Showing headlines posted by linuxwriter
« Previous ( 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 11 ) Next »Kubuntu v Ubuntu: looks like the house is dividing
Just a day before Ubuntu announced that it would be making its Mir display server the default from the next release, in October, the chief Kubuntu developer, Jonathan Riddell, announced that Kubuntu would not be using Mir or XMir.
Hacking the kernel: one man's tale
There are kernel hackers who are famous. And there are the hundreds who are not so well-known but nevertheless render yeoman service to the FOSS community by their diligent work. Mel Gorman belongs to the latter class.
Oracle doesn't understand open source: Monty
MariaDB founder Ulf Michael "Monty" Widenius says that Oracle has failed to make a success of MySQL because the company doesn't understand open source. "It's not in their blood," Widenius, one of the three co-founders of MySQL, told iTWire in an interview.
Ditching MySQL: Red Hat shows its prowess in spin
In the aftermath of one of its most dramatic announcements, Red Hat, the premier Linux company, continues to demonstrate that its main strengths lie in things other than technology.
Red Hat ditches MySQL, switches to MariaDB
Red Hat will switch the default database in its enterprise distribution, RHEL, from MySQL to MariaDB, when version 7 is released. The switch was expected to happen after Red Hat's community distribution Fedora announced earlier this year that it would be moving to MariaDB. But it will come as a major jolt to Oracle, the owner of MySQL. (openSUSE, the community distribution of SUSE, also announced a switch to MariaDB at the same time as Fedora.)
16 students to work on Debian during Google Summer of Code
Sixteen students will work on various aspects of Debian GNU/Linux as part of the Google Summer of Code, according to information from the Debian project
Novell decline arrested, says Attachmate chief
Two years after it acquired Novell and took the company private, the Attachmate Group says its decline has been arrested. It anticipates being able to hold that line next year.
Dovecot fails during Wheezy upgrade
A stable release from the Debian GNU/Linux project is normally just that - rock-solid stable. Not so with Wheezy or Debian 7.0 which was released on May 4. One package, Dovecot, a secure IMAP and pop3 server, fails during post-installation. There were so many changes from version 1.2 to 2.0 that it merited at least a mention in the release notes.
Debian Wheezy released, no support for secure boot
The Debian GNU/Linux project released version 7.0 of its well-known Linux distribution on May 4, two years and three months after the last version came out.
Debian developers set to party
Twenty cities around the globe, ranging from Bangalore in India to New York in the USA, will be hosting parties this weekend. More are expected to announce they are joining in as the week progresses.
Windows 8 still a hurdle for Linux
Six months have gone by since Windows 8 hit the market and it looks like Linux distributions - at least the better-known ones - are still struggling to ensure that they can live side by side with this operating system.
Getting the masses on-side: openSUSE's community manager speaks
Jos Poortvliet, the community manager for openSUSE, is refreshingly different from the norm. He is someone who brings intelligence and good sense to the role, someone who knows how to communicate in an effective way.
Lawyer hopeful of success with secure boot complaint
The lawyer who has filed a case with the European Commission against secure boot in Windows 8 on behalf of some 8000 Linux users in Spain says the complaint takes "an user and developer perspective, it is an unprecedented approach to the problem of monopoly in operating systems in Europe".
Open Ubuntu is the way out for Shuttleworth
What Mark Shuttleworth needs to realise is that a distribution cannot be both a community and enterprise system. It has to focus on one or the other.
How openSUSE 12.3 lives with secure boot
One of the many good things about openSUSE 12.3 is that the developers have provided detailed documentation on the one aspect which could cause confusion - secure boot.
openSUSE 12.3 leads the move to MariaDB
openSUSE, the community GNU/Linux distribution set up by SUSE Linux, has released version 12.3 today and, in the process, become the first distro to make the switch from MySQL to MariaDB as default database management system.
For Shuttleworth, Mir is just another means of control
Nine years have gone by since Canonical was founded; the 19th release of its Ubuntu GNU/Linux distribution will take place in October this year. Thus, it is fair to assume that the founder of Canonical, Mark Shuttleworth, is by now used to the reaction whenever Ubuntu moves in a direction different to the prevailing conventional wisdom. The latest move is from the Wayland display server to Mir, a display server that is an in-house creation. As usual, there is moaning aplenty, while people try to find reasons for the announcement.
Secure boot: Linux is at Microsoft's mercy
Linux companies or organisations that have paid for, and obtained, keys from Microsoft to ensure that their distributions can be booted on secure boot-enabled devices, have to abide by the terms of a contract or else may have their keys revoked.
SUSE has no plans for mobile, tablet
SUSE Linux has no plans to enter the mobile or tablet markets, but instead will concentrate on other areas which are part of the integrated Linux market, the president and general manager of the company, Nils Brauckmann, tells iTWire.
Red Hat spins, SUSE plays it straight
Red Hat is the 800-kg gorilla of the commercial Linux space. SUSE is about quarter of that in terms of revenue, yet is the second biggest of the three companies that vie for business attention in the burgeoning Linux market.