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Linux.com

NewsVac: News from around the Web

  • CNR.com Releases Beta CNR Client For Ubuntu 8.04 1 hour, 30 minutes ago
    Free One-click Software Delivery Service Now Offers Full-Featured CNR Client for Upcoming Version of Ubuntu HardyHeron
  • Does your OS systems management got GPL? 3 hours, 30 minutes ago
    That has emerged as the question, or at least a major factor in determining whether open source software works in the enterprise systems management market.
  • What do RMS and Naomi Campbell have in common? 4 hours ago
    Richard Matthew Stallman, the founder of the Free Software Foundation, has probably been called many names and been compared to a great many characters in his lifetime.
  • Is “working on it” just open source FUD? 4 hours, 30 minutes ago
    Sun is pondering an open source codec. No they’re really working on it.
  • The making of Wine (how to make Windows apps merrier with Linux) 5 hours ago
    Jeremy White, co-founder and CEO of CodeWeavers, talked to Microsoft Subnet today about how Wine might make IT professionals a lot merrier. For those wanting to save money on desktops by using Linux, but feel trapped into Windows because of the need to run Windows apps, Wine can help. Ten days ago, the folks at CodeWeavers released the almost official version of this open source project that allows Windows programs to run on Linux and Mac desktops. Wine is on course for official release, its 1.0 version, in the next 60 days.
  • Open Source Census launches 5 hours, 30 minutes ago
    The Open Source Census, an effort to pin down hard statistics regarding the implementation of open-source software around the world, gets underway on Wednesday.
  • A year later, sales of Linux on Dell computers continue to grow 6 hours ago
    As Dell Inc. approaches its one-year anniversary of selling laptop and desktop computers preloaded with Ubuntu Linux, the company is continuing to expand the fledgling program to new computer models and markets.
  • Fat, fatter, fattest: Microsoft’s kings of bloat 6 hours, 30 minutes ago
    What Intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away. Such has been the conventional wisdom surrounding the Windows/Intel (aka Wintel) duopoly since the early days of Windows 95. In practical terms, it means that performance advancements on the hardware side are quickly consumed by the ever-increasing complexity of the Windows/Office code base. Case in point: Microsoft Office 2007, which, when deployed on Windows Vista, consumes more than 12 times as much memory and nearly three times as much processing power as the version that graced PCs just seven short years ago, Office 2000.
  • Fedora 9 feature preview - kernel modesetting 7 hours ago
    So F9 will be released in a few weeks so I thought I'd mention a neat semi-hidden feature preview.
  • Sun touts big plans for OpenSolaris as first release nears 7 hours, 30 minutes ago
    Sun's Ian Murdock gave a presentation about OpenSolaris at LugRadio Live this past weekend. He explained how OpenSolaris reflects Sun's changing platform strategy and also discussed some of the technical attributes that differentiate OpenSolaris from Linux.
  • Seagate Fires First SSD Legal Salvo 8 hours ago
    Drive maker seen sending a message with patent infringement suit against a much smaller rival.
  • Linux-friendly virtualization software adds PowerPC support 8 hours, 30 minutes ago
    VirtualLogix announced that its VLX virtualization software will be available for Power Architecture processors. VLX for Network Infrastructure (VLX-NI) will now enable PowerPC processors to simultaneously run multiple operating systems -- typically Linux and a real-time OS (RTOS) -- for performance-critical telecom and datacom applications.
  • PCI Express bus climbs aboard PC/104 9 hours ago
    An industry group maintaining the PC/104 family of stackable single-board computer standards has adopted a new three-connector interface equipped with an x16 PCI Express (PCIe) bus. The PC/104 Consortium's 156-pin PCI/104 Express interface mounts a challenge to the stackable "SUMIT" interface also announced today at ESC.
  • Probe upgraded with Linux kernel analyzer 9 hours, 30 minutes ago
    Semiconductor design firm MIPS Technologies is offering a kernel profiling tool that works with its EJTAG hardware probe. The Eclipse-based Hot Spot Analyzer (HSA) utility works the company's FS2 System Navigator EJTAG probes, and can be used to debug Linux kernels running on MIPS-based SoCs.
  • Free Open Source Software Is Costing Vendors $60 Billion? 10 hours ago
    Looking for your daily dose of anti-Open Source FUD, check this one out.
  • More News

Linux.com : Features

Bruce Perens tells how he got involved with Linux and Free Software (video)

By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller on April 16, 2008 (9:00:00 PM)

You've probably seen quotes from long-time Linux and Free Software advocate Bruce Perens, and you may have even have seen his picture a few times. Now, in this exclusive Linux.com video, you have a chance to "meet" him in a little more personal way, and to learn how Bruce got interested in Linux and FOSS -- and why he stays both interested and involved.

