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5 tips for creating better mobile interfaces for the web

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Feb 11, 2013 10:47 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The mobile revolution has changed user expectations of how they interact with different products. Meeting these changed expectations requires a huge amount of re-thinking from user experience (UX) designers. Pascal Mangold, CEO of Magnolia, recently explored this trend in an article on how the mobile revolution is challenging open source product interfaces and explained how Magnolia CMS, an open-source enterprise-grade Java Content Management System, redesigned its web-based interface to give its users an innovative new "driven by touch" content management experience.

Debian Is Still Being Made To Build With LLVM/Clang

Debian developers are still working on making the operating system compiler agnostic so that its packages can be built with LLVM/Clang and other compilers rather than continuing in a monogamist relationship with GCC...

Android in Space

  • Mail Online; By Damien Gayle (Posted by bob on Feb 8, 2013 1:54 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Mobile
UK to launch first-ever satellite controlled by a mobile phone… and the scientists have chosen a Google Nexus handset.

JavaScript becoming default language for GNOME apps

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Feb 4, 2013 7:16 PM EDT)
  • Groups: GNOME; Story Type: News Story
GNOME developer Travis Reitter is reporting on the decision by the GNOME developers to make JavaScript the standard language for GNOME application development

Microsoft Office and the Big Subscription Bet

Well it's been another wild week here in the Linux blogosphere, what with all the ruckus emanating out of the bordering Redmond territories. Much like what happened last fall when Windows 8 made its fanfare-filled debut, the launch of Office 2013 and 365 last Tuesday left more than a few Linux bloggers with a ringing in the ears that didn't abate for days.

FOSDEM: Android app to control LibreOffice presentations

LibreOffice 4.0, which is due to arrive soon, is to come with an app that allows the office suite's presentation features to be controlled from Android smartphones

Microsoft Mum on Munich Migration Study

Munich's multiyear migration to Linux has been nothing if not an ongoing saga over the past decade or so, beset as it has been by stops, starts, and various twists and turns. The story appeared to have a happy ending in November when Munich reported that using Linux had already saved it more than 10 million euros, but last week Microsoft spoke up with a different tale.

Lennart Poettering Takes To Battling Systemd Myths

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jan 27, 2013 4:03 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Lennart Poettering, the controversial open-source developer behind PulseAudio and systemd among other projects, has written a lengthy blog post as he attempts to battle some myths about his Linux init daemon...

Lotus 1-2-3 turns 30: Mitch Kapor on the Google before Google

Surviving tech's bubble, but not Microsoft Before Apple and Google turned computing into a webified, personalised and mobile experience, there was Microsoft. It was Microsoft that set the computing paradigm with a layer of software called Windows, which made computing personal, powerful and affordable when married with Intel chips. But before all of them, there was Lotus Development Corp, with its Lotus 1-2-3 software - so-called because it integrated three elements: spreadsheet, database and graphics. In many ways, the 30-year-old software package laid the foundations for the type of productivity app that's so ubiquitous in the modern computing experience and yet so important it has been thrown into the cloud by Google with Docs, Apple with iWorks and Microsoft with Office 365.…

Ubuntu 13.04 Will Improve Gaming On Open-Source GPU Drivers

While still a ways from being comparable to the proprietary graphics drivers in terms of features and OpenGL performance, the open-source GPU drivers found by default in the forthcoming Ubuntu 13.04 release are a big improvement over the out-of-the-box graphics drivers found in earlier Ubuntu Linux releases. The Ubuntu desktop is also faster thanks to improvements to its Unity desktop environment and Compiz compositing window manager. In this article are Linux gaming benchmarks looking at the performance of Fedora 17, Fedora 18, Ubuntu 12.10, and a preliminary Ubuntu 13.04 development snapshot. In this first article, the OpenGL performance of Intel and Radeon graphics are being benchmarked.

Alan Cox, No. 2 in Linux world, resigns

In the world of Open Source, they do things differently. Even resignations. Alan Cox, effectively number two in the Linux world after Linus Torvalds, resigned on Wednesday. Cox, who’s paid by Intel for his Linux work and officially lists himself as “Works at Etched Pixels Digital Design” on his Google+ profile, announced his resignation in a public statement that is as transparent as it is honest.

Fedora 18 Fails At ARM Wrestling Arch, Ubuntu, Linaro

Fedora 18 was officially released this week for x86/x86_64, but the ARM version of Fedora 18 "Spherical Cow" is still under development. Fedora 18 for ARM went into beta last week and since then benchmarks were carried out comparing Spherical Cow on ARM to other popular ARM Linux distributions.

Intel's Mesa Driver Gets New Performance Patch

Intel's Mesa DRI driver received a new patch this weekend that's capable of enhancing the open-source graphics driver's performance for some OpenGL games...

SDDM: A Lightweight QML-Based Display Manager

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Jan 20, 2013 4:19 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
A Phoronix reader has announced his work on SDDM within the Phoronix Forums this weekend. SDDM is a very lightweight display management that takes advantage of Qt's QML...

jQuery 1.9 prepares developers for the dropping of old IE support

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Jan 16, 2013 7:05 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
jQuery 1.9 clears the decks on the JavaScript library as the developers prepare to drop support for Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8 in the forthcoming jQuery 2.0 which has just entered beta

Calls for internet law reform and open access after activist suicide

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Jan 15, 2013 10:30 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
US law on computer crime should be reformed says the EFF, as the death of Aaron Swartz shows the law to be overly punitive and broad. Open access advocates are memorialising Swartz by releasing and collating academic papers using the #pdftribute hashtag

VMware joins the Open Source Software Institute

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Jan 14, 2013 5:53 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
VMware has joined the Open Source Software Institute (OSSI), a non-profit industry organisation aimed at increasing open source adoption within the US government, specifically the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Defense

How the mobile revolution is challenging open source user interfaces

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Jan 14, 2013 12:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
In the past couple of years, a powerful paradigm shift has occurred in user experience (UX) design. UX designers used to focus on desktop users but now, mobile devices and mobile users are at the center of attention. The evidence for the importance of this paradigm shift is stifling: Morgan Stanley predicts that by 2014, mobile users will exceed desktop users. Google’s executive chairman Eric Schmidt says that "if you don’t have a mobile strategy, you don’t have a future strategy."

Hey, open sourcers: Who's your code's daddy?

  • The Register (Posted by bob on Jan 14, 2013 11:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
VMware's dealings with Vert.x founder should serve as a warning Open... and shut So-called "pre-invention assignment agreements" are a rite of passage when joining a company. For an open-source developer, they may also be giving away the keys to an open-source project, as VMware's recent legal action against the founder of the Vert.x project shows.…

Fix for critical Java hole released

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Jan 14, 2013 10:49 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Oracle; Story Type: News Story
Oracle has released an update for Java 7 to address the recent 0day vulnerability which is being widely exploited. The update also closes a previously undisclosed critical hole

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