Showing headlines posted by scan2006

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Back on Linux

After a year on OSX, a programmer goes back to Linux

Linux Minted

  • omgubuntu; By Joey Sneddon (Posted by scan2006 on Dec 12, 2011 2:06 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux Mint altered the Banshee Amazon MP3 referral code to that of its own, taking 100% of all profits made in the process.

Linux Mint developers make GNOME 3 edition plans

Clement Lefebvre, Linux Mint Founder and lead developer, has announced that his project has started work on a GNOME 3 edition of its next major release, version 12. The new edition will initially be developed alongside the GNOME 2.32-based release which will remain as the default desktop environment of Mint. The developers had decided to stick with GNOME 2.32 because there had been "radical changes" in GNOME 3.x's desktop which had split the communities of GNOME and Mint users.

The Puppy Linux project announced version 5.2

  • Linux for Devices; By Eric Brown (Posted by scan2006 on Oct 17, 2011 6:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type:
The Puppy Linux project announced version 5.2 of the legacy-PC friendly "Wary" version of its small-footprint Linux distribution. Puppy Linux 5.2 ("Wary") features an SMP-optimized version of the Linux 2.6.32.45 kernel, an upgrade path to Xorg 7.6, an updated PuppyPhone 1.1 VoIP app, and a new PupCamera app for automatically detecting digital cameras, says the project.

Dennis Had A Bigger Effect Than Jobs: Pike

  • EFYTimes; By EFYTimes (Posted by scan2006 on Oct 14, 2011 4:37 AM EDT)
  • Story Type:
There is no denying the fact that the death of Steve Jobs is a great loss to the world but death of Dennis Ritchie, the father of Unix, is no less. Rob Pike, the programming legend and Googler, said, “When Steve Jobs died last week, there was a huge outcry, and that was very moving and justified. But Dennis had a bigger effect, and the public doesn’t even know who he is.”

Dennis Ritchie, Creator of UNIX and C, Dead at 70

  • OS news; By Eugenia Loli-Queru (Posted by scan2006 on Oct 12, 2011 11:47 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Twitter is currently buzzing about the death of Dennis Ritchie, the visionary creator of UNIX and C, among other things. We hope it's just a false rumor. Story developing, we will be updating. Update: Unfortunately, it seems to be confirmed. Rob Pike, co-creator of the Plan 9 and Inferno OSes, who has worked with Ritchie in the past, and he's currently working for Google's GO language, posted this.

Eric S Raymond Defends Richard M Stallman Over Steve Jobs

  • muktware.com; By Neil Richards (Posted by scan2006 on Oct 11, 2011 12:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
Eric S Raymond, one of the leaders of the Open Source world and the author of Cathedral in Bazaar has come out to defend Richard M Stallman, the father of Free Software movement who was misquoted by the press. Eric has written a blog to give a clearer picture of Steve Jobs.

BerliOS will be closed on 31.12.2011

  • berlios.de; By Fraunhofer FOKUS (Posted by scan2006 on Oct 1, 2011 7:21 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Announcements
BerliOS was founded 10 years ago as one of the first repositories in Europe. It was developed and maintained by Fraunhofer FOKUS. As an European, non-proprietary project BerliOS pursued the goal to support the various Open Source players and provide a neutral mediator function. In 2011 over 4800 projects have been hosted on BerliOS, with 50,000 registered users and over 2.6 million file downloads each month. We are proud that with BerliOS we have brought the idea of an OSS repository to Europe. Meanwhile, the concept has prevailed and there are many good alternatives.

Edit the Contents of ISO Disk Image with ISO Master

you can view the contents of the ISO Disk image files by simply using archive manager. But it is a risk to add/delete or edit the contents of such ISO files using archive manager only in Ubuntu as there is high probability of the disk image to be invalid or not bootable. In such cases , you can use a very handy tool called ISO Master.

Why some Windows 8 machines might not be able to boot Linux

The UEFI secure boot protocol is part of recent UEFI specification releases. It permits one or more signing keys to be installed into a system firmware. Once enabled, secure boot prevents executables or drivers from being loaded unless they're signed by one of these keys. Another set of keys (Pkek) permits communication between an OS and the firmware. An OS with a Pkek matching that installed in the firmware may add additional keys to the whitelist. Alternatively, it may add keys to a blacklist. Binaries signed with a blacklisted key will not load.

A New Security breach at Linux Foundation

The Linux Foundation has mailed users of the Linux.com and LinuxFoundation.org sites informing them that they discovered a security breach on 8 September which "may have compromised your username, password, email address and other information". The Foundation says that it believes the breach is connected to the security breach at kernel.org at the start of September.

How to Auto Mount Partitions at Linux Startup the Easy Way

Usually making Ubuntu mount a partition at startup would require fiddling with the “fstab” which is confusing. The easiest way to mount your partitions automatically when you turn on your computer is by reading this article. So let’s get started!

Security breach on kernel.org

Earlier this month, a number of servers in the kernel.org infrastructure were compromised. We discovered this August 28th. While we currently believe that the source code repositories were unaffected, we are in the process of verifying this and taking steps to enhance security across the kernel.org infrastructure.

A Decade of Haiku

Ten years ago today, the first post appeared on the mailing list of our project - then still called "OpenBeOS" - officially marking the start of our endeavor. Back then, with the imminent demise of Be Inc., there was an excitement and creative motivation in the air, that lead many to think a first release was only a matter of a few years. As it turns out, this estimation was a bit too optimistic...

Linus Torvalds and Greg Kroah-Hartman on 20 years of Linux @ LinuxCon Japan 2011

Linux kernel developer Greg Kroah-Hartman and Linux creator Linus Torvalds share their thoughts on the first 20 years of Linux and what the future holds at LinuxCon 2011 Japan.

Ubuntu’s Shuttleworth: patents misunderstood, misused, outdated

Patents are archaic, misunderstood and of little or no help to the entrepreneur, according to Mark Shuttleworth, who leads the Ubuntu Foundation, which is behind the open source operating system. In an interview with TechCentral, Shuttleworth was asked about the escalating patent battle in the mobile industry and he provided some choice quotes.

How To Cut Your Linux PC’s Boot Time in Half With E4rat

Linux is pretty quick to boot on modern computers, but why not pare it down some more? If you’re hurting from a lack of SSD or just want to boot faster, E4rat will easily shave down your boot time. E4rat and Your Linux PC E4rat is a utility that’s designed to cut your Linux boot time drastically. Essentially you show it what you do when you start your computer normally, and it analyzes the files you access and use. Then, it’ll move them to the beginning of your hard disk so that it takes less time to find them during boot.

Firefox easily outperforms Chrome with many tabs open

When the Chrome web browser appeared from Google it was notable for two reasons: the rate of development and the speed of the browser. Chrome continues to see regular releases that push forward with new/better functionality as well as continuing to get faster. It is one of, if not the fastest browser available at the moment.

The Next Firefox UI

As revolutionary and disruptive the visual transition from Firefox 3.6 to Firefox 4 was, the impact of the transition to the new UI, which may come with Firefox 7 or 8 later this year, will be even more dramatic. If there have been complaints about too much change before, Mozilla will now definitely need a legacy mode to keep software migration managers happy.

Linux is all growed up now

  • IT World; By Brian Proffitt (Posted by scan2006 on Jun 24, 2011 8:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
There is absolutely nothing flawed about DistroWatch page hit ranking. It represents page hits on the individual distribution pages, period. Now, if you'd said that the DistroWatch page hit ranking is a flawed way of measuring the popularity of Linux distributions, then yes, I would have agreed..

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