 “Lenny”

  • EasyLinuxCDs.com; By Mike Weber (Posted by aweber on Feb 13, 2009 6:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
The process of installing Logical Volume Management on install…is well…a task that can present issues for most users. So I have tried to lay out a screen shot and description of this process on Debian 5 “Lenny” because many people will want to use LVM once they understand the value and the process.

Lenny's Looking for Love

Valentines Day. That one day a year when geeks everywhere find themselves whisked away from their terminals for a night filled with flowers, chocolate, and — dare we say it? — romance. This year, however, significant others of the Debian set may find it more difficult to drag their beloved beyond the box, as, barring a lovers quarrel, the Debian community and the long-awaited Debian 5, better known as Lenny, will finally tie the knot.

New software would play any videogame ever created

Software that can be used to play almost any computer game in history is to be developed as part of a European attempt to preserve digital cultural heritage. The European Union has funded a €4.02 million (£3.6m, $5.2m) project dubbed KEEP, for Keeping Emulation Environments Portable, which will develop new ways to archive digital objects endangered by the relentless march of technology. As well as games, it will work to ensure that other kinds of files and software remain accessible long after the demise of the hardware and software for which they were originally intended.

Party Like It's 1234567890!

Planned celebrations will spontaneously erupt all over the globe as computer geeks celebrate when UNIX time hits 1234567890! Today! On Friday the 13th! The day before Valentine's Day!

JBoss: Bigger Than Red Hat's Linux Business?

At some point in the not-so-distant future, Red Hat's JBoss middleware business will be larger than Red Hat's Linux business. Here's why, reports The VAR Guy.

The Free Software Foundation (FSF), Apple, Activism and DRM. Lessons to be learned?

  • Free Software Magazine; By Gary Richmond (Posted by scrubs on Feb 13, 2009 2:59 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community
Let me issue a disclaimer right off. Before I ever typed my first GNU/Linux command in a terminal the Free Software Foundation was fighting the good fight for free software and all the issues surrounding individual freedom and privacy both on and offline. All of us owe it a debt of gratitude for the work is has done and continues to do on behalf of the principles of a free society and free computing. It’s commitment to these things is unswerving but one of the down sides of this unremitting focus is the danger of a loss of perspective on certain campaigning issues. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine.

Open-Xchange Nears 10 Million Paid Users

Open-Xchange, which positions itself as an open source alternative to Microsoft Exchange, has a message for solutions providers: Yes, you can make money by blending open source applications with software as a service (SaaS). In fact, Open-Xchange is nearing 10 million paid users, and the company has a few surprises in store for 2009. Here’s the scoop.

Here’s to reaching the “Games for Linux” tipping point

  • A Division by Zer0; By Db0 (Posted by db0 on Feb 13, 2009 1:38 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
World of Goo has finally been ported to Linux. We have now a chance to show that this was a worthwhile endeavour and hopefully show to other Publishers that there is an incentive to do the same.

The 1,234,567,890th second approacheth

As most any user can tell you, Linux systems think of time in terms of the number of seconds, not counting leap seconds, since the beginning of the UNIX epoch: Jan. 1, 1970. For most readers, that number will reach 1,234,567,890 this Fri. the 13th. Psyche!

Sun pitches JavaFX Mobile into RIA squabble

Sun Microsystems has upped its ante in the rich internet application battle for mobile mind-share, just as Microsoft and Adobe Systems traded shots at each other. On Thursday, the systems and server company released a version of JavaFX for mobile devices here, branded JavaFX Mobile by marketing types but known to coders as JavaFX 1.1.

Software libre! Cuba develops own free Linux called 'Nova'

Cuba released its own distribution of the free Linux operating system this week, as the communist island seeks to wean its citizens and institutions from what it says is insecure, capitalist-produced Microsoft Corp. software, according to a report. The Reuters news service reported Wednesday that the new version is called Nova, and was introduced at a technical conference in Havana. Based on a Linux variant called Gentoo that is popular with highly technical users, Nova has been in development since 2007, according to the Associated Press, after Free Software guru Richard Stallman visited the island and persuaded government officials to move off Windows.

Ubuntu Users: Focused on the Wrong Market?

  • WorksWithU.com; By Joe Panettieri (Posted by thevarguy2 on Feb 13, 2009 11:33 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Ubuntu
Sometimes I don’t see eye to eye with the Ubuntu user community. I think Ubuntu Server Edition should be Canonical’s top priority for 2009. But only 8 percent of Ubuntu users agree with me, according to a reader poll on WorksWithU, the independent guide to Ubuntu. Here’s why I’m right and 92 percent of Ubuntu users are wrong. Take a look.

