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Windows Vista is now officially dead. And good riddance

Support ended on Tuesday and Microsoft's not offering even a single strand of safety net Farewell, Windows Vista, we hardly knew ye. But as of now* you're out of support and even-more-unloved than was previously the case.…

Top 10 and editors picks: March review

Opensource.com brought in 666,696 unique visitors who generated 1,115,124 page views in March, our sixth consecutive month with more than 1,000,000 page views. We published 90 articles in March, including 12 that were a part of our Raspberry Pi series, which is always one of our reader favorites.

Mozilla Awards $365,000 to Open Source Projects as part of MOSS

At Mozilla we were born out of, and remain a part of, the open source and free software movement. Through the Mozilla Open Source Support (MOSS) program, we recognize, celebrate, and support open source projects that contribute to our work and to the health of the Internet...

How Googles Borg Inspired the Modern Datacenter

  • Linux.com; By Carla Schroder (Posted by bob on Apr 12, 2017 2:08 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
In part one of this series, What Is Kubernetes?, and in part two, Why Choose Kubernetes to Manage Containerized Applications?, we learned what Kubernetes does, its architecture, and how it compares to similar container orchestrators. Now we'll learn how Kubernetes was descended from the secret Google Borg project.

Windows 10 Creators Update general rollout begins with a privacy dialogue

Review your privacy settings, or no update for you Microsoft's rollout of Windows 10 Creators Update has begun, complete with a privacy dialogue box shown by default to all users.…

Simple Server Hardening, Part II

In my last article, I talked about the classic, complicated approach to server hardening you typically will find in many hardening documents and countered it with some specific, simple hardening steps that are much more effective and take a only few minutes.

How to program games with the LÖVE gaming engine on the Raspberry Pi

The Raspberry Pi is famous for introducing kids to open source software and programming. The Pi is an affordable, practical introduction to professional-grade computing, disguised as hackable fun. read more

Trivial Transfers with TFTP, Part 3: Usage

  • Linux.com; By Chris Binnie (Posted by bob on Apr 11, 2017 7:00 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
In this final article in our TFTP series, we take a closer look at usage and moving things around.

Open hacker board takes aim at RPi 3

The $30 Orange Pi Prime combines a quad -A53 Allwinner H5 SoC with 2GB RAM, wireless, MIPI-CSI, GbE, and a 40-pin expansion header. Another Orange Pi has shaken loose from Shenzhen Xunlong’s highly productive Orange Pi tree in the form of an Orange Pi Prime that matches up nicely with the Raspberry Pi 3. There […]

What to do when your open source hobby becomes a project

Many software developers have their own side projects, which are often open source projects. When those open source hobbies grow too big, how do developers manage them? All open business and projects face this problem: If they grow too big, more members are necessary for carrying the collective load. Their strategies for scaling are important. One popular open source community recently faced this problem. And the way that community surmounted it teaches us something about the art of scaling an open organization. read more

Python vs. Ruby: Which is best for web development?

Python and Ruby are among some of the most popular programming languages for developing websites, web-based apps, and web services. In many ways, the two languages have a lot in common. Visually they are quite similar, and both provide programmers with high-level, object-oriented coding, an interactive shell, standard libraries, and persistence support. However, Python and Ruby are worlds apart in their approach to solving problems because their syntax and philosophies vary greatly, primarily because of their respective histories. read more

ESP32 dev board ships with multiple IoT kit options

The $12, open source “Hornbill” dev board runs FreeRTOS on an ESP32 wireless module, and is available in several Hornbill kits. A Bangalore, India based startup has successfully funded its ESP32-based, IoT-oriented “Hornbill” boards and dev kits on Crowd Supply.

Mark Shuttleworth says some free software folk are 'deeply anti-social' and 'love to hate'

Compares Mir chat to 'irrational' gun control or climate change debates, so that Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth has labelled some members of the free software community habitual, hateful and reflexive contrarians.…

New Survey: Cloud Providers in Open Source

Some of today’s most dynamic and innovative free and open source software (FOSS) projects boast significant investment and involvement by well-known cloud service and solution providers. We are launching a survey to better understand the perception of these solution providers by people engaging in open source communities.

Best practices and basic evaluation benchmarks: IBM Power System S822LC for high-performance computing (HPC)

  • IBM developerWorks : Linux (Posted by bob on Apr 10, 2017 10:59 PM EDT)
  • Groups: IBM, Linux; Story Type: News Story
This article is a quick reference guide for IBM Power System S822LC for high-performance computing (HPC) system users to set processor and GPU configuration to achieve best performance for GPU accelerated applications. Before running an application, users need to make sure that the system is performing to the best in terms of processor frequency and memory bandwidth, GPU compute capacity, and memory bandwidth.

WileyFox disentangles itself from Cyanogen

  • The Register (Posted by bob on Apr 10, 2017 9:33 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
CyanogenNodSoMuch WileyFox is rowing its users away from the wreckage of the Cyanogen disaster, with some help from Ricardo Cerqueira, Cyanogen Inc’s former director of engineering.…

How Googles Borg Inspired the Modern Datacenter

  • Linux.com; By Carla Schroder (Posted by bob on Apr 10, 2017 8:07 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
In part one of this series, What Is Kubernetes?, and in part two, Why Choose Kubernetes to Manage Containerized Applications?, we learned what Kubernetes does, its architecture, and how it compares to similar container orchestrators. Now we'll learn how Kubernetes was descended from the secret Google Borg project.

How the open source model will soar above the rest

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 10, 2017 3:50 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Defining a project is more than just discussing the results of the deliverable. For a project manager, this definition is about learning how to balance a series of interrelated elements. When it comes to the process of creation, the project manager has to manage the dependencies and the project's critical chain. The project manager also has to communicate effectively with the various stakeholders' personalities and the dynamic differences between Waterfall and Agile development methods. read more

How to install Percona XtraDB Cluster for MySQL on Debian 8

In this article, I will show you how to configure a MySQL database cluster with three nodes in a multi-master replication. Multi-master replication allows writing of records in each node, so if a node will fail, we can work on the other as if nothing happened. This tutorial describes how to install and configure three Percona XtraDB Cluster nodes on Debian 8 servers, we will be using the packages from the Percona repositories.

Try Tilix — a new terminal emulator in Fedora

Fedora users are spoilt for choice when it comes to terminal emulators. From the default gnome-terminal, to xterm, konsole, terminator, or tilda, there is certain to be a terminal emulator that suits your workflow. However, in Fedora 26, there is... Continue Reading →

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