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RF harvesting could pluck energy from the air

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jul 13, 2011 10:58 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Radio-frequency energy from television, AM, FM, cellular, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, and other broadcasts can now be harvested to power electronic devices, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have claimed. It's said applications could include security, environmental sensing, structural monitoring, and bio-monitoring devices....

A Status Update On GNU Hurd: Java, Debian, Money

Over on the GNU.org Hurd news page is a status update for the GNU Hurd operating system for Q2'2011...

Android mini-tablet integrates pico projector

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jul 13, 2011 10:35 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
NionCom is preparing an Android 2.3 mini-tablet reference design that includes an embedded pico projector, capable of displaying content on a wall or screen sized up to 100 inches diagonal. The & MemoryKick Vision& offers a 4.3-inch capacitive WVGA display, 4GB flash memory, a 500GB hard disk drive (HDD), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, plus HDMI in and out ports, according to a story in Picopros....

Microsoft to Windows XP diehards: Just 3 more years' support

'Eventually, there comes a time to give us more money' Microsoft continued its campaign yesterday to convince stuck-in-the-mud Windows XP customers to upgrade to Windows 7, the company's current operating system.…

KDE Ships Second 4.7 Release Candidate

  • KDE.news (Posted by bob on Jul 12, 2011 12:02 PM EDT)
  • Groups: KDE; Story Type: News Story
Today, KDE has released a second release candidate of the upcoming 4.7 release of the Plasma Desktop and Netbook workspaces, the KDE Applications and the KDE Frameworks, which is planned for July 27, 2011. With API, dependency and feature freezes in place, the KDE team's focus is now on fixing last-minute showstopper bugs and finishing translation and documentation that comes along with the releases.

NVIDIA GeForce GT 520

  • Phoronix; By Michael Larabel (Posted by bob on Jul 12, 2011 11:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Up for review today is a low-end NVIDIA Fermi graphics card, the GeForce GT 520. The low-end graphics processor it uses, the GF119, was released back in April. The graphics card only has 48 Stream processors and uses DDR3 memory with a 64-bit bus, except the cost on this creation is just around $60 USD.

Mesa Gets OpenGL 3.0 Floating-Point Depth Buffers

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 11, 2011 5:31 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Yet again Marek Olšák has made another great improvement to Mesa. Recently this independent developer has been working quite a lot in implementing OpenGL 3.0 support for the open-source Mesa stack. Ending out this weekend, he now has working OGL3 floating-point depth buffers per the GL_ARB_depth_buffer_float extension...

At Long Last, CentOS 6.0 ISOs Finally Surface

Since the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0, 242 days have passed. Additionally, 129 days have passed since the release of Scientific Linux 6.0, which is one of the popular community rebuilds of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0 source packages. Only today, however, is CentOS 6.0 ISOs beginning to surface...

Visualizing Linux Performance Data In New Ways

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 10, 2011 4:17 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
One of the items I've been working on recently for Phoronix Test Suite 3.4-Lillesand is new ways to visualize performance result data generated by the many test profiles and suites available via OpenBenchmarking.org. Here's one of the new ways that was committed over the weekend to the Lillesand Git code-base...

Apple Time Machine Come To Linux, Sort Of

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 8, 2011 3:59 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Apple Time Machine is a feature that was introduced in Mac OS X 10.5 nearly four years ago, which allows the automatic creation of incremental file back-ups that can be restored at a later date, either for the entire system or just an individual file. Mac OS X programs can also become Time Machine-aware themselves to take advantage of these incremental backups. Basic read-only support for better managing Apple Time Machine back-ups is now available to Linux users via a new virtual file-system aptly called the Time Machine File-System...

Oracle coughs up Java 7 release candidate

  • The Register (Posted by bob on Jul 7, 2011 10:36 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Oracle; Story Type: News Story
A non-revolution five years in the making Oracle has published the first release candidate for JDK 7, the long-awaited next version of Java set to officially debut on July 28.…

Linux-based system tries to tame San Francisco traffic

  • Linux for Devices; By Eric Brown (Posted by bob on Jul 7, 2011 8:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
McCain says it will supply San Francisco with a new Linux-based traffic controller computer that meets the latest Advanced Transportation Controller (ATC) standards. Built around a Freescale PowerQUICC II Pro processor, the & 2070LXN2 NEMA& offers several keypads, an 8x40 display, plus Ethernet, USB, serial, and SDLC connections, says the company.

Archiving CDs to ISO from the commandline

  • Linux Journal (Posted by bob on Jul 7, 2011 1:49 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
A few weeks ago I was working on a PC when I needed to grab the motherboard driver CD. In a perfect world, the CD would be located in a nice protective sleeve, safely kept away from the nasty elements that encompass the IT tech area (read: coffee, scratches, and the occasional jelly doughnut). But in this case, it appeared someone had taken this CD and wiped it.

KDE SC 4.6.5 Monthly Update Arrives

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 7, 2011 12:52 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: KDE
The July 2011 update for KDE is now available. KDE SC 4.6.5 is this new release, and as usual for KDE monthly point releases, it just brings a variety of bug-fixes and translation updates...

Nouveau Driver Power Management Against The NVIDIA Blob

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jul 6, 2011 2:43 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Following last week's completion of the Radeon driver power management tests against the AMD Catalyst driver, now it is time to turn the tables on NVIDIA. In this article are some power consumption and thermal tests when comparing the latest open-source "Nouveau" driver code against NVIDIA's closed-source proprietary driver.

OMAP 4 earns first Netflix HD certification on Android

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jul 6, 2011 10:51 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Netflix has launched a certification program for its Netflix HD application, awarding its first seal of approval to Texas Instruments' OMAP 4 processor and WiLink 7.0 chipset running on Android 2.3. TI's dual-core OMAP 4 won the certification thanks to its ability to play 1080p video at 30fps and its on-chip support for DRM (digital rights management)....

General-Purpose C Libraries: Not Many Good Options

  • (Posted by bob on Jul 6, 2011 9:47 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
With the great popularity of C, you would think that a wide variety of solutions would have flourished

Wistron patent deal hints at Chrome OS tablet

Microsoft has entered into a patent-licensing agreement with Wistron that for the first time covers Google's Chrome OS as well as Android. The agreement -- announced a day after a Microsoft-led consortium beat out Google for Nortel's wireless patents -- covers smartphones, tablets, and e-readers, suggesting Wistron may be working on a Chrome OS tablet....

Webian Shell: Prototype Web-Based Shell

  • Linux Journal (Posted by bob on Jul 5, 2011 10:51 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Webian Shell is a web-based shell that is designed to run full-screen and function as the primary user interface for your computer. At the moment, it's still at the proof of concept stage, but 0.1 is runnable without making any modifications to your system. As it features some interesting ideas, it's worth having a play around with.

Mac OS X Power Consumption vs. Ubuntu 11.04, Windows 7

Last week we delivered results looking at the power consumption of Ubuntu 11.04 versus Windows 7, which was interesting in its own right, but in this article is a brief look at where Apple's Mac OS X operating system fits in between the power consumption of Ubuntu Linux and Microsoft Windows.

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