Showing headlines posted by bob

« Previous ( 1 ... 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 ... 1154 ) Next »

GnuCash 2.4.0 Accounting Software Released

Besides gaming being one of the last strongholds for Microsoft Windows users from switching over to Linux (though this is beginning to change), accounting software is an area that is even in worse shape under Linux -- free software or not -- aside from the available web-based accounting solutions. GnuCash is one of the Linux desktop accounting packages for small businesses, but it's not the greatest; I am still an Intuit customer for their superior financial products. GnuCash 2.4.0 was released yesterday and sadly it really doesn't change the situation at all...

Allegations of OpenBSD Backdoors May be True

  • Linux Journal; By Susan Linton (Posted by bob on Dec 23, 2010 3:16 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
It was just last week that Theo de Raadt, OpenBSD founder and developer, posted an email that claimed the Federal Bureau of Investigations paid OpenBSD developers to leave backdoors in its IPSEC network security stack. Since then early audits have found some questionable code, contributors denied any wrongdoing, and the original source reaffirmed his allegations.

Tutorial: Editing Batches of Photos Easily on Linux

  • LinuxPlanet (Posted by bob on Dec 23, 2010 2:19 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Akkana Peck introduces David's Batch Processor, a Gimp plugin that makes editing big batches of photos a breeze. Resize them for the Web, make them lighter or darker, crop, rotate-- DBP does it all.

Embedded GPUs On Linux Remain A Great Big Mess

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Dec 23, 2010 1:22 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
For anyone that happens to be on holiday this week (or just have excess time otherwise), there is another lively and polarized discussion that's been taking place for the past several days on the DRI mailing list. What does it involve if it's not about developer disagreements amongst themselves? Embedded GPU driver support on Linux, of course. This mailing list thread just reaffirms how the situation is a great big mess...

Mozilla lands fresh Firefox 4 beta on Android, Maemo

Spit and polish desktop beta goes live Mozilla has released a new Firefox 4 beta for Android and Maemo, hot on the heels on its latest desktop beta.…

News: 2010 Was a Big Linux Year

2010 was a big year for enterprise Linux releases and the Linux kernel as the business world grows ever-more reliant on Linux.

Oracle VM VirtualBox 4.0 Has Arrived

Oracle's VM VirtualBox virtualization software just went into beta two weeks ago, but since then they have put out four beta releases. Now though Oracle is already ready to announce the official release of VM VirtualBox 4.0...

Systemd Test Day on Tuesday 2010/09/07

  • Fedora QA; By Adam Williamson (Posted by bob on Sep 6, 2010 3:16 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Fedora
It’s test day time again, folks, and this one’s a biggie! You may have read about the brand new initialization system, systemd, written by Lennart Poettering. At the moment, we’re planning to use it as the default initialization system for Fedora 14. Obviously, this is a bold step with a fairly new piece of code.

Interview with Richard Stallman

Richard Stallman answers the top 25 questions from reddit readers.

A fascinating interview ...

GNOME 3.0 Delayed To March 2011

  • Phoronix; By Michael Larabel (Posted by bob on Jul 28, 2010 6:40 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: GNOME
Two years ago at GUADEC, the annual developer's conference for GNOME, it was announced that GNOME 2.30 would be released as GNOME 3.0. With GNOME's long-standing tradition of putting out major updates every six months, this put the GNOME 3.0 release to be in March of 2010. Last November it was then decided to delay GNOME 3.0 to September of 2010 to give developers more time to prepare on this first major overhaul to the GNOME desktop in years. It's just been announced though from this year's GUADEC conference happening this week that GNOME 3.0 will now not be released until March of 2011.

AMD Ups The Workstation Ante With A New FirePro Driver

Whether you are an owner of an ATI FirePro V3800 that retails for just over $100 USD, the proud owner of an ATI FirePro V8800 that goes for over $1,300 USD, or any of the FirePro products in-between, you will want to update your graphics driver when AMD puts out their next stable software update. Back in March AMD put out an amazing FirePro Linux driver that increased the performance of their workstation graphics cards already on the market (and the other Evergreen-based workstation cards that entered the market soon after) by an astonishing amount. Our independent tests of this proprietary Linux driver update found that the performance in some workstation applications had increased by up to 59% by simply installing this updated driver while other OpenGL tests had just improved rather modestly with 20%+ gains. AMD though is preparing to release another driver update for Microsoft Windows and Linux that ups their workstation graphics performance even more! We have run some tests of this new beta driver against their older driver with both their low-end and ultra-high-end FirePro products and have found the improvements again to be astonishing.

Cluster In The Clouds

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by bob on Jul 28, 2010 11:14 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
The new Amazon EC2 Cluster Compute Instance may be a game changer in HPC

India's $35 PC is the Future of Computing

  • PCWorld; By Tony Bradley (Posted by bob on Jul 23, 2010 2:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: OLPC
The government of India has unveiled a prototype of a touchscreen, tablet computer which it expects to sell for $35 initially... The Indian prototype is impressive--especially at a $35 price point. The device runs on a variation of Linux.

Details of the first-ever control system malware

The security world is aflutter over new malware that has been spreading via USB devices and is programmed to steal data from systems running specific software used in utilities and industrial manufacturing plants.

There are a lot of moving parts to this story so we've decided to break them down and tell you what is happening and how it impacts you.

DeVeDe 3.16.8, create DVDs from video files

  • Linux Journal (Posted by bob on Jul 19, 2010 2:10 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
DeVeDe is an application that converts various video file formats into a disc that can be played in a DVD player. Other applications and tool chains can be coaxed into doing this but DeVeDe has the advantage of being a dedicated utility that has been designed for a single function.

The VDrift Racing Game Continues Speeding Up

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 19, 2010 12:57 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
At the end of last month the VDrift project did their first snapshot release in more than a year for this open-source drift racing game that's supported on Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X operating systems. The VDrift 2010-06-30 snapshot incorporates a great deal of changes, among which are a rewritten physics engine and a new deferred rendering engine that brings a great deal of visual improvements to this free software game. In this article are some screenshots on this OpenGL racing game and more of the new work found within this release.

NVIDIA's Oldest Legacy Driver Will Not Gain New Support

A few days back there was the release of two updated NVIDIA legacy drivers for Linux, but only their newest legacy driver (they have three different legacy drivers at present) gained support for X.Org Server 1.8. This support though is needed for the older NVIDIA drivers to operate on newer Linux distributions like Fedora 13 and openSUSE 11.3. On this Sunday evening we have now confirmation from NVIDIA that they have no plans on providing xorg-server 1.8 support for their oldest legacy driver...

Dirk Hohndel at Akademy

At Akademy in Tampere we interviewed Dirk Hohndel, Chief Linux and Open Source Technologist (we would call him 'dude') at Intel. He was present representing Intel and checking out what the KDE community is up to. As he sacrificed spending the 4th of July with his family for this, we were anxious to talk to him. read more

Linux wins the SCO vs Novell case

The case began in 2004 over a transfer agreement made in 1995. And finally, thanks to Groklaw, its volunteers and Pamela Jones, whose tireless efforts to follow and explain the twists and turns of this case showed what an obsessive compulsive with a blog can do and helped make the case understandable for those of us happy enough not to be lawyers. - John Oates, The Register

Ubuntu 10.04 is Released

  • LXer (Posted by bob on Apr 29, 2010 1:46 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Ubuntu
Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Lucid Lynx is released.

« Previous ( 1 ... 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 ... 1154 ) Next »