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07.07.11

Links 7/7/2011: Linux 3.0 RC 6, CentOS 6.0 Coming

Posted in News Roundup at 5:41 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

Contents

GNU/Linux

  • Desktop

    • Of Operating Systems and Oil Companies

      The bill often comes due with the same inflated price tag. Computer repair shops more and more choose scorched earth methods to fix an infected or broken system. Being a person who partially makes their living from the same pain, it is much, much cheaper to recover data and reinstall than it is to untangle the tentacles of a rootkit or sophisticated virus from the registry.

      Even when things are running smoothly, the Windows user pays for the “convenience” by updating virus software, tolerating Windows updates and suffering sluggish behavior from a system that is six months or longer installed.

  • Kernel Space

    • Linux 3.0-rc6

      And quite frankly, Christoph Hellwig has now _twice_ said good things about that driver, which is pretty unusual. It might mean that the driver is great. Of course, it’s way more likely that space aliens are secretly testing their happy drugs on Christoph. Or maybe he’s just naturally mellowing.

    • Could you do Linus “Linux” Torvalds job?

      At $500 US through July 8th and $600 thereafter, that’s a nice discount. Student Registration is $100. Student attendees will be required to show a valid student id at registration. LinuxCon will be held in Vancouver, B.C. on August 17-19, 2011 It will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Linux. Besides a host of far more important Linux and open-source movers and shakers, I’ll be speaking at the conference as well.

    • PCIe, power management, and problematic BIOSes
    • Graphics Stack

      • Nouveau Driver Power Management Against The NVIDIA Blob

        Following last week’s completion of the Radeon driver power management tests against the AMD Catalyst driver, now it is time to turn the tables on NVIDIA. In this article are some power consumption and thermal tests when comparing the latest open-source “Nouveau” driver code against NVIDIA’s closed-source proprietary driver.

        Testing went nearly the same as last week’s Radeon driver power management test. The Watts Up Pro USB power meter was monitoring the system’s power consumption, which was being automatically logged by the Phoronix Test Suite. Also monitored at the same time by the Phoronix Test Suite was the CPU usage and GPU temperature.

  • Applications

  • Desktop Environments

    • GNOME Desktop

  • Distributions

    • New Releases

    • PCLinuxOS/Mageia/Mandrake/Mandriva Family

      • Eugeni Dodonov Sails Away, Quits Mandriva

        There is a community. Hackers hack and take flak. Artists create beauty. Managers manage. Bloggers write and commenters comment. Names become familiar. Personalities began to