Showing headlines posted by bob
« Previous ( 1 ... 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 ... 1158 ) Next »Getting started with Minecraft Pi
Minecraft is a hugely popular game that runs on PC, Xbox, PlayStation, and even smartphones. It's the best-selling PC game of all time and has become a worldwide sensation with obsessive players around the world, a large online community, and a vast array of merchandise. Many people enjoy building complicated structures and even creating their own interactive systems using only the mechanics of the game.
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Here comes RHEL beta 6.7
Not ready for the jump to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7? Be of good cheer, Red Hat is still improving Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.x.
8 ways developers can be more like Willie Nelson
I cringe when I see job listings searching for "rock star developers." What does that even mean? Developers who take all the credit, while the band, agent, road crew, and sound engineers do the heavy lifting?
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EMC partners with Canonical, Mirantis, and Red Hat for OpenStack
The storage giant is partnering up to bring its hardware to the major OpenStack clouds.
diff -u: What's New in Kernel Development
One ongoing question kernel developers face is the best way to delete data so no one else can
recover it. Typically there are simple tools to undelete files that are deleted
accidentally, although some filesystems make this easier than others.
Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) Minimal Server Installation Tutorial
This tutorial shows the installation of a Ubuntu 15.04 minimal server in detail with many screenshots. The purpose of the guide is to show the basic installation of Ubuntu 15.04 that can be used as basis for our other Ubuntu 15.04 tutorials here at howtoforge like our perfect server guides.
Tiny UAV-oriented i.MX6 SBC has HDMI in and out
Gateworks unveiled a tiny, UAV-oriented SBC that runs Linux or Android on an i.MX6 SoC, and offers HDMI in/out, USB, serial, GPIO, CAN, mini-PCIe, and more.
Google Updates Password Alert Extension, But Some Bypasses Still Work
For the second time in less than a week, Google has updated its Password Alert extension for Chrome to address a method for bypassing the warning screens that alert users that they're entering data on a non-Google site. However, the researcher who discovered the most-recent bypass method said his technique still works on the latest version.
House of Cards UI central to Mozilla's plans for Firefox on tellies
The deck is stacked and the designers want it that way. Mozilla has revealed how it reckons Firefox should look when it's on the tellie.
Linux-ready COM mates an i.MX6 SoC with an FPGA
Armadeus has launched a Linux-equipped module that integrates a Freescale i.MX6 SoC with a Cyclone V GX FPGA, and offers SATA, CSI, DSI, and optional WiFi.
Singapore's prime minister releases source code for his hand-coded Sudoku-solver
Top that, David Cameron and Ed Miliband
Singaporean prime minister Lee Hsien Loong has decided to reveal the source code of the Sudoku-solving app he personally coded.…
Shell Scripting Part 3: Decision Control Structures in Shell Scripts
We already covered the basics of shell scripting such as accepting inputs, process data through arithmetic operations and generating and displaying output in the previous series of this tutorial. In this series, we will go deeper to a more advanced topic in a programming language -- making decisions in a program, but this time we will do it using bash shell.
IBIS: A powerful, Drupal-based info gathering tool
I'm very excited about Joshua Lee's talk on the Drupal-powered International Biosecurity Intelligence System (IBIS) at DrupalCon 2015. Though I'm no biosecurity expert, the aggregation methods and process workflow for gathering biosecurity information is relevant to many industries. In his talk, the technology for creating this data aggregation system will be covered, as well as how the Drupal community can both benefit and contribute to this project.
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Chrome-Colored Parakeets
I personally like Google's Chrome interface. It's simple, fast, elegant
and did I mention fast? Unfortunately, I don't like how locked down the
Chrome OS is on a Chromebook, nor do I like its total dependence on Google. I
also don't like the lack of ability to install Chrome easily on generic
hardware. Thankfully, Budgie is here to help.
Federal Investment in Repository Solution Sets New Bar for How Libraries Share
The project will give libraries, museums, and archives of all types and sizes an out-of-the-box open source solution for managing their digital content and exposing what they have to the world. It will build on the work many academic libraries have done to create institutional repositories for their own organizations.
Mozilla Looks To Phase Out Unencrypted Web
“Today we are announcing our intent to phase out non-secure HTTP,” said Firefox security lead Richard Barnes in a blog post. “There’s pretty broad agreement that HTTPS is the way forward for the web.”
84-Year-Old Volunteer Rebuilds, Sends Linux Laptops to Africa
Retired pastor James Anderson, age 84, has never worked in IT or had any formal computer training, but over the past two years he has rebuilt more than a hundred IBM ThinkPad laptops and sent them to schools and nonprofits in Africa – all running Linux.
7 reasons why the feds shouldn’t mess with encryption
The spread of encryption is posting public safety challenges and making it harder for the government to fight both criminals and terrorists, said Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson. But for security vendors providing encryption technology to enterprise customers, any tampering with encryption protocols would do more damage than harm. Here are seven ways security pros believe the DHS is wrong on encryption.
Biicode goes open source early after outpouring of community support
In my last Opensource.com article, I wrote about biicode's decision to go open source once we reached 10,000 users.
After the announcement, our community growth skyrocketed. Our investors were so impressed by the welcoming of our open source announcement that they let us go ahead with open sourcing biicode early. We worked hard to release most of it in biicode 3.0.
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5 ways to promote an inclusive environment where good ideas can emerge
People in tech companies and particularly in open source communities believe in and value meritocracy—letting the best ideas win. One thing that's become increasingly clear to me over the past few years is this: meritocracy is a great driver of innovation, but if we want to get to the best ideas, we need diversity of thought and an inclusive environment where everyone feels welcome to participate and offer different perspectives. Indeed, to live up to our ideal of meritocracy, we must consistently question and seek to improve it.
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