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Forgetting Microsoft: How Steve Ballmer's Surface could win

Ignore Apple, it's Google he must take on Open ... and Shut In a Windows world we bought the product. In Google's world we are the product. Judging from market share trends, we apparently don't mind being bought and sold. At least, so long as the price is right.…

The H Roundup - Google Drive backdoor, Wayland 1.0 and Raspberry Pi

In the week ending 27 October - Google Drive clients open backdoors, Wayland hit its 1.0 milestone and the Raspberry Pi got its ARM code open sourced. Also, Mozilla and CryptoParties, and attacking TrueCrypt

Yocto Project 1.3 includes AutoBuilder

  • Heise (Posted by bob on Oct 27, 2012 1:04 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
With the release of version 1.3, the team at the Yocto Project has added a number of developer-visible features to its embedded distribution builder. First announced in October 2010, the open source collaboration project (a Linux Foundation workgroup) is aimed at device builders. It provides templates, tools and methods for developers to create Linux-based systems for various embedded systems and processor architectures such as ARM, MIPS, PPC or x86.

Tiki Wiki 9.2 can now check system requirements

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Oct 26, 2012 10:18 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
Version 9.2 of the wiki, CMS and groupware solution introduces the Tiki Server Check, a feature for testing whether server environment meets Tiki's minimum requirements

Parallella: Low-Cost Linux Multi-Core Computing

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Oct 26, 2012 9:18 PM CST)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Parallella is an attempt to make Linux parallel computing easier and is advertised as a "supercomputer for everyone", but will it come to fruition?..

Getting Started with 3-D Printing: the Hardware

I've been interested in 3-D printers ever since I saw one at a Maker Faire a few years ago, but it was only a year ago when I started seriously thinking about having one of my own. At that point, I started to realize just how many different options existed and ultimately started researching the RepRap family of 3-D printers (more on the different printer families below).

CoffeeScript 1.4.0 released

The new version of the "little language that compiles into JavaScript" includes changes that allow it to strip Microsoft's UTF-8 BOM from source files and fixes to correct deprecation warnings

Windows 8: Jack of All Trades, Master of None?

There just doesn't seem to be any rest for the weary here in the Linux blogosphere lately, what with the release of Ubuntu Linux 12.10 "Quantal Quetzal" last week and the "Rectangle with Rounded Corners" 5 not long before that. Next up? Well, it's Windows 8, which officially launches on Friday.

FOSS' Fight Against China's Free-as-in-Pirated Syndrome

The tide of software piracy in China may be ebbing. With the clear support of the Chinese government, several software organizations and computer firms based in Europe and the U.S. are conducting events focusing on growing open source in China. The push toward China's active participation in the open source community signals a maturing of the country's computing infrastructure.

Google becomes strategic member of the Eclipse Foundation

As a strategic member, Google will provide the organisation with eight full-time developers to work on Eclipse technology and donate $250,000 per year

When I realized why open source rocks

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Oct 23, 2012 8:25 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
West Virginia: a state made up entirely of the Appalachian Mountain range. Whether you're there to experience the beautiful New River Gorge, or to watch the Mountaineers play at home, the mountainous theme never subsides. The Appalachian region has the Most Beautiful award locked down, however its height and elevation face a slightly different opponent. Towering over the city of Morgantown, WV, home to West Virginia University and the Mountaineers, stands a fierce competitor. An engineering marvel, over ten stories tall. The Engineering Science Building!

Ubuntu less Unity: A first look at Ubuntu GNOME Remix 12.10

With the release of Ubuntu 12.10, a first remix that includes GNOME 3 as its standard desktop is now available. The new remix even uses a GNOME package management tool

Gentoo Developers, Users Look At Gaming Future

One of the events being co-hosted alongside LinuxDays is a Gentoo mini-conference. A session held this morning concerned the state of Linux 3D graphics drivers and gaming for Gentoo Linux...

Reading The Linux Graphics Driver How-To Book

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Oct 20, 2012 10:41 PM CST)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
For those wondering about the outcome of the Linux graphics driver development book that was worked on back in September prior to XDC2012, the book continues to be worked on a bit for those interested in reading it...

GCC 4.8 To Handle More C++11, Initial C++1y Support

  • Phoronix (Posted by bob on Oct 18, 2012 4:03 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
GCC 4.8 is set to support more of the C++11 ISO standard and it also starts working on very early support for "C++1y", the next C++ standard that is still years away...

Fedora 18 delayed by another week

The beta release and the subsequent final version of Fedora 18 have been delayed by yet another week. The upgrade tool and priorities at Red Hat are among the reasons for the latest slip

FSF opens nominations for 15th Free Software Awards

  • The H Open (Posted by bob on Oct 17, 2012 11:53 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
The FSF is asking for nominations for its two Free Software awards, which will be handed out by FSF president Richard Stallman at the LibrePlanet conference next year

Can we upgrade democracy with open source version control?

  • opensource.com (Posted by bob on Oct 17, 2012 7:18 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
As Luis Ibanez pointed out on Friday, Clay Shirky's latest TED Talk—exploring what open source version control systems may mean for democracy—is great food for thought. Shirky says tools like Git will one day transform democracy, because they will make it easier than ever for citizens to participate in lawmaking and other formerly hierarchical civic processes. Imagine, for example, if anyone could propose a "patch" to the legal code, as easily as they can for computer code. It might be feasible for many more people to be directly involved, and the code might get much better.

KDE celebrates Ada Lovelace Day with tutorials

Dot Categories: Community and EventsToday, KDE celebrated its 16th birthday. On October 14, 1996, Matthias Ettrich started KDE. Since then, amazing women have helped make KDE what it is today. Women like Anne-Marie Mahfouf, Eva Brucherseifer, Alexandra Leisse, Celeste Lyn Paul, Anne Wilson, Claire Lotion, Lydia Pintscher, Myriam Schweingruber, Claudia Rauch and many many more. Women have shaped both KDE code and KDE community.

How Nokia managed to drive its in-house Linux train off the rails

  • The Register; By Andrew Orlowski (Posted by bob on Oct 11, 2012 2:00 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Intel, Mobile
Nokia's strategy to revive its fortunes with its home-grown Linux was derailed by academic theory, bureaucratic in-fighting and a misguided partnership with Intel, a new report reveals. Finnish publication Taskmuro has published an extensive history of the Meego project which contains a mixture of old and new: some information that's familiar - and some intriguing new details. The report confirms what we know: that Nokia had developed a competitive successor to its ageing Symbian platform years before Apple's iPhone appeared - but fluffed the execution so badly, it would eventually junk almost all of its internal platform software development.

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