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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.

A New Version Of Libvirt Brings Many Changes

Celebrating the US Independence Day, while many Americans are spending time with their families, drinking (usually nasty) beer and BBQ'ing, others talking to Microsoft, the Red Hat virtualization team has released a new version of libvirt. The libvirt 0.9.3 release brings many changes...

Google left out of $4.5bn Nortel patent deal

Android left nude as enemies shrug on extra IP armour Apple, Microsoft, RIM, EMC, Ericsson and Sony all chipped in to buy the patents, which cover critical 4G and wireless broadband technologies, leaving Google empty handed.…

Fedora Logical Volume Manager Benchmarks

Last month when publishing Fedora 15 vs. Ubuntu 11.04 benchmarks in some of the disk workloads the Fedora Linux release was behind that of Ubuntu Natty Narwhal. Some users speculated in our forums that SELinux was to blame, but later tests show SELinux does not cause a huge performance impact. With Security Enhanced Linux not to blame, some wondered if Fedora's use of LVM, the Logical Volume Manager, by default was the cause.

News: Red Hat's $1 Billion Journey

Red Hat came a step closer to its goal of being the first Linux vendor to make $1 billion in revenue in one year while taking another step with its MRG offering. The GNOME foundation and Sabayon Linux also saw forward momentum, and Linux 3.0 got a speed bump.

Sabayon Linux 6.0 released -- without GNOME 3.0

The Sabayon community released version 6.0 of its Gentoo-based Linux distribution, moving up to Linux 2.6.39.1, but opting for GNOME 2.32.2 and KDE 4.6.4 desktop environments instead of the controversial GNOME 3.0. Sabayon 6.0 adds support for the Btrfs filesystem, switches to LibreOffice 3.3.3, and updates to version 1.0 of its Entropy package manager....

More Android 3.2 and Amazon tablet details emerge

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jun 23, 2011 5:24 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
More details have surfaced about Android 3.2, including support for seven-inch screens and Qualcomm processors. The release may appear on Amazon.com's Android tablets, which are rumored to be arriving in August bearing Texas Instruments processors and could hasten the fall of the monochrome Kindle....

German court case could imperil GPL licensing

In a case that could threaten open source GPL licensing in Germany, a Berlin court yesterday began hearing a lawsuit from German DSL router vendor AVM against web-filtering software firm Cybits. AVM charges that by modifying Linux kernel code in router firmware, Cybits is infringing on copyright, while Cybits' defense claims GPL licensing permits it to alter the code....

VA Awards TIAG $5 Million Open Source Contract

  • Government Health IT; By Mary Mosquera (Posted by bob on Jun 22, 2011 11:14 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: GNU, Linux
The Veterans Affairs Department has awarded The Informatics Applications Group Inc. of Reston, Va., a $5 million contract to be the custodial agent to manage VA’s open source community to modernize its VistA electronic health record.

Ceylon: True advance, or just another language?

The language road in computer science is littered with the carcasses of what was to be "the next big thing." And although many niche languages do find some adoption in scripting or specialized applications, C (and its derivatives) and the Java language are difficult to displace. But Red Hat's Ceylon appears to be an interesting combination of language features, using a well-known C-style syntax but with support for object orientation and useful functional aspects in addition to an emphasis on being succinct. Explore Ceylon and find out if this future VM language can find a place in enterprise software development.

Nokia N9 could be the first and last MeeGo phone

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jun 21, 2011 11:01 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Nokia announced its long-awaited MeeGo Linux-based follow-up to the N900 phone -- but when this ships later this year it may well be the company's first and last MeeGo device. The Nokia N9 features an OMAP3630 processor, up to 64GB storage, a 3.9-inch AMOLED display, an eight-megapixel Carl Zeiss camera, NFC, and a & Harmattan& UI with swipe-gesture support, says the company....

How Fast Can You Type? Develop a Tiny Utility in Bash to Find Out

  • Linux Journal (Posted by bob on Jun 21, 2011 6:42 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
If you spend most of your time typing on your keyboard (and I hope you don’t use that mouse very frequently, if you care for your wrists, that is), getting up to speed and practicing to become a better and faster typist is well worth the time and effort. And measuring something is the first step to improve it.

Dual-threading QorIQs tap 64-bit, 28nm e6500 core

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jun 21, 2011 5:45 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Freescale Semiconductor announced a series of 28nm-fabbed QorIQ multicore processors, featuring a 64-bit PowerPC core clocked up to 2.5GHz. The Linux-ready Advanced Multiprocessing (AMP) QorIQ series will debut in early 2012 with the T4240, offering 12 cores dual-threaded to 24 virtual cores, numerous acceleration engines, and cascading power management, says Freescale....

Tweaking text in Scribus

  • Linux Journal; By By Bruce Byfield (Posted by bob on Jun 15, 2011 1:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
In word processors, users generally settle for an appearance that is good enough. By contrast, in a design application like Scribus, you have the tools to adjust the layout until it is exactly the way you want.

GStreamer 1.0 Is Coming; Here's The Plans

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jun 15, 2011 5:34 AM EDT)
  • Groups: GNOME; Story Type: News Story
For those interested in GStreamer, the open-source multimedia framework commonly used by the GNOME desktop, is slowly working its way towards doing a 1.0 release...

LinuxCon schedule unveiled, including 20th anniversary gala

  • Linux for Devices (Posted by bob on Jun 15, 2011 3:40 AM EDT)
  • Groups: IBM, Linux; Story Type: News Story
The Linux Foundation announced the final program for LinuxCon North America in Vancouver, B.C. August 17-19, 2011. Events include the 20th anniversary of Linux gala celebration, a discussion between Linus Torvalds and Greg Kroah-Hartman, a keynote by IBM's Irving Wladawsky-Berger, and a & 20 Years of Linux& panel featuring Jon & maddog& Hall and Eben Moglen....

GTK+ 3.2 Squeezes In A Couple More Features

  • Phoronix; By Michael Larabel (Posted by bob on Jun 13, 2011 12:39 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: GNOME
GTK+ 3.2, the first major update since the release of GNOME 3.0 with the overhauled GTK+ 3.0 tool-kit, is coming along nicely in preparation for the September release of GNOME 3.2.

Say Goodbye to Google Search Portals for Linux, Mac and More

  • PCWorld; By Katherine Noyes (Posted by bob on Jun 9, 2011 8:07 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Fans of Linux, Microsoft and Macs used to be able to search for information about those topics on Google using specialized search tools that narrowed the results to a focused set of highly relevant Web sites. Earlier this week, however, it was discovered that Google has pulled the plug on many such specialized search portals--including Google.com/linux, Google.com/microsoft, Google.com/mac and Google.com/bsd--redirecting users to Google.com/webhp instead.

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