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Is La Toya Jackson a Prime Number?

  • Linux Magazine; By Douglas Eadline (Posted by linuxmag on May 20, 2009 7:52 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
"Making the world’s knowledge computable" — Sounds like a job for parallel computing.

Using TCT To Recover Lost Data On Linux Or Unix - Part Two

Part two of a quick-start guide to the recovering deleted data on Linux or Unix partitions. Focus on lazarus from TCT

Open Source Business Intelligence Scores Again

Forgive The VAR Guy if he sounds like Yogi Berra today, but our resident blogger has deja vu all over again. The reason: The folks at OpenBI, a systems integrator in Chicago, have scored yet another win promoting Pentaho’s open source business intelligence software to customers. This is becoming a familiar story for OpenBI and Pentaho’s partner channel. Here’s the scoop.

Likewise Software Ships with SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 from Novell

Likewise announced today that its Likewise Enterprise offering will ship as part of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 from Novell. Likewise Enterprise securely connects computers running SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 with Microsoft Active Directory -- making it easy to authenticate users, control access to applications and data, centrally manage settings with group policies and create reports for regulatory audits.

State IT Agency to host FOSS vendor day

The SA State IT Agency's Free and Open Source Programme Office (FPO) is to host a workshop this coming Friday in which free and open source software (FOSS) vendors will have a chance to demonstrate their products to government officials. The day-long workshop will include representatives from companies that were selected, in a 2005 tender process, as government-approved open source vendors.

Digital and Analog Circuit Simulation with Ksimus

I took a Computer Logic Design class in college, so when I stumbled upon the Ksimus Circuit Simulator, I was intrigued. At the risk of waxing nostalgic, I remember what it was like to build circuits in school. We'd spend hours the night before the lab designing our circuit, being careful to list each interconnection. We had to keep track of which pin numbers on each chip were to be connected.

As Hacking Hits Home, China Strengthens Cyber Laws

A year ago, when a Time Magazine reporter told Tan Dailin that he'd been identified as someone who may have hacked the Pentagon, he gasped and asked, "Will the FBI send special agents out to arrest me?" The answer, it turns out, was, "No, the Chinese government will." Dailin, better known in Chinese hacker circles as Withered Rose, was reportedly picked up last month in Chengdu, China, by local authorities. He is now facing seven years in prison under a new Chinese cybercrime law that was passed in late February.

Gedit won't save to SSHFS mount, cured

I ran into an odd gedit bug on various versions of Ubuntu and Kubuntu; it won't save to an SSHFS mount and says it's a permissions error. But the error message is in error, because it isn't a permisssions error. But before we get to that, here is a quick SSHFS howto. I use SSHFS all the time because it is a great fast way to securely mount a remote directory locally.

The Ugly Truth About the Web

  • Linux Magazine; By Martin Streicher (Posted by linuxmag on May 20, 2009 12:29 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Tired of Arial and Verdana? Add some sizzle to your Web pages with a new open source project that can render any font in a page. (Flash not required.)

This week at LWN: Long discussions about long names

When Microsoft filed its lawsuit against TomTom, it named two patents which cover the VFAT filesystem. That, naturally, led to a renewed push to either (1) get those patents invalidated, or (2) move away from VFAT altogether. But some participants have advocated a third approach: find a way to work around the patents which retains most of the VFAT filesystem functionality while, with luck, avoiding any potential infringement of the claims of the patent. But, as a recently-posted patch and the ensuing discussion show, workarounds are not a straightforward solution even after the lawyers have been satisfied.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.8 released

Red Hat has announced their latest release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4, version 4.8. This is the 8th major update to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 OS.

Protecting the Linux Root Password

"Whoever has physical access to the machine owns it" is an old and true Unix saying. Still, there are some steps you can take to add extra security to your Linux box, such as password-protecting the boot process. Juliet Kemp shows how.

Sugar Wins! Nobody Buying Windows XO Laptops

I've been wondering about what ever happened to these Windows XP-based OLPC trials. I haven't really heard anything about them in quite some time. Now more recently I've asked around and found there is a good reason why I haven't seen anything: countries are choosing Sugar over Windows XP for their XO deployments. Apparently the conversations are going pretty much as many of us had expected: Initially country representatives inquire if Windows XP runs on the XO laptop. That doesn't really come as a surprise - for many people Windows is the definition of a computer. However, upon further investigation every country decided to stick to Sugar.

Deployment Xen 3.4 (testing) with 2.6.30-rc5-tip kernel to Ubuntu 9.04 Server (64-bit)

  • Xen Virtualization on Linux and Solaris; By Boris Derzhavets (Posted by dba477 on May 19, 2009 8:29 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Debian, Red Hat, Ubuntu
Have Ubuntu Intrepid Server dual boot with Jaunty just to perform Xen build properly and remove afterwards . It’s needed due to issues with python setup on Ubuntu Jaunty Server. We would build Xen 3.4 from source on Ubuntu 8.10 server and perform install via “make dist and install.sh to remote instance”. I believe procedure bellow will run same way with Ubuntu Jaunty root file system mounted as NFS share on Intrepid Server.

Proxmox VE 1.2: First Impressions

  • Linux Magazine; By Ken Hess (Posted by linuxmag on May 19, 2009 7:34 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Download, install and go to work in less than an hour.

Novell GroupWise On Ubuntu?

I stumbled onto this blog post earlier today — from dkpw’s Wikedfire — explaining how you can potentially install Novell’s GroupWise on Ubuntu. Novell doesn’t support GroupWise on Ubuntu. So, do dkpw’s step-by-step directions work? I must concede: I haven’t tried the install. But the mere mention of Novell GroupWise and Canonical’s Ubuntu in the same sentence raises some interesting considerations. Here's some perspective.

The Battle for ODF Interoperability

Last year, when I was socializing the idea of creating the OASIS ODF Interoperability and Conformance TC, I gave a presentation I called "ODF Interoperability: The Price of Success". The observation was that standards that fail never need to deal with interoperability. The creation of test suites, convening of multi-vendor interoperability workshops and plugfests is a sign of a successful standard, one which is implemented by many vendors, one which is adopted by many users, one which has vendor-neutral venues for testing implementations and iteratively refining the standard itself.

Virtualization With KVM On Ubuntu 9.04

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on May 19, 2009 4:42 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and running virtual machines on an Ubuntu 9.04 server. I will show how to create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Tom, I Can Name That Distro in Two Notes

Everybody loves the wild and wacky names that end up gracing releases of the various Linux distributions throughout the year, even if some of them — we're not going to name names, that might hurt our karma — have gotten a bit more bizarre of late. Among the more interesting processes for picking release names comes from the Fedora Project, where unlike most other distributions, the new name must share a unique link to its predecessor. Its time then to put your thinking caps on, as the race to make that most creative of links is underway.

Microsoft and Linux sitting in a tree...

Strange but true, usually the best of enemies it would seem that Microsoft and the Linux Foundation are in full agreement over something for a change. What is more, they are working together in order to find a solution as well.

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