Showing headlines posted by bob

« Previous ( 1 ... 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 ... 1151 ) Next »

Rugged, 3.5-inch SBC expands upon Skylake

Perfectron’s Linux-friendly, 3.5-inch “OXY5361A” SBC supplies 6th Gen CPUs with industrial temp support, and a pair each of mini-PCIe, GbE, and DP links. The OXY5361A follows earlier x86-based 3.5-inch SBCs from Perfectron such as the 5th Gen “Broadwell” based OXY5338A.

Welcoming FRRouting to The Linux Foundation

  • Linux.com - Original Content; By Jim Zemlin (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 9:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community, Linux
One of the most exciting parts of being in this industry over the past couple of decades has been witnessing the transformative impact that open source software has had on IT in general and specifically on networking. Contributions to various open source projects have fundamentally helped bring the reliability and economics of web-scale IT to organizations of all sizes. I am happy to report the community has taken yet another step forward with FRRouting.

Android beats Windows as most popular OS for interwebz -- by 0.02%

Google's Android has overtaken Windows to become the world's first-choice platform for accessing the internet, according to number cruncher StatCounter.… It's the first time Windows has been bested with StatCounter calling the March figures a "milestone in technology history and the end of an era".

10 Practical Examples of Linux Cal/NCal command for Beginners

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 6:15 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
If you want to quickly view a calendar on terminal in Linux, then cal is the command line tool that you should be using. By default the command displays the current month in output.

Tiny, temp-resistant SBC runs Android 6.0 on Snapdragon 820

  • LinuxGizmos.com (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 5:01 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Android; Story Type: News Story
iWave has launched a rugged, 56 x 50mm “iW-RainboW-G25S” SBC with a Snapdragon 820 SoC, up to 6GB of LPDDR4 RAM, up to 128GB eMMC, WiFi, BT, and GPS. The iW-RainboW-G25S single board computer, which iWave also calls the APQ8096 SBC and Snapdragon 820 SBC, runs Android Marshamallow on Qualcomm’s quad-core APQ8096 SoC, better known […]

Students meet Fedora at Linux Weekend 2017

Open source projects are built online and a lot of their community members are placed all over the world. Even though projects have people from around the world, this doesn’t stop ambitious community members to organize open source conferences or... Continue Reading →

Congress to US citizens: Want online privacy? Pay up!

  • PCWorld; By Michael Kan (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 2:32 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Security
Tuesday’s congressional vote to repeal U.S. restrictions on broadband providers doesn’t mean that online privacy is dead. Consumers will just have to pay for it. The coming repeal, which President Trump is expected to sign into law, paves a clearer path for broadband providers to sell customers’ internet browsing history and other online data, without their consent.

Introducing Flashback, an Internet mocking tool

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 1:18 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
At LinkedIn, we often develop web applications that need to interact with third-party websites. We also employ automatic testing to ensure the quality of our software before it is shipped to production. However, a test is only as useful as it is reliable. With that in mind, it can be highly problematic for a test to have external dependencies, such as on a third-party website, for instance. These external sites may change without notice, suffer from downtime, or otherwise become temporarily inaccessible, as the Internet is not 100% reliable. read more

Microsoft's in-store Android looks desperate but can Google stop it?

To survive in an increasingly mobile-first world, Microsoft needs the kind of regulatory intervention it fought so hard to avoid in the 1990s and 2000s. Only this time, imposed on the dominant mobile OS, Google's Android.…

Introduction to functional programming

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 3, 2017 8:20 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Depending on whom you ask, functional programming (FP) is either an enlightened approach to programming that should be spread far and wide, or an overly academic approach to programming with few real-world benefits. In this article, I will explain what functional programming is, explore its benefits, and recommend resources for learning functional programming. read more

Microsoft to take CodePlex behind the shed and shoot it by Christmas

Advises developers to move to GitHub. Redmond's open source code repository CodePlex is to close on December 15, 2017 and Microsoft is advising users to move their stuff over to GitHub.…

Programming, open hardware, and more new articles in April

  • Opensource.com; By Jen Wike Huger (Posted by bob on Apr 2, 2017 10:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups; Groups: Community, Linux
It's April here at Opensource.com headquarters in Raleigh, NC, where a new season, spring, has begun. It's also time for a new month of awesome open source stories and technologies for you to learn about. 

Peering into complex, tiny structures with 3D analysis tool tomviz

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 2, 2017 4:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
New open source software tomviz—short for tomographic visualization—enables researchers to interactively understand large 3D datasets. More specifically, the software analyzes 3D tomographic data similar to a medical CT-scan but at the nanoscale. read more

Gumstix adds Arduino support for Curie-based boards designed with Geppetto

Gumstix added Arduino IDE support to its Geppetto design service for boards based on the Intel Curie. It also shipped a Curie-based “Radium 96BIE” SBC. Last September, Gumstix unveiled two single board computers based on Intel Joule and Curie modules, and built to 96Boards CE and the new, MCU-oriented 96Boards IE (IoT Edition) form-factor specifications, respectively.

Linux Journal April 2017

I'm not sure what problem Vanilla Ice solved with his DJ's sick hook, but thankfully in the Linux world, we solve problems all the time. In fact, Linux exists as a solution to a problem—25+ years later, and Linux is still solving problems all the time. This month, let's attack some problems the penguin way.

Creating and using Nautilus templates

  • Fedora Magazine (Posted by bob on Apr 1, 2017 9:54 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Fedora; Story Type: News Story
Have you ever noticed that by default there’s a Templates folder in your home directory? In some file managers, there’s an item in the right-click menu to “Create empty file” or “Create new file”.  However, Files (also known as Nautilus) lets you... Continue Reading →

Y'know CSS was to kill off HTML table layout? Well, second time's a charm: Meet CSS Grid

  • The Register (Posted by bob on Apr 1, 2017 8:00 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Browser makers unite to make web design great again With the release of Safari 10.1 this week, four major browsers in the space of a month have implemented support for CSS Grid, an emerging standard for two-dimensional grid layouts in web applications.…

Top 5: Vi-mode in your shell, Scratch and Logo, and more

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 1, 2017 2:17 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
In this week's Top 5, we highlight vi-mode editing, teaching programming with Scratch, command shells, DIY smog sensors in Germany, and how to harness open source powers for humanitarian efforts. Top 5 articles of the week 5. Open source job opportunities grow at crisis groups read more

This Week in Open Source News: Cloud Foundry Launches Certification Program, Google Creates Home For Open Source & More

  • Linux.com - Original Content (Posted by bob on Apr 1, 2017 10:28 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups; Groups: Cloud, Linux
This week in open source and Linux news, Cloud Foundry releases its new certification program for developers, Google creates a new home-base for its open source initiatives, and more! Read on to stay in the open source loop!

Rugged, open-spec industrial SBC runs Linux on i.MX6

Technologic’s “TS-7970” SBC runs Linux on an i.MX6, and offers wide power and temp ranges, dual GbE, WiFi, BT, CAN, Modbus, an FPGA, and full schematics. Technologic Systems’ Linux-driven TS-7970 SBC was a long time coming, having been originally announced in June, 2015, but that’s not so surprising for such a complex, feature-rich SBC.

« Previous ( 1 ... 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 ... 1151 ) Next »