Showing headlines posted by bob
« Previous ( 1 ... 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 ... 1150 ) Next »Wireless-crazed, customizable IoT gateway uses ARM or x86 COMs
Congatec’s modular, Linux-ready IoT Gateway builds on its x86 and ARM Qseven COMs, providing up to 2x GbE, 6x USB, and 3x mini-PCIe connectivity links.
Live From LinuxCon: Red Hat and Microsoft Embrace On Stage
If any LinuxCon moment so far has underscored the evolution of Linux over 25 years, it was during the transition between keynotes this morning when Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst found himself on stage with Microsoft’s new vice president of open source, Wim Coekaerts. The men laughed nervously at the irony of the moment and paused for a brief photo opp, arms around each other’s shoulders.
Open education is more than open content
The famous playwright George Bernard Shaw once said: "If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples, then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas."
read more
Support multiple keyboard layouts in web-based VNC apps
Take advantage of a recently introduced browser API (available in Chrome, Firefox, and Opera) to add support for multiple keyboard layouts to web-based VNC clients.
How to install and setup DRBD on CentOS
This tutorial explains how to install and setup DRBD for your server. Before I start, let me explain what actually DRBD represents and what it is used for. DRBD stands for Distributed Replicated Block Device, a software-based, shared-nothing, replicated storage solution for mirroring the content of block devices such as hard disks, partitions, logical volumes etc.
How to organize your scholarly research with Docear
The Docear academic literature suite blends Freeplane and JabRef to make a comprehensive academic paper-writing application, with support for mind-mapping, citations, notes, and many other features.
read more
7 resources for open education materials
Shrinking school budgets and growing interest in open content has created an increased demand for open educational resources. According to the FCC, "The U.S. spends more than $7 billion per year on K-12 textbooks, but too many students are still using books that are 7-10 years old, with outdated material." There is an alternative: openly licensed courseware. But where do you find this content and how can you share your own teaching and learning materials?
read more
Kaspersky launches its own OS on Russian routers
Four-year build results in OS that aims to secure industrial control systems,
Kaspersky Labs has finished building its eponymously-named operating system after four years of quiet development.…
How IBM's LinuxONE Has Evolved For the New Open Source Cloud
One year ago at LinuxCon 2015 in Seattle, IBM announced IBM LinuxONE, its enterprise-grade system specifically designed for Linux and open source workloads. Today in their keynote at LinuxCon 2016 in Toronto, IBM executives Jim Wasko and Donna Dillenberger will give us an update on how the technology has evolved since then and how IBM is involved now in the open source community.
Almost open: BIOS and firmware update tips for Linux users
I suppose I'm lucky in that for more than 10 years my primary work environment has been Linux-based, yet all to often I've been forced to dig out a DOS or Windows image because I need to patch some BIOS device firmware. These days I don't own anything than has a valid Windows license, and even my 2008 white MacBook has spent most of its life running either Ubuntu or Fedora. Luckily most hardware manufacturers have started to provide bootable images for patching system firmware, and for enterprise-grade hardware they even provide Linux-ready tools.
read more
Your wget
is broken and should DIE, GitHubbers tell Microsoft
PowerShell applause sours as devs say they don't care much for Redmond's curl alias either
Well, that didn't take long: within a week of applause for Microsoft's decision to open-source PowerShell, a comment-war has broken out over curl and wget.…
Linux rules the world. Where to next?
On the back of some significant improvements in the last year and a half, Linux is now the model for software development.
Rugged 3.5-inch SBCs run Linux on Bay Trail and Broadwell
Perfectron unveiled a pair of 3.5-inch SBCs: one with a quad-core Atom and the other with Broadwell Core SoCs. Both support extended temperatures. Perfectron, which recently tapped Intel’s 6th Gen “Skylake” SoCs on its INS8349A Mini-ITX board, has also announced two 3.5-inch form-factor boards with older Intel processors. The OXY5322A is equipped with a quad-core, […]
App development, avoiding pitfalls, and more OpenStack news
Are you interested in keeping track of what is happening in the open source cloud? Opensource.com is your source for news in OpenStack, the open source cloud infrastructure project. OpenStack around the web
There is a lot of interesting stuff being written about OpenStack.
The Top 10 Developers and Companies Contributing to the Linux Kernel in 2015-2016
The Linux kernel community came close this year to setting a new record for the number of changes merged in a single release, according to the latest Linux Kernel Development report released today by The Linux Foundation.
Intel reveals Broxton Atoms with Gen9 GPUs
At IDF, Intel revealed some new details on the 14nm “Broxton” Atom T5700 and T5500 SoCs. Highlights include Gen9 graphics, DDR4, and more memory bandwidth. Although there were plenty of interesting embedded computing announcements (namely: Joule, Aero, and Euclid) at last week’s Intel Developer Conference — almost all of them tied to the Intel RealSense […]
Installing an Apache Web Server with TLS
One of the powerful things that Linux on servers allows you to do is to create scalable web applications with little to no software costs. Apache HTTPD, commonly referred to as just Apache, is the number one web server software in the world.
What do we mean when we talk about software 'alternatives'?
The word alternative is one of those shifty terms, with a definition that changes depending on perspective. For instance, something that is alternative to one person is the norm for another. Generally, the term alternative is considered to be defined by the fact that it is not considered to be in the majority or the mainstream.
read more
LinuxCon: Changing the World with Code
“You can better yourself while bettering others at the same time.” That was the theme of Jim Zemlin’s morning keynote address opening the LinuxCon North America conference in Toronto.
Zemlin, Executive Director of The Linux Foundation, began with reminder that this week marks the 25th anniversary of Linux, and special events will be held throughout the conference to celebrate -- including a black-tie gala on Wednesday night.
NVMe over Fabrics Support Coming to the Linux 4.8 Kernel
The Flash Memory Summit recently wrapped up its conferences in Santa
Clara, California, and only one type of Flash technology stole the show:
NVMe over Fabrics (NVMeF). From the many presentations and company
announcements, it was obvious NVMeF was the topic that most interested the
attendees.
« Previous ( 1 ... 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 ... 1150 ) Next »