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Mini-PCs gain customized I/O and a headless hack

  • LinuxGizmos (Posted by bob on Sep 25, 2013 2:08 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
CompuLab announced four customized versions of its fanless, Linux-ready mini-PCs based on plug-in LAN, serial/CAN, USB/mSATA, and mini-PCIe personality modules. The company also introduced a signage and communication oriented mini-PC, as well as a $15 HDMI dongle that enables high-res VNC-based remote display from headless PCs by tricking proprietary video drivers into thinking an HDMI […]

Open health conference report: OSEHRA Summit 2013

On September 4 - 6 the open source electronic health records community came together at the 2nd annual OSEHRA Summit and workshop, in Bethesda, Maryland. Day 1: tutorials on a variety of topics Day 2: high-level presentations from members of the community with unique vantage points in the community

Queueing in the Linux Network Stack

Packet queues are a core component of any network stack or device. They allow for asynchronous modules to communicate, increase performance and have the side effect of impacting latency.

Fanless Pico-ITX SBC runs Linux on Atom E6xx

Axiomtek announced a 100 x 72mm Pico-ITX form-factor motherboard based on Intel’s embedded-oriented Atom E6xx processors and EG20T chipset. The Linux-friendly PICO822 SBC provides LVDS display, HD audio, SATA-300, gigabit Ethernet, USB, and serial interfaces, comes with up to 32GB of onboard SSD, runs fanless, and supports -20 to +70? C operation. Axiomtek says the […]

FlightGear 2.12 Is Flying

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Sep 24, 2013 4:44 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The FlightGear open-source flight simulator has graduated to version 2.12 and with it comes many changes as it still sets out to try to compete with commercial flight simulators...

Mozilla evangelist talks favorite Firefox OS phone apps and addresses misconceptions

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Sep 24, 2013 3:57 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Mozilla; Story Type: Interview
This article is part of an interview series highlighting the speakers of the upcoming All Things Open 2013 conference in Raleigh, NC Jason Weathersby is an experienced coder and co-author of Integrating and Extending BIRT. His earlier work with HTML and Javascript recently led him to join Mozilla as one of their many Technical Evangelists. "Every day I get to work on some of the coolest technology on the planet, and I really enjoy working with some of the brightest and passionate people I have ever met," Weathersby said.I caught up with Jason get his insight on the Firefox OS Geeksphone, as well as, learn more about what got him to where he is now, tips and tricks of the trade, plus a peak into his presentation for the upcoming All Things Open conference. Read on in this interview.

Observations from this year's NSA Open Source Industry Day

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Sep 23, 2013 1:32 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I attended the NSA Open Source Industry Day in Maryland this year and thought I'd summarize what did and didn't surprise me. We'll see if these observations prove controversial or helpful! More importantly we'll see if organizations can effectively manage, govern, and secure their applications given the reality of open source, agile development practices, and component-based development.

Coursefork: a new way to collaborate on open education

What if teachers could fork educational materials just like software developers fork code? Imagine if educators far and wide could collaborate on curriculums beyond their school, district, or university. Imagine a revolutionized education system by way of the open source model. Well, the future is now. Eric Martindale, Cofounder and CTO of Coursefork, is replacing closed education systems with open ones with a new development tool for educators. It's not a MOOC, it's not Moodle, and it's not edX. It's a GitHub for course creation. It's about building a community.

Intel Iris Pro 5200 vs. HD Graphics 4600

After several weeks of testing the Linux-friendly System76 Gazelle Pro Haswell laptop, we've now been using the System76 Galago UltraPro for a wide variety of Linux testing as its powered by the Core i7 4750HQ CPU with Iris Pro 5200 graphics. In the preview article for this System76 ultrabook we ran some early comparative tests while in this article are some direct Ubuntu 13.10 comparison benchmarks between System76's two Intel Haswell laptops. What's most interesting to see with these results is how much faster the Iris Pro graphics are over HD Graphics 4600.

Twelve keynote videos from LinuxCon 2013

The Linux Foundation held its LinuxCon North America conference in New Orleans this week. This post provides short summaries and links to videos from 12 keynote sessions videos featuring luminaries including Linus Torvalds, Google’s Chris DiBona, and Valve’s Gabe Newell, Raspberry Pi’s Eben Upton, and more. LinuxCon is the Linux Foundation’s major public conference, and […]

Driving Continuous Integration from Git

  • Dr. Dobb's Open Source Articles (Posted by bob on Sep 21, 2013 6:50 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Testing, code coverage, style enforcement are all check-in and merge requirements that can be automated and driven from Git.

Google Is Exploring an Alternative to Cookies for Ad Tracking

  • New York Times; By Claire Cain Miller (Posted by bob on Sep 21, 2013 4:55 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story, Security
Google, the biggest online advertising company, is considering a new way to help advertisers track people across the Web and consolidate its power in the industry. Google could create an anonymous identifier, tied to users of its Chrome browser on a specific device, that advertisers would use to target ads, according to a person briefed on the plan

Guerilla Improvement: Getting Started in DevOps Without Buy-In

  • Dr. Dobb's Open Source Articles (Posted by bob on Sep 21, 2013 3:01 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
DevOps need not be a top-down mandate to succeed. With these steps, developers and operations staff can lead the way implementing DevOps techniques and later show the organizational benefits to management.

Tesla autopilot system likely to include Linux

  • LinuxGizmos (Posted by bob on Sep 21, 2013 11:12 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Tesla Motors announced plans to produce an autopilot feature within three years for its Model S electric car, which currently offers a Linux IVI and telematics system. Tesla’s system falls short of being a fully autonomous car, a la Google’s Linux-based Prius systems, and will only handle control of the car for “90 percent of […]

Fedora 20 Alpha status is Go

  • Fedora; By Jaroslav Reznik (Posted by bob on Sep 20, 2013 8:31 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Fedora
At the Fedora 20 Alpha Go/No-Go Meeting #2 that just occurred, it was agreed to Go with the Fedora 20 Alpha by Fedora QA, Release Engineering and Development.

Exploring the Samsung ARM Chromebook 3G

Back in late 2010, Google announced a "Chromebook"—a low-cost, entry-level netbook that would run Google's own operating system, ChromeOS. Google's vision of ChromeOS, although based on Linux, basically would be a giant Web browser, with all the apps on the machine running in the browser.

NC Datapalooza 2013: Why publicly available data is innovative

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Sep 19, 2013 10:04 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
If you live in the southeastern US (aka the Bible Belt) as I do, you’ve probably been to a church revival or two (or twenty). Revival is an event intended to light a fire under the 'faithful,' as opposed to the newcomer. As I sat at NC Datapalooza last week, I felt that I was in a revival, without the obvious religious overtones, of course. I was amazed at how far the Raleigh area has come in terms of understanding and accepting open data principles.

Open source Android fork Cyanogen becomes $7m company

Plans to build 'world's largest' mobile OS contender Independent Android firmware project CyanogenMod has become a company, thanks to a $7m Series A financing round led by Silicon Valley venture firms Benchmark Capital and Redpoint Ventures.

Walking around LinuxCon 2013

  • ZDNet | Linux And Open Source Blog RSS (Posted by bob on Sep 18, 2013 6:51 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
What it's like at a LinuxCon? Join me in a virtual walk about the North America LinuxCon 2013 in New Orleans.

State-Sponsored Hacker Gang Has a Side Gig in Fraud

An elite group of nation-state hackers running roughshod through the financial sector and other industries in the U.S. has pioneered techniques that others are following, and has used sophisticated methods to go after hardened targets, including hacking a security firm to undermine the security service the company provided its clients.

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