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HAMMER Approaches Alpha Status

Matthew Dillon posted on update on his evolving HAMMER filesystem, noting that it "passes all standard filesystem stress tests and buildworld will run with a HAMMER /usr/obj". He also noted, "pruning and reblocking code is in and partially tested, but now needs more stringent testing; full historical access appears to be working but needs testing." He added, "there are two big-ticket and several little-ticket items left. HAMMER will officially go Alpha when the big-ticket items are done, and beta when we get a few of the little-ticket items done." The two "big-ticket" items left to be completed are UNDO crash recovery code, and handling for full filesystems.

Interview with organizers of the BSD certification exam

The BSD Certification Group, (BSDCG) held its first in-person BSDA certification exam session for systems administrators during SCALE last month in Los Angeles. Subsequent tests were then held held during FOSDEM in Brussels, Belgium, and Linux-Tage Chemnitzer in Chemnitz, Germany. During the events, we were able to catch up with several people involved in the testing. Here's what they had to say about the exam development process, the events themselves, and reasons for becoming certified.

End-to-end video podcast production with Kino and FFmpeg

Producing a video podcast entirely on Linux is not only possible but fairly easy to do. This article outlines the steps you can take to make a video podcast entirely on Linux, as I do.

Tickets Version 2.6 Now Available

The latest version of Tickets has been released, and this version is a major upgrade over previous editions. Tickets has been growing and maturing into a full fledged Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system. For those agencies that currently do not have a CAD solution, Tickets offers a free and powerful solution.

Compiz – Taking Linux Beyond the Shell

What have you heard about Linux? An operating system which is hard to learn with a shell for typing complex commands? Anyway, Linux was popular to be popular among geeks for decades and the general users were left aside when it comes to Linux. But amazingly, there are increasing number of layman computer users converting themselves from Windows to Linux nowadays. Most of the honor for this new trend should go to a few new developments of the area of desktop visualization such as Compiz and Beryl.

Manage MySQL remotely with phpMyAdmin

Odds are, if you design Web sites with a database back end, you've worked with MySQL. You can manage this database from the command line, but it's not very user-friendly. Using the graphical tool phpMyAdmin helps, but not all Web hosting providers offer it or allow you to install it on the server. Fortunately, you can install it on your own box and manage several MySQL databases remotely at the same time, without having to install anything anywhere else.

Cuba, India vote no on OOXML

Cuba and India are the latest countries to vote against Microsoft’s Office Open XML (OOXML) file format being adopted by the International Standards Organisation (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). Meanwhile Germany and the US confirmed that they won't be backing down on their call for the format to be ISO/IEC-approved. The decisions from national delegates from 33 countries who took part in the DIS29500 ballot resolution meeting in Geneva in late February have been trickling in ahead of this Saturday’s crucial deadline.

Get more out of Ubuntu's virtual desktops

Perhaps the greatest single productivity-boosting feature in Linux is the ability to open several virtual desktops at one time. This allows you to create separate work environments for various simultaneous tasks, such as one with a word processor, image editor, and spreadsheet open for creating a report, and another with e-mail and browser windows active for keeping in touch with co-workers. The multiple desktops let you focus on the task at hand without interruption, but switch to your other active workspace with a single click.

Due in June, Mozilla says ‘Firefox 3’ is ready to rock!

Although Mozilla says Firefox 3 beta 4 still isn’t intended for the general public, its performance so far has given them the confidence to announce the final version is nearly ready to be unleashed on the world.

IBM chips into EnterpriseDB love fund

IBM is putting some of its financial muscle behind the business trying to rival Sun Microsystems' MySQL, pushing PostgreSQL. The systems giant and a trio of VCs have pledged $10m in the latest round of funding for EnterpriseDB. That brings the start-up's total funding to $37.5m.

Inside the OSS Lab

To some folks outside of Microsoft, the Open-Source Software Lab has been a sort of mysterious place. A place where we study Linux and open-source software, cursing our enemies while brewing our malevolent plans to combat those nasty FOSS developers. Oh, and we also have a death ray on the roof of building 17. It's Linux-powered, of course, just to add a little irony.