The Buzztard Project, Part 1

In November 2008 the Buzztard project maintainers announced the public release of version 0.4.0 of their flagship application. This version of Buzztard brings new features and performance enhancements, including expanded support for original Buzz songs and machines and an impressive make-over of its GUI.

Microsoft to Open Stores, Hires Retail Hand

Microsoft Corp. said it hired a former Wal-Mart Stores Inc. executive to help the company open its own retail stores, a strategy shift that borrows from the playbook of rival Apple Inc. The Redmond, Wash., company said it hired David Porter, most recently the head of world-wide product distribution at DreamWorks Animation SKG, as corporate vice president of retail stores for Microsoft. In a statement, Microsoft said the first priority of Mr. Porter, who is also a 25-year veteran of Wal-Mart, will be to define where to place the Microsoft stores and when to open them. A Microsoft spokesman said the company's current plans are for a "small number" of stores.

[Oh my, this is going to be good. Popcorn anyone? - Scott]

Symbian Foundation in anti-Android recruit drive

The Symbian Foundation is limbering up to face the Open Handset Alliance next week, announcing a raft of new members to take on the Android threat, while LiMo and Access Linux lurk nearby looking for scraps. Realizing that the battle of operating systems is all about applications, Symbian has announced a load of new members including MySpace, Bank of America, and Omron Software - though most of the new members have something to gain for their $1,500 membership fee and there's a remarkable degree of infidelity with companies betting each way.

How to set up an auto-mounted keyfile based luks partition for your home directory

  • TechieM2's Blog; By Mark D. Montgomery II (Posted by techiem2 on Feb 13, 2009 8:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
Anyone that carries confidential data around on their laptop has probably considered encryption at some point or other. However, the typical methods seem to generally entail either manual mounting of your encrypted volume (a pain) or volumes that automount when you login based on your login information (not exactly secure as anyone who forces you to login will have access).

I Give Up. Windows Is Proof That People Are Too Stupid To Use Computers.

We need to give up the notion that such computer users can be rescued by Linux-- we don't WANT them using Linux. "It is impossible to make anything foolproof, because fools are ingenious".

The move to Linux, stymied by hardware...the server side...

If you thought installing Linux on a laptop was a fun discussion, have I got a new one for you. This comes straight out of the really, it should not be this hard category…the server side.

10 Reasons to Use Linux-Based Virtualization

  • DaniWeb; By Ken Hess (Posted by khess on Feb 13, 2009 6:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Do you need 10 reasons to use Linux-based virtualization? Linux is the chosen virtualization platform for Cloud vendors, virtualization software companies and the largest IT companies in the world. What do they know that you don't?

First the Standards, then the Solution

  • ConsortiumInfo.org Standards Blog; By Andy Updegrove (Posted by Andy_Updegrove on Feb 13, 2009 5:39 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
As these words are being written, the US Congress is debating the final terms of a stimulus bill that will result in the expenditure of almost $800 billion of public funds on a wide array of initiatives intended to address an equally challenging goal: resurrecting an economy that seems inexorably headed towards its worst performance since the Great Depression. Whether that fortune gets spent wisely or not will depend a lot on open source, and open standards.

When Worlds Collide: Combining GPL and Proprietary Software

Bruce Perens reports that Linux is a natural for embedded systems. That's why it's popping up in more cell phones, often without the customer even realizing it's there. But cell phone manufacturers, and the broader sector of embedded systems, must cope with the problem of how to combine the GPL Linux kernel, and software that isn't Open Source. How does one do that legally?

S3 Graphics Still Talks Up Linux Support, But Fails

  • Phoronix; By Michael Larabel (Posted by phoronix on Feb 13, 2009 4:28 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
S3 Graphics has announced this afternoon the release of the Chrome 540 GTX, which they advertise as "The World's Most Connected Hi-Def Card" with its HDMI, DisplayPort, and DVI connections. The Chrome 540 GTX runs at 850MHz, uses GDDR3 memory, and shares other features to the Chrome 530 GT that was introduced in the fourth quarter of 2008. In the press release announcing the S3 Graphics Chrome 540 GTX they once again mention Linux support... But is there any Linux support?

PV-Grub & managing openSUSE 11.1 PV DomU (via VFB) at Xen-Unstable Dom0 with 2.6.29-rc3...

  • Xen Virtualization on Linux and Solaris; By Boris Derzhavets (Posted by dba477 on Feb 13, 2009 3:40 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
This posting is targeting install stubdom binaries at Xen-Unstable Dom0 with pv_ops enabled kernel and testing pv-grub and virtual frame buffer functionality in mentioned environment. Setup VNC at Dom0 exactly as on Ubuntu Intrepid Server with Ubuntu Desktop installed via “tasksel” to manage Dom0 remotely via Gnome Desktop interface.

