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Sliding Back the Support Scale

The amount of time a given release of a Linux distribution is support is of paramount interest to its users. After all, large-scale deployments depend on stability, and stability means support. Some users of openSUSE are liable to be feeling a bit shaken this week, after the project announced that the support period for its releases has been cut by a fourth.

Kernel Bug Lay Undiscovered for Eight Years

A Linux kernel bug in network socket initialization could allow an attacker to acquire root privileges to inflict damages. The security hole applies to all kernels of the 2.4 and 2.5 series and has been around possibly since 2001.

Use Multiple Debian Versions At the Same Time

If you like the reliability of Debian Stable, buy yearn for some newer packages from Testing or Unstable, you can have it all. Juliet Kemp shows us how to run a mixed Debian installation and pull packages from whatever version we desire.

Arch Linux 2009.08 Benchmarks

Arch Linux 2009.08 was released earlier this week with a new installer, more automatic configuration settings, many core package updates, and other changes to this growingly popular distribution. At the request of some readers, we have carried out some quick benchmarks to get a general understanding of where Arch Linux 2009.08 is performing in comparison to Ubuntu 9.04.

Importing a remote desktop session via ssh tunnel

  • unixlab.blogspot.com (Posted by fermi on Aug 14, 2009 6:15 PM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
At home, I have,2 machines; one running Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty) and the other running Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy). The Hardy machine is used by my family members and I use Jaunty for my experiments. Some times, I would like to test some thing on Hardy also. But most of the times that machine is not free. I use ssh to login to the hardy box and use an ssh tunnel to export the GUI session back to my Jaunty box.

Netscape Founder Backs New Browser

It has been 15 years since Marc Andreessen developed the Netscape Internet browser that introduced millions of people to the Internet. After its early success, Netscape was roundly defeated by Microsoft in the so-called browser wars of the 1990s that dominated the Web’s first chapter. Mr. Andreessen appears to want a rematch. Now a prominent Silicon Valley financier, Mr. Andreessen is backing a start-up called RockMelt, staffed with some of his close associates, that is building a new Internet browser, according to people with knowledge of his investment.

Taming Twitter with the Command Line

  • Greg Laden's Blog; By Greg Laden (Posted by gregladen on Aug 14, 2009 4:58 PM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
I thought I was done with the command line for the week, but then I did something cool that I thought I'd share with you. I use twitter to promote my blog, and I follow almost 3,000 people. That means that every few seconds there is an update on my "people I follow" list, and it is almost always something I am not interested in. This makes Twitter kind of useless for me. My want: Manually maintain a file of the names of people whose tweets I want to actually see. An a-list, if you will. Write a script that would use the a-list to generate a list of tweets culled from the larger fire hose list. ... I call it a-tweet. Short for show me the a-list tweets!

Attempt of prevu Xen 3.4.1 Hypervisor on Ubuntu Jaunty Server (64-bit)

  • Xen Virtualization on Linux and Solaris; By Boris Derzhavets (Posted by dba477 on Aug 14, 2009 4:01 PM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
PVOPS kernel been installed to run under Xen 3.4.1 was 2.6.31-rc5. To build Xen 3.4.1 Dom0 via Bug Attachments at Please merge xen-3.4 (3.4.0-2) from debian unstable installed "prevu" and performed build to obtain debian packages.

Google Wrestles Microsoft for Media Attention

For most of the summer, Microsoft has done a good job of capturing the lion's share of media attention, but this week Google took steps to wrestle that attention away.

OpenSolaris: Installing gnome-launch-box

Mark your calendars, for 12 August 2009 deserves to be remembered for all eternity. At least it was an important day for me. Because one thing that I was missing on OpenSolaris and in the GNOME desktop environment was GNOME-DO. This application was one of many that truly made me efficient in a GNU/Linux environment. It is unfortunate though that a package of it does not exist in OpenSolaris. Even when installing Mono (pkg.opensolaris.org/contrib) and all the necessary components, I still had problems building the package. One day I may revisit that but in the meantime I decided to concentrate on building and installing the gnome-launch-box. For the most part, gnome-launch-box will do all that I really need it to do.

The vi Editor Mini-Course

  • BeginLinux.com; By Mike Weber (Posted by aweber on Aug 14, 2009 1:23 PM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
This is the second course in the Bash Shell course series which will help you understand the basics of working with the vi text editor in Linux. At some time everyone who uses Linux will need a text editor. One of the most important reasons for learning vi is that it is loaded on every Linux distro by default whereas others like nano or emacs are not. So whatever, text editor you choose be sure you load it and use it before you need it.

Big-Name Distro Disenchantment

Break out the Speedos, grab the suntan lotion from the cupboard and crack open a chilled lager: the new summer collection from the top three desktop distro vendors is here. But if you’re thinking of giving a slice of your hard disk to one of these prominent free operating systems, don’t bother.

Requests for Linux drivers flowing in

A steady stream of manufacturers are requesting Linux drivers for their hardware, suggesting growing adoption of Linux operating systems among enterprises. According to Greg Kroah-Hartman, Novell programmer and Linux Driver Project lead, the group of some 400 programmers at the Project receive requests to port existing closed-source drivers to open source drivers for Linux "all the time", and has been "doing a lot of work on this over the past few years".

Open Source Programming Languages surveyed

Black Duck has analysed its database of 200,000 open source programs to see which programming languages are most popular. The database is used by the company as part of their compliance and license management services.

Ubuntu 9.04 Samba Server Integrated With Active Directory

  • HowtoForge (Posted by falko on Aug 14, 2009 9:42 AM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
This howto describes how an Ubuntu 9.04 Samba server is integrated with Active Directory, and how to use Winbind; the Linux server sees the domain users and groups transparently. I assume that your Ubuntu server is installed and ready to be configured with Samba.

Novell cuts openSUSE Linux support to 18 months

  • InternetNews.com; By Sean Kerner (Posted by red5 on Aug 14, 2009 8:41 AM CST)
  • Groups: Novell, Linux; Story Type: News Story
The issue of how long a Linux distribution will support a release is one that tends to go back and forth. Novell's openSUSE Linux is now revising its policy. Starting with the openSUSE 11.2, maintenance support will be approximately 18 months which is reduction of 6 months from what openSUSE 11.1 and prior offered users.

Installing openSuSE: grub complaining on a hardware RAID

  • Technology FLOSS; By Edmundo Carmona (Posted by eantoranz on Aug 14, 2009 5:47 AM CST)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: SUSE
A few days ago I set myself to install openSuSE 11.1 (LiveCD based on KDE4). The thing is that this particular box has a hardware RAID set up. I had no problem installing other OSs on top of it so I thought it was going to be painless.... It wasn't. When the installer was about to finish, on the part where grub was going to be installed on the MBR, it would fail miserably with an error 21. It would complain about not being able to find a certain device.

Got Extras?

We have all read many tutorials and articles about what programs to add to Ubuntu after installation. However I have yet to see an article or tutorial talk about installing the extras that beef up the default programs that come with Ubuntu.

The Three Button Mouse Phenomenon: A cultural trait found in those who love their computers

Macs have always used a three-button mouse. The fact that no one has ever SEEN such a mouse is not because mac users are delusional. It is because they love their computers so much that they assume that if a three button mouse is a good thing, then there must be one attached to their box ....

Penguin unveils Linux-based HPC in the cloud

Penguin Computing, a company that provides high-performance computing resources to researchers, scientists and engineers, has begun offering its services in the cloud. Penguin On Demand (POD) became available on Tuesday. The company said the service is intended for those who need HPC capabilities without having to acquire the clustered infrastructure required for that level of computing.

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