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What's the right filesystem for your portable backup drive?

By Nathan Willis on April 16, 2008 (7:00:00 PM)

So you just bought an external hard drive for backups. Now, with what filesystem should you format it? Ext2? FAT32? No matter which one you choose, there are trade-offs to consider.

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Mounting archives with FUSE and archivemount

By Ben Martin on April 16, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

The archivemount FUSE filesystem lets you mount a possibly compressed tarball as a filesystem. Because FUSE exposes its filesystems through the Linux kernel, you can use any application to load and save files directly into such mounted archives. This lets you use your favourite text editor, image viewer, or music player on files that are still inside an archive file. Going one step further, because archivemount also supports write access for some archive formats, you can edit a text file directly from inside an archive too.

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A GNOME-based Desktop on Demand

By Dmitri Popov on April 16, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

Desktop on Demand (DOD) is the latest contender to give users a full-fledged remote desktop instead of Web-based applications to help users to stay productive when they are on the move. Similar to Ulteo (which we reviewed not long ago), DOD gives you a full-blown remote Linux-based desktop -- but that's where the similarity ends. Unlike Ulteo, which is based on the VNC protocol and runs entirely in the browser using a Java-based applet, DOD employs the NoMachine NX technology for accessing the remote desktop.

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Meet IT industry analyst Dan Kusnetzky (video)

By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller on April 15, 2008 (9:00:00 PM)

Dan Kusnetzky is one of the people you see quoted all over the place, especially about GNU/Linux and its effect on the computing world. But not many people (as a percentage of the world's total population) have had a chance to sit down with Dan and learn who he is in any kind of personal sense, so one day I lugged my video gear to Dan's home office in Osprey, Florida, and handed him a microphone. He spoke for 19 minutes, which is an awfully long time for an Internet "get to know you" piece, but since Dan's opinions have been known to sway industry perceptions (and some IT companies' stock prices) more than you'd think possible for an individual, I'm running the whole thing here, because some of what Dan has to say is important to management and business types who need to know how the open source segment of the IT industry has gotten to where it is today, and where it may go in the near future.

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The iPhone SDK and free software: not a match

By Nathan Willis on April 15, 2008 (7:00:00 PM)

Apple's recently released a software development kit (SDK) for the iPhone, but if you were hoping to port or develop original open source software with it, the news isn't good. Code signing and nondisclosure conditions make free software a no-go.

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Bringing chat to the browser with JWChat

By Ben Martin on April 15, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

JWChat is a Jabber instant messaging client that is written using only HTML and JavaScript. This means that you need not install a Jabber instant messaging client in order to use Jabber, assuming you already have a Web browser installed. A Jabber client that runs in a Web browser could be just the ticket for such uses as providing instant messaging to visitors to your Web site.

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Run Windows and Linux without virtualization

By Mayank Sharma on April 15, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

Linux does everything that many users want it to, but some people have tasks that require Windows applications. You can dual-boot both operating systems, or run Windows in a virtualized environment on Linux. Alas, virtualization makes the guest OS almost useless for processor- and RAM-intensive tasks like editing videos and playing games. Now, a Ubuntu-based distro called andLinux takes cooperation with Windows to a whole new level.

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Comic strip aims for a fun way to educate new Linux users

By Tina Gasperson on April 14, 2008 (9:00:00 PM)

Jeremiah Gray wants to provide an interesting way to learn about Linux, so he's created a new comic strip, called Hackett and Bankwell, about the open source operating system. The strip will be published as a series of comic books that Gray hopes will appeal to new Linux users, but he says it is "more than just a comic book version of a Linux training guide."