A Response to HIMSS "Call to Action" on the American Recovery and Response Act of 2009

Jeff Soble, Neil Cowles, and Edmund Billings have a response reproduced after the break to HIMSS "Call to Action". This is a sobering look at the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 which looks poised to result in the demise of real competition, medical data in the hands of a cartel or monopoly for a few wealthy corporations, loss of privacy and the loss of the physician as the traditional custodian of medical data.

Cuba rolls its own Linux cigar

  • InternetNews.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by red5 on Feb 13, 2009 2:41 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
From the 'what? Linux isn't American??' files: Reuters has an interesting story today titled, "Cuba launches own Linux variant to counter U.S." The gist of the story is that Cuba is now going to produce their own Linux distro called 'Nova' in some sort of attempt to not have to use American software. Nonsense.

Open-Xchange Launches Free Webmail Promotion

Company Offers Partners E-mail, Calendaring and Contact Infrastructure. Qualifying partners such as web hosting providers, telcos, ISPs, as well as academic institutions and non-profit organizations can take advantage of a fully-maintained webmail module, which includes installation and configuration support of the Open-Xchange software.

GNOME Shell Status - 2009-02-09

GNOME-Shell is an experimental new desktop environment for GNOME bringing together a lot of new user interface ideas and new technologies in hopes of bringing desktop users something more intuitive.

Mandriva Linux 2009 Spring - Beta release available

  • The Official Mandriva Blog (Posted by Anne on Feb 13, 2009 1:15 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Mandriva
The beta release of Mandriva Linux 2009 Spring (code name Margaux) is now available. This beta version provides some updates on major desktop components of the distribution, including KDE 4.2.0, GNOME 2.25.90, Xfce 4.6 RC1, X.org server 1.5, OpenOffice.Org 3.0.1, qt 4.5.0 (RC1)

WFTL Bytes for Feb 11, 2009

This is WFTL Bytes!, your occasiodaily FOSS and Linux news show for Wednesday, February 11, 2009, with your host, Marcel Gagné. This is episode 50. On today's newscast . . . we with Linux Journal a musical happy birthday, look at open source financial myths, bundle Firefox with some bad ideas, examine Microsoft's open source software, and try to find that same Microsoft a spy.

Windows and Linux on the Same Laptop? You Bettcha!

The EE Times reports this week that Dell has released a hybrid laptop running both Linux and Windows clearly aimed at business travellers. Linux for quick tasks and Windows for more intensive ones, but will such a machine really fly in the business world?

Moonlight 1.0 goes live

Moonlight, the open source implementation of Silverlight for Unix systems has officially reached its 1.0 level. We are feature complete, we pass all the Microsoft regression test suites and we shipped support for Microsoft's Media Pack for x86 and x86-64 architectures.

JavaFX goes mobile

Sun Microsystems has released version 1.1 of their rich internet technology JavaFX, which now includes the JavaFX Mobile runtime component to better support mobile devices. The runtime also includes a Software Development Kit (SDK) for developing JavaFX mobile applications. Sun will demonstrate the technology next week in Barcelona at the Mobile World Congress. Companies, including Sony Ericsson, LG, Orange and Sprint have already confirmed their support for the technology.

Taxonomy and Thesauri in Drupal 6

  • packtpub.com; By David Mercer (Posted by sanjivl on Feb 12, 2009 9:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial

In this article we will see how Taxonomy makes Drupal's classification system so powerful. The method of categorizing content in Drupal makes it one of the most sophisticated content management systems around. Take the time to master working with taxonomy in Drupal, because not only will this help you to work out how to manage content better, but it will also really set your site apart from others because of the flexible and intuitive manner in which the content is organized. These attributes allow you to manage a site of pretty much any size imaginable (just in case what you are working on is "the next big thing").

BleachBit - Cleans unnecessary files to free disk space and maintain privacy

BleachBit deletes unnecessary files to free valuable disk space, maintain privacy, and remove junk. Rid your system of old clutter including cache, temporary files, cookies, and broken shortcuts. Designed for Linux systems, it wipes clean Bash, Beagle, Epiphany, Firefox, Flash, Java, KDE, OpenOffice.org, Opera, RealPlayer, rpmbuild, VIM, XChat, and more.

Virtualization With Xen 3.3.1 On Debian Etch

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Feb 12, 2009 8:04 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
This tutorial provides step-by-step instructions on how to install Xen 3.3.1 on a Debian Etch (4.0) system. Xen lets you create guest operating systems (*nix operating systems like Linux and FreeBSD), so called "virtual machines" or domUs, under a host operating system (dom0). Using Xen you can separate your applications into different virtual machines that are totally independent from each other (e.g. a virtual machine for a mail server, a virtual machine for a high-traffic web site, another virtual machine that serves your customers' web sites, a virtual machine for DNS, etc.), but still use the same hardware.