Tiny Asus computer great for travel, delicate hands

We have some really good stuff this week: a super-thin graphics tablet and a teeny-tiny computer. Let’s kick off with the tiny computer We were charmed by a new miniature computer from Asus. It has a full keyboard (if only we had miniature fingers ), built-in wireless connectivity, an Ethernet port, serial port and three USB ports. It’s 6 inches by 9 inches and weighs just 2 pounds. That’s with the battery, so if you run it off the charger instead, it’s just a little over a pound.

Open Source Software Made Developers Cool. Now It Can Make Them Rich

Last spring, marketer and blogger Hugh MacLeod posted a question on his site: If open source is such a phenomenon, where are all the open source billionaires? His audience wasn't amused. Open source software relies on a community of volunteer developers who tinker on, write for, or amend a program, then give it away free. MacLeod's site filled up with complaints that even to look for billionaires violated the spirit of the open source movement. "There have to be rewards," one commenter wrote, "but they don't have to be financial."

Apple’s dirty Safari installer wouldn't happen in open source

A lot has been said of late concerning the way Apple slipped in a brand-new Safari installer into the Apple Software Update used by many hundreds of thousands of iPod-wielding Windows users. Let me offer a new perspective, from the open source point of view - why what Apple did was bad, and why open source developers wouldn’t do it. I'll also cut through the FUD and deliver the truth about what the installer really does!

Click right on with RISC OS

  • drobe.co.uk; By Martin Hansen (Posted by Scott_Ruecker on Mar 25, 2008 12:57 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
When asked what they most like about RISC OS, many enthusiasts are likely to mention the fluid, slick and intuitive manner with which user and computer interact. In other words, the graphical user interface, or the GUI as the geeks would have us call it. With RISC OS, the GUI encourages all applications to work in a similar way, and to have the same feel. Faced with new RISC OS software, a user already has a good idea of how to drive it and explore.

What CAN’T Linux do?

A few weeks ago a colleague of mine sent me a link to a story about a man who clustered together sixteen Playstation 3s using Linux to simulate black holes. I had forgotten about this until yesterday when I was thinking “What can’t Linux do?” I know, I know, you’re thinking: Alright fanboy, bring on your dogma. Not so. This isn’t one of those pie in the sky, wishful thinking blog entries where I am going to go on to spout that Linux will, in fact: Cure cancer, solve global warming, fix the US economic crisis, and release the world from its dependency on oil (Although it might help in those arenas.)

Novell aims SLES 11 at Sun and Red Hat

The next version of Novell's Suse Linux Enterprise Server will focus on migration technologies and virtualization, in order to entice users from Unix and take market share from Red Hat, according to a roadmap announced at the company's BrainShare meeting in Salt Lake City.

Is Firefox 3 ready for prime time?

  • DesktopLinux.com; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by Scott_Ruecker on Mar 24, 2008 6:47 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Mozilla
Firefox 3 may still be a beta, Beta 4 to be exact, but in a recent Reuters news story, Mozilla Vice President of Engineering Mike Schroepfer said of the browser, "In many ways it is much more stable than anything else out there." Is Firefox 3 Beta 4 ready for prime time? The Firefox Beta 4 Web page still declared, as of March 24, that Mozilla does "not recommend that anyone other than developers and testers download this beta release, as it is intended for testing purposes only."

Consultant hopes open source apps will "snap together" someday

DCPI, a technology consulting firm based in New York City, specializes in providing custom content management solutions. DCPI uses open source software and recommends it to clients who need powerful, flexible content management solutions, but face budget challenges in a belt-tightening economy. President and founder Joe Bachana says he discovered the merits of building a business on open source first through personal experience.

NComputing spreads I/O wealth

NComputing has sold more than 600,000 virtual desktops in the last three years, offering an innovative way to harness what it calls “the untapped power of existing PCs.” The 5-year-old NComputing provides the software that creates a virtual desktop environment on any Windows- or Linux-based computer. The NComputing solution differs from competitors Citrix Systems, Microsoft and VMware by also including a client device that improves I/O through a patented process.

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