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To survive Industry 4.0, think beyond the digital
We live in an age of innovation featuring rapid cycles of change. Futurist Gerd Leonhardt estimates we will see more change between 2015 and 2035 than in the prior 300 years of modern history. To effectively understand this change, we need to step back and see the large scale impact of this age.
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Best Bug Bounty Programs On Internet
?The software revolution brought many opportunities for programmers. The modern software industry is not just limited to development. The developed software or service might have backdoors or glitches. These can cause vulnerabilities that hackers use to their benefit by exploiting such services.
How to Manage Your User Password from the Terminal in Linux
Passwords in Linux can be managed directly with the passwd command. This will show how you can use it to manage your user password in Linux.
4 add-ons to improve your privacy on Thunderbird
Thunderbird is a popular free email client developed by Mozilla. Similar to Firefox, Thunderbird offers a large choice of add-ons for extra features and customization. This article focuses on four add-ons to improve your privacy. Enigmail Encrypting emails using GPG (GNU Privacy Guard) is the best way to keep their contents private. If you aren’t […]
UserLAnd, a Turnkey Linux in Your Pocket
There comes a time when having a full-fledged Linux distribution within
reach is necessary or just plain useful. And, what could be more within reach than
having that same distribution on a computing device most people
have with them at all times? Yes, I'm talking about a smartphone—specifically, an
Android-powered smartphone. Enter UserLAnd.
How to set up Apache Virtual Hosts on Debian 9
In this tutorial, we will show you how to set up Apache virtual hosts on Debian 9. Apache is a free and open source web server. It is the most popular and widely used web server in the world, and it is commonly used in Linux servers. It is developed and maintained by Apache Software Foundation, over half of all servers around the world are running this fast and secure web server.
DIY RV Offsite Backup and Media Server
What better way to add a geeky touch to #vanlife than with a
Linux server in your RV? One easily could make the strong argument that an RV is the ultimate DIY project
playground. It combines all of the DIY projects you could perform on a
vehicle with the DIY projects for a home.
KDE Plasma 5.13.3 Desktop Environment Released with More Than 30 Improvements
The KDE Project released today the third maintenance update to the latest KDE Plasma 5.13 open-source desktop environment for Linux-based operating systems.
Canonical Releases Minimal Ubuntu, Mozilla Launches Two Mobile Test Pilot Experiments, Google Announces Jib for Java Developers, New Ubuntu Bug Discovered and Wine 3.12 Now Available
News briefs for July 10, 2018.
wego – ASCII weather app for the terminal
wego is another gem of a terminal application. It’s open source weather software written in the Go programming language and designed for the terminal. It displays the weather in a variety of visually attractive ways. It’s a lightweight way to keep an eye on the weather without requiring a web browser.
Users, Groups, and Other Linux Beasts
In a nutshell: you use permissions to establish who can do stuff to files and directories and what they can do with each file and directory -- read from it, write to it, move it, erase it, etc. To try everything this tutorial covers, you'll need to create a new user on your system. Let's be practical and make a user for anybody who needs to borrow your computer, that is, what we call a guest account.
Linux module and dev board showcase Arm/FPGA Stratix 10 SX
Reflex CES has launched a “COMXpressSX Stratix 10” Basic Type 7 module that runs Linux on Intel’s Stratix 10 SX SoC and offers 56GB DDR4, 32GB eMMC, and 32x PCIe. An optional PCIe carrier supplies 10GbE, GbE, SATA, and more. Paris-based Reflex CES, which sells a variety on FPGA-based PCIe boards and development kits, last year released a Linux-driven, 95 x 86mm Arria 10 SoC SoM based on Intel PSG’s FPGA- and dual Cortex-A9 enabled Arria 10 SoC. Now it has returned with a COM Express Basic Type 7 module and development kit that runs Linux on Intel PSG’s more powerful, 14nm fabricated Stratix 10 SX SoC.
New Variant of Spectre Security Flaw Discovered: Speculative Buffer Overflows
Security researchers Vladimir Kiriansky and Carl Waldspurger have published a paper to disclose a new variant of the infamous Spectre security vulnerability, which creates speculative buffer overflows.
Xen 4.11 Improves Server Virtualization with PVH
PVH brings together the best of paravirtualization (PV) with Hardware Virtual Machine (HVM) to enable a new era of server virtualization capabilities.
Proxies Vs. VPNs Vs. Tor Browser
In a world where global transactions take place within seconds of initiation. Where Millions of cryptocurrency coins are exchanged across the framework of distributed systems. Internet security is and will always remain a major concern.
Shippable's Software
What's interesting is that Shippable isn't targeting developers for the Internet of Things or smartphones, ARM's typical base, but is betting that the reduced instruction set architecture is on its way to having a big impact in data centers.
The aftermath of the Gentoo GitHub hack
A password guess and five days offline have left not only Gentoo's GitHub admins, but all of us, with some things to think about.
With Many Eyeballs, Is Open Source Security Better?
Back in 1999, Eric Raymond coined the term "Linus' Law," which stipulates that given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow.
Linus' Law, named in honor of Linux creator Linus Torvalds, has for nearly two decades been used by some as a doctrine to explain why open source software should have better security. In recent years, open source projects and code have experienced multiple security issues, but does that mean Linus' Law isn't valid?
Linus' Law, named in honor of Linux creator Linus Torvalds, has for nearly two decades been used by some as a doctrine to explain why open source software should have better security. In recent years, open source projects and code have experienced multiple security issues, but does that mean Linus' Law isn't valid?
Getting started with Perlbrew
What's better than having Perl installed on your system? Having multiple Perls installed on your system! With Perlbrew you can do just that. But why—apart from surrounding yourself in Perl—would you want to do that?
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How to install OpenCV on Ubuntu 18.04
This tutorial explains how to install OpenCV on Ubuntu 18.04.
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