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« Previous ( 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 11 ) Next »Torvalds blasts Howells, Garrett over secure boot
A push by Red Hat kernel developer David Howells and ex-Red Hat developer Matthew Garrett to get code supporting secure boot merged into the mainline kernel to meet some of Microsoft's requirements has led to a sharp rebuke from Linux creator Linus Torvalds.
Kernel developer criticises Linux over security
A senior Linux kernel developer has pointed to an instance of what he calls a lax approach to security in the Linux kernel, citing the case of a serious vulnerability that is now more than a month old and is yet to be fixed.
Women and free software: bridging the gap
One programme is doing a lot to actually increase the numbers of women in FOSS - and which hardly gets any recognition for the good work it does.
Tablet for hackers: is the dream dead?
The ZaTab, advertised as a tablet for hackers, is out of stock with no indication of whether it will be coming back into circulation again.
LibreOffice releases new, faster version
A little more than two years after it forked from OpenOffice.org, the free office suite LibreOffice has come out with a sleek and faster version 4.0.
Berners-Lee visit: Linux Australia pays up
Linux Australia, the umbrella organisation for all Linux user groups in the country, has decided to pick up the remainder of the tab for the visit to Australia and New Zealand by Sir Tim Berners-Lee.
Berners-Lee visit: organisers left out of pocket
Sir Tim Berners-Lee has been the highest profile keynote speaker in the history of the Australian national Linux conference, but after his visit to Australia this year the main organisers of his trip appear to have been left holding the can.
Monty has last laugh as distros abandon MySQL
When the community GNU/Linux distributions Fedora and openSUSE recently announced that they would be switching their default database management system from MySQL to MariaDB, one man in Finland would have had a very hearty laugh.
Could secure boot lead to Linux v Linux strife?
Could Microsoft's implementation of secure boot be, one day, the reason why Linux vendors get into strife with each other? Could Oracle one day go to Microsoft in order to get a key issued to Red Hat by Microsoft revoked?
GNOME outreach programme attracts 25 women
Twenty-five women have been accepted for participation in the GNOME-led Outreach Programme for Women which runs from January 2 to April 2, according to a media release from the GNOME Foundation.
Propaganda, Red Hat-style
The best publicity comes from others, yet companies are increasingly trying to manipulate public opinion by being their own best friends and spreading their own, masqueraded word. Red Hat, the biggest and best-known Linux company, has been hard at work on this front for the last three years.
UEFI-enabled Samsung laptops get bricked with Linux
A number of Samsung laptops are dying after they are booted with a live-usb image of Ubuntu 12.04 using UEFI, according to information at the Ubuntu bug reporting site.
Closed minds of 'Open Source' eject iTWire from Linux conference
In the more than 30 years that I have been involved with the tech industry I have seen a lot of strange things but none stranger than the events of today at the Linux Conference Australia. iTWire senior Linux writer Sam Varghese has been ejected from the conference. Why? Well, you may ask and then wonder what the Linux community in Australia has come to.
A wait and see approach that worked
What does a Linux kernel developer talk about when he sits down with a journalist with whom he had a minor stoush at the LCA a few years ago?
Debian guru's plea for sane computing future
When Bdale Garbee talks about the future of the Linux desktop, it is not so much a visionary view as a view of how he would like computing to evolve.
Fedora still has issues with secure boot
Three days before its scheduled release, Fedora 18 still has some issues when confronted with a computer that is running Windows 8 with secure boot enabled, if one goes by the latest testing image available online.
Ubuntu mobile: too little, far too late
There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Wise words those, from the bard of Avon. They come to mind as one ponders the situation that Canonical is in, after its announcement a few days ago of a concept for a mobile running Ubuntu.
FSF dragging its feet on secure boot
The Free Software Foundation's campaign against Microsoft's implementation of secure boot needs an update urgently, as it is lagging behind on facts.
Maintainer of two GNU software projects quits
The maintainer of the Free Software Foundation's GNU grep and GNU sed projects has resigned, after looking after them for three and eight years respectively
The best of Linux - made on a Mac
The Linux Foundation has released a video of what it sees as the 2012 highlights for Linux - but the presence of decent video-creation and editing software running on Linux does not seem to be one of them.