Showing headlines posted by SamShazaam

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Dell Compromises Customers’ Security with Pre-Installed Rootkit

Dell has compromised their customers’ security by installing rootkits in their own computers.The alarm was sounded first — as usual — on Reddit.

How Intel's Compute Stick Is Once Again Redefining the PC

Intel's Compute Stick is one of the most interesting new computer designs to arrive on the market. The device is little more than an HDMI dongle, like Google's Chromecast or Amazon's Fire TV Stick, but unlike those products, which offer streaming services, the Compute Stick is a self-contained PC.

Best Linux music player: 5 reviewed and rated

  • TechRadar; By Andrew Gregory (Posted by SamShazaam on Jun 7, 2011 3:38 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
Most desktop distros include at least one music player, which many people won't even think about changing. But with Ubuntu 11.04 dropping its old Rhythmbox application and opting instead for Banshee, our curiosity was piqued: which are the best music players for Linux?

Raising Caine

  • Linux Pro Magazine; By Hans-Peter Merkel and Markus Feilner (Posted by SamShazaam on Dec 29, 2010 1:32 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux, Ubuntu
Caine is a Linux distribution based on Ubuntu 10.04 for forensic scientists and security-conscious administrators. Poised to do battle against IT ne’er-do-wells, Caine has a comprehensive selection of software, a user-friendly GUI, and responsive support.

A fast guide to system rescue using open tools

Technology is wonderful, until it stops working as expected. Computers have a nasty habit of developing glitches or just going belly up altogether at the worst possible times. There's nothing that can prevent that, but a couple of open source tools can help mitigate disaster and maybe even save the day altogether. With Clonezilla you can create a perfect copy of your system. Using the System Rescue CD, you'll have all the tools you need to recover from many system crashes.

Sabayon Linux x86/x86-64 5.2 GNOME and KDE

The best, refined blend of GNU/Linux, coming with bleeding edge edges is eventually here! Say hello to Sabayon Five-point-Twoh, available in both GNOME and KDE editions! Dedicated to those who like cutting edge stability, out of the box experience, outstanding Desktop performance, clean and beauty.

The biggest threat to Microsoft isn't Apple or Linux, it's falling hardware prices

Two interesting tidbits of news about Microsoft today. First is that the company is to make it legal to rent both Windows and Office. The second is an analysis on how slates will affect the Redmond giant’s bottom line. Both are interesting reading, but both also are indications of the problems that Microsoft is likely to encounter over the coming years.

Dell: Linux v Windows netbook returns a 'non-issue'

Dell has delivered a dose of reality for both Microsoft and the Linux community on the subject of netbooks. Speaking at OpenSource World, a Dell executive deflated Microsoft's enthusiasm for making a case out of the number of Linux netbooks returned by unhappy customers. Todd Finch, Dell senior product marketing manager, said the number of Linux returns are approximately the same as those for Windows netbooks. He categorized the matter of returns as a "non-issue".

Sabayon Linux x86/x86-64 4.2 KDE

Dedicated to those who like order over chaos, to those who like simplicity over complexity, to those who think that less is more, to those that just want more for less. Sabayon 4.2 will catch you: just the best of the Out-Of-The-Box, KDE 4.2.4, multimedia applications and nothing more than what you need for your daily tasks, but what about your free time?

KDE Community Improves Desktop with KDE 4.2.4

KDE Community Ships Fourth Translation and Service Release of the 4.2 Free Desktop, Containing Numerous Bugfixes, Performance Improvements and Translation Updates

KOffice 2.0.0 tagged for release

After nearly two years in the making, the KOffice project will release version 2.0.0 of if its cross-platform office suite of the same name this week, adding features like scripting support and a new shape library.

Sabayon Linux 4.1 KDE: Released

On the behalf of the Sabayon Linux team, we are happy to announce the immediate availability of Sabayon Linux 4.1 KDE, dedicated to Abruzzo's earthquake victims.

FBI issues warning over VoIP scammers hijacking Asterisk

The FBI is advising users of the open source VoIP package Asterisk to upgrade to the latest version, but has so far provided very little evidence on what vulnerability it has detected.

3 out of 10 Asus PCs run desktop Linux

  • ComputerWorld; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by SamShazaam on Nov 4, 2008 12:46 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Linux
I don't get it. Why in the world are people reporting that seven out of ten Asus PCs is news. Hello. Wake up call. Nine in ten PCs, counting Macs as PCs, are already running Windows. The news, the real news, is that three out of ten Asus PCs are being sold with Linux.

Digium Reinvents AsteriskNOW

When Asterisk sponsor Digium, Inc. released AsteriskNOW, early in January 2007, the stated aim was to provide an open-source telephony "appliance." Not appliance as in hardware/software combo, but appliance as in 'all the software you need to get a complete telephony application up and running'—even if you don't know a lot about Linux administration. AsteriskNOW contained all necessary Linux components "built in" (and nothing that was not needed) and came with AsteriskGUI, a simple graphical admin module. The lean, mean offering has been very successful by any standard.

Would The Internet Exist Without Linux?

The internet as we know it today predominantly runs on Linux. There’s an extremely high probability that the internet connection you’re using right now is connected thru a Linux server - and routed thru many other Linux servers along the way.

Battle of the Thumb Drive Linux Systems

  • Lifehacker; By Kevin Purdy (Posted by SamShazaam on Oct 28, 2008 7:50 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
These days, it only takes an increasingly-cheap USB thumb drive and a program like UNetbootin to create a portable Linux desktop you can run on any computer that can boot from a USB port. But check out the list of distributions UNetbootin can download and install—it's huge, and the names don't tell you much about which distro is best for on-the-go computing. Today we're detailing four no-install distributions—Damn Small Linux, Puppy Linux, Xubuntu, and Fedora—and helping you decide which might work for that spare thumb drive you've got lying around, or as just a part of your multi-gig monster stick. Read on for a four-way faceoff of bootable Linux systems.

A New Puppy Is Born

Although the Productivity Sauce blog is all about, well, productivity, I'm willing to make an exception and mention the newly released Puppy Linux 4.1. I've been using this lightweight Linux distro on my ASUS Eee PC 701 for quite some time, and it helped me to be productive wherever I went.

Introduction to Tomato Firmware

  • Wi-Fi Planet; By Aaron Weiss (Posted by SamShazaam on Oct 3, 2008 12:51 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In the annals of computer software with bizarre and seemingly random names, "Tomato" is probably one of the less weird examples as these things go. But whether you say tomay-toe or tomah-toe, this one is neither a fruit nor a vegetable—it is a firmware for wireless routers, including the popular WRT54G family.

Theodore Tso: How the LSB Helps You Behind the Scenes

This is James Turner with O'Reilly Media; I'm talking today with Theodore Tso, who is the Chief Platform Strategist at the Linux Foundation.

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