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Software animation with Pencil

By Nathan Willis on April 14, 2008 (7:00:00 PM)

Attention computer animators -- if you've ever felt limited by working in three dimensions with tools like Blender, check out Pencil, an open source, cross-platform animation app that lets you create in glorious 2-D. Pencil mimics hand-drawn animation techniques, but it's easy to use and produces high-quality output.

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Three ways to test Web form input with a CAPTCHA

By Ben Martin on April 14, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

Many Web forms these days feature a Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart (CAPTCHA) as an effort to stop people from setting up computers to automatically fill in Web forms. A typical CAPTCHA is an image with some numbers and letters in it with distortion and/or background noise, and a Web form input field where you are to enter the numbers and letters from the image. This article investigates three CAPTCHA applications that you can use on a PHP Web site.

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Customize your Firefox browser with Personas

By Lisa Hoover on April 14, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

If you like to customize your applications' appearance, then Firefox themes probably haven't impressed you. Although there are hundreds of themes available, typically all they allow users to do is change the icons and background color of your browser -- not too exciting. Personas for Firefox offers a new way to customize the browser. Though the project was quietly introduced last year, it recently moved into Mozilla Labs, where work has begun in earnest to give users more than just a way to change icons from blue to green. While right now Personas aren't much more than fancy skins, they're easy to change on the fly, and the prototype shows that Mozilla plans to give Firefox users more customization options than ever

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Commentary: the Linux Foundation and the future of Linux

By Joe Barr on April 11, 2008 (10:00:15 PM)

I came away from the second annual Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit with mixed feelings. I mean, it's hard not to support the group that pays Linus Torvalds to spend his time continuing to lead the poster-boy project for free and open source software. But at the same time, those golden chains are my biggest concern about the Linux Foundation.

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Linux Foundation Director Jim Zemlin talks to Weekly Wire about the group's goals and plans (video)

By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller on April 11, 2008 (10:00:00 PM)

AUSTIN, TEXAS -- The Linux Foundation is just over a year old. This week, here in Austin, it held its second annual Collboration Summit, a "by invitation" event for about 300 core Linux developers and corporate sponsors. In this video, Linux Foundation director Jim Zemlin talks about the group's current activities and future goals.

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Libre Graphics Meeting raising funds for developer travel

By Nathan Willis on April 11, 2008 (5:00:00 PM)

The annual conclave of free graphics software developers, users, and artists known as the Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM) is set for May 8-11 in Wroclaw, Poland, this year. LGM organizers are holding a fund-raising campaign this week to help volunteer developers travel to the event.

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Creating a VPN with tinc

By Ben Martin on April 11, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

With tinc you can create a virtual private network (VPN) that lets you communicate between two machines over an insecure network such as the Internet with all of your traffic encrypted between the hosts on your virtual network.

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Flock 1.1 offers nectar for social butterflies

By Lisa Hoover on April 11, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

When we looked at Flock 0.9 last year, the social Web browser showed a lot of potential. Now that it's over the 1.0 hump, the Flock team has made good on the application's promise. Maybe too good -- while Flock serves up a lot of content on a single page, you practically need super-powers to take it all in. Once you cut back on the sensory input a bit though, it's a pretty slick Firefox alternative for anyone with a ton of cyber friends.

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Open source video editing: what we have now and what we need

By Rui Lopes on April 10, 2008 (9:00:00 PM)

Watching the evolution of open source tools for video editing and manipulation over the last 10 years has been less than a thrilling experience. But are things about to change for the better in the near future? Can even the people most disenchanted with the current state of affairs feel tempted to regain a spark of hope?

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PCLinuxOS Gnome links two worlds

By Susan Linton on April 10, 2008 (7:00:00 PM)

If you're looking for a GNOME desktop for the popular PCLinuxOS (PCLOS), then newly released PCLinuxOS Gnome might be for you.

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How much can you improve network throughput with a high-end NIC?

By Ben Martin on April 10, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

What sort of impact can you expect from switching a machine from the Gigabit Ethernet NIC that come on its motherboard to a higher-end Intel desktop NIC? I benchmarked two common gigabit NICs found on motherboards against two Intel PCIe desktop gigabit NICs, targeting the specific purpose of accessing an NFS share over the network. The short version: throughput for sequential read/write operations didn't improve much, but latency was much better, allowing anything that needs a network round trip, like create, delete, and seek, to work much faster.

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