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How to edit Movie Subtitles on the Linux Desktop

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Jun 22, 2015 10:17 AM CST)
  • Groups: GNOME, Linux; Story Type: News Story
Here's is a quick guide on how to load and edit subtitles on GNOME Subtitles and Subtitle Editor. The movie that I will be using for this tutorial is a documentary called “The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard” released in 2013 under a Creative Commons (CC) license.

“EPIC” fail—how OPM hackers tapped the mother lode of espionage data

  • ars technica; By Sean Gallagher (Posted by bob on Jun 22, 2015 9:20 AM CST)
  • Story Type: Security
Government officials have been vague in their testimony about the data breaches—there was apparently more than one—at the Office of Personnel Management. But on Thursday, officials from OPM, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of the Interior revealed new information that indicates at least two separate systems were compromised by attackers within OPM's and Interior's networks.

The rise of creativity propels open data forward

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Jun 22, 2015 8:23 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
The Greek mathematician and philosopher Plato, when asked of the Socratic dialogue The Republic, "Will we say of a painter, that he makes something?," answered "Certainly not, he merely imitates." Plato did not believe in art as a form of creativity. In fact, many great ancient cultures like Ancient Greece and Ancient India lacked the concept of creativity. Art was seen as a form of discovery and not creation.It was a common belief that creativity happens to a selected few as a consequence of some form of divine intervention. read more

How to build CubiKG, a DiY heart and activity tracking device

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Jun 22, 2015 5:32 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
A few weeks ago, my doctor told me to keep an eye on my heart with the help of DiY toolkit BITalino, and I wrote about it in Why my doctor prescribed me open hardware. Although I could keep slapping a bunch of cables and a PCB on me every day (Figure 1), miniaturized physiological computing devices are pretty fun to build and play with—at least for me—so I decided to make myself something more practical. read more

Can Wikipedia Survive?

  • New York Times; By Andrew Lih (Posted by bob on Jun 21, 2015 8:50 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
One of the biggest threats it faces is the rise of smartphones as the dominant personal computing device. A recent Pew Research Center report found that 39 of the top 50 news sites received more traffic from mobile devices than from desktop and laptop computers, sales of which have declined for years.

Attack Gave Chinese Hackers Privileged Access to U.S. Systems

  • New York Times; By David E. Sanger, Nicole Perlroth and Michael Shear (Posted by bob on Jun 21, 2015 9:24 AM CST)
  • Story Type: Security
Undetected for nearly a year, the Chinese intruders executed a sophisticated attack that gave them “administrator privileges” into the computer networks at the Office of Personnel Management, mimicking the credentials of people who run the agency’s systems, two senior administration officials said. The hackers began siphoning out a rush of data after constructing what amounted to an electronic pipeline that led back to China...

OSVR supports Android, Linux gaming at E3, and more

Hello, open gaming fans! In this week's edition, we take a look at OSVR's support of Android, Linux games at E3, and more!

Linux Security The Complete Manual, on sale now!

Learn how to keep your system and your online life as secure and private as possible with our digital special.

Wireless media streaming speaker has Android touchscreen

Zettaly’s portable, “Avy” wireless speaker runs Android 4.4 and features a 7-inch touchscreen, 10W speakers, a web cam, and up to 40GB of storage.

Run Linux in the AWS cloud

  • Linux User & Developer; By Filipe Martins & Anna Kobylinska (Posted by bob on Jun 20, 2015 6:24 AM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Cloud, Linux
Power up your own virtual Linux instance on EC2 and run it free for a year.

LinkedIn and Facebook tools, IBM boosts Apache Spark, and more open source news

In this week's edition of our open source news roundup, we take a look at LinkedIn and Facebook open sourcing tools, IBM giving Apache Spark a boost, and more!

Reddit to Move to HTTPS-Only

In the two years since the details of the NSA's deep penetration of the Internet infrastructure began to emerge, there has been a major movement afoot among Web companies to encrypt more and more of their resources and services. The latest large property to make this move is Reddit, which by the end of the month will move to an HTTPS-only model for its sites.

Top 10 botnet targets in the U.S. and worldwide

Every day, the security team at network services provider Level 3 Communications monitors approximately 1.3 billion security events; mitigates roughly 22 distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks; and removes, on average, one control and command (C2) server network.

Top 5: Docker contributions, DevOps is 10% tech, and more

This week, we highlight NY State's open data portal, how to be a Docker contributor, an exclusive interview with Robyn Bergeron of Elastic, the latest release of Blender and it's cool new features, and and interview with Jen Krieger, an Agile coach at Red Hat.

Goodbye F20, F23 development, and Fedora Hubs

  • Fedora Magazine (Posted by bob on Jun 19, 2015 3:09 PM CST)
  • Groups: Fedora; Story Type: News Story
Fedora 20 End-of-Life Imminent The Fedora Project keeps three versions of the OS active at any given time — the current release, the release before that, and a new one in development. With last month’s release of Fedora 22 and... Continue Reading →

The AtoMiC Toolkit!

If you're a cord cutter (and a nerd), you most likely have a server or two dedicated to serving and possibly retrieving videos from the Internet. Programs like Kodi and Plex are awesome for media delivery; however, there's more to a complete system than just playing the videos.

The tools don't get you the job

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Jun 19, 2015 9:10 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
Not too long ago, I was working at an art organisation that offered university classes, low-cost membership for facility usage, and just an all-round creative space where people could come and look at and create art. It was very nearly my ideal organisation. It was non-profit, creative, and as open as it could be to anyone who wanted to learn. read more

New speakers announced for PGDay

  • Linux User & Developer - the Linux and FOSS mag for a GNU generation (Posted by bob on Jun 19, 2015 8:13 AM CST)
  • Groups: GNU, Linux, Developer; Story Type: News Story
The UK's only dedicated Postgres user event has two new speakers, along with a great line up of technology and other experts

How to change the Swappiness of your Linux system

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Jun 19, 2015 7:16 AM CST)
  • Groups: Kernel, Linux; Story Type: News Story
Swappiness is the kernel parameter that defines how much (and how often) your Linux kernel will copy RAM contents to swap. This parameter's default value is “60” and it can take anything from “0” to “100”. The higher the value of the swappiness parameter, the more aggressively your kernel will swap.

Tiny module aims quad-core 64-bit Snapdragon 410 at IoT

Intrinsyc’s tiny “Open-Q 410 SOM” module has a quad-core, Cortex-A53 Snapdragon 410, offers WiFi, BT, GPS, 8GB of eMMC, and supports both Android and Linux. Vancouver, Canada based Intrinsyc Technologies Corp. has expanded its line of Qualcomm Snapdragon based Open-Q computer-on-modules with a tiny module that taps Qualcomm’s 64-bit, Snapdragon 410. The Open-Q 410 is […]

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