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Do Your SSL Certs Meet Microsoft's New Requirements?

Warning from Microsoft to the entire Internet: make sure that your digital certificates are at least 1024 bits. As of Oct. 9, 2012, longer key lengths are mandatory for all digital encryption certificates that touch Windows systems.

Can this Android desktop replace your PC?

  • TG Daily; By Trent Nouveau (Posted by masgeeks on Sep 14, 2012 7:57 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Motorola has rolled out an Android-powered desktop in China - complete with an 18.5-inch LED touchscreen (1366x768 @ 60Hz, 16:9), keyboard and mouse.??

Do We Need More Linux Kernel Developers? Oracle Thinks So VIDEO

At the LinuxCon USA event, Linus Torvalds told the audience that there are enough Linux kernel developers out there already. As it turns out, that might not necessarily be the case.

German Court Ruling Sheds Doubt on Motorola Patents' Worth

A regional court in Munich has ruled that Google-owned Motorola Mobility infringed an Apple patent related to touchscreen technology. The court placed a preliminary injunction on devices that use the patent-infringing tech, including the Motorola Milestone XT720, the Motorola Defy, the Motorola Atrix and the Motorola Xoom.

First release candidate for Samba 4 is available

The Samba developers are moving forward with their plans to deliver the next version of the Windows file, print and directory server and have announced that the first release candidate for Samba 4 is now ready.Version 4 of the free Windows services server has been in development for some time, and now includes a directory service that is compatible with Microsoft's Active Directory. The developers point out that this version continues to be unsuitable for production use, but that it can now be tested by interested Samba users.

5 Links for Developers and IT Pros 9-14-12

  • Ness Software Engineering Services Blog; By Ron Miller (Posted by rsmiller on Sep 14, 2012 4:20 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial, Roundups
This week we look at Star Trek tech that's available today, why Apple and Microsoft mobile developers are upset and why development teams don't communicate better.

VirtualBox Finds the Meaning of Open Source Life with Version 4.2

  • InternetNews.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by red5 on Sep 14, 2012 3:34 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Oracle
In the spirit of full-disclosure, let me first tell you that I love VirtualBox. I use it every day and it is a core component of my workflow and my digital life. The new VirtualBox 4.2 release out today is now going to make my life, a bit easier.

Pear Linux 6 Alpha 1 Is Now Available for Testing

  • Softpedia; By Marius Nestor (Posted by hanuca on Sep 14, 2012 2:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
David Tavares, the developer of Pear Linux, has announced yesterday, September 13th, on Twitter, that the first Alpha versionn of the upcoming Pear Linux 6 operating system is now available for download and testing.

Do We Need an Affero Cloud? Nah.

  • CloudStack.org; By Joe Brockmeier (Posted by jzb on Sep 14, 2012 1:40 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
Donnie Berkholz of RedMonk has argued that the “infrastructure stack” needs an Affero LGPL to prevent the dreaded fragmentation. Do we? I’m not convinced that it’s necessary, desirable, or likely to catch on at all.

'Euro Truck Simulator 2' will have a Native Linux Version

  • Ubuntu Vibes; By Nitesh (Posted by Dart on Sep 14, 2012 12:43 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Euro Truck Simulator 2 is developed by SCS Software. The game is powered by Prism3D, a multiplatform game engine written in C++. It supports both 32-bit and 64-bit target architectures on Windows, Mac and Linux out of the box.

Upcoming Features of GNOME 3.8

  • Softpedia; By Marius Nestor (Posted by hanuca on Sep 14, 2012 11:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: GNOME
Even if GNOME 3.6 has not yet been released, the GNOME developers published some of the features that will be implemented in the next major release of the desktop environment, GNOME 3.8.

review: opensuse 12.2

  • everydaylht.com; By dmbkiwi (Posted by dmbkiwi on Sep 14, 2012 11:11 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: SUSE
I’m going to put my conclusion to this review right up front – OpenSuse 12.2 is a solid desktop and server operating system built on the incremental improvements that have been made across the linux ecosystem in the last 10 months. Whilst that sounds rather like damning with faint praise, in the current operating system ecosystem, there will be many who will find such an unspectacular and solid release, reason for wild celebration. OpenSuse is not trying to shoe-horn a tablet UI onto a desktop machine, ala OSX 10.8, Windows 8, and Ubuntu. OpenSuse is putting out a solid OS that provides its users with a system that they understand and meets their needs, is stable and performant, which in this day and age, is rather refreshing.

openSUSE to support secure boot in next release

The latest release of openSUSE, 12.2, which became available last week, does not have support for secure boot, Vojtech Pavlik, director of SUSE Labs and head of kernel development at SUSE, has told iTWire.

My impressions of Ubuntu/Unity - Ubuntu 12.04

  • LXer; By tracyanne (Posted by tracyanne on Sep 14, 2012 9:16 AM EDT)
I've been using Ubuntu 12.04 on my MSI netbook for about a week now. The netbook is a 10" model with a 1.66 Gig dual core Intel Atom N280 CPU, 1 Gig of RAM and Intel Mobile 945GSE Integrated Graphics, 3 USB ports, VGA out, and Microphone and Headphone sockets, and an SD card slot.

Ubuntu GNOME Remix 12.10 Alpha 2 Released

The second Alpha images of the upcoming Ubuntu GNOME Remix 12.10 distribution was announced yesterday, September 13th, by Jeremy Bicha and the Ubuntu Gnome Community.

Intel Shafting Linux Users With Clover Trail: No Support

While Intel can be loved for consistently supporting their in-house products under Linux, and their Open-Source Technology Center (OTC) makes great strides at improving Linux from open-source contributions to the Mesa graphics stack to doing all sorts of kernel-level work along with major contributions to WebKit, Tizen, Wayland, and other key open-source components, they have a new blemish. It appears Intel won't be supporting their forthcoming Atom "Clover Trail" hardware under Linux...

Compiz Working On Unredirected Fullscreen Windows

Ubuntu developers are working on improving the performance of Unity and Compiz, but it may take a while that will almost certainly extend past the Ubuntu 12.10 release. As part of this, support for un-redirecting full-screen windows has been improved...

Vi : Guides for Beginners

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 14, 2012 5:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Vi is an old screen-oriented text editor , the first release of this software is dated back in 1976, originally created for the Unix operating system. What I like of vi is that I can find it in any Linux and Unix system I’ve to work, so once I learnt how to use it I’ve used it everywhere, but there is small problem the software is user-friendly as could be a software wrote in 1976, so many new users find really hard to understand the shortcuts and so after some small test they decide that the software is too hard and return to some graphical editor like gedit, leafpad or perhaps libreoffice.

Best Open Source Games

Linux gaming has acquired bigger dimensions lately, after the active involvement of well known commercial games developing studios and other independent efforts, but we should not forget to support the great selection of open source games that Gnome users can enjoy! The following article is not about presenting every single open source game in existence, but more like selecting the best out of popular gaming categories that are really modern, enjoyable and alive as projects.

You know your Linux installation is getting a bit old and crusty when ...

While there's always a pack of geeks telling me how they've been running the same Debian system since Potato, I've found that most desktop systems under any kind of heavy use by those of us who do a lot of experimenting and install a lot of software don't last forever. Or they won't last a long time without a great deal of maintenance and fixing mistakes made along the way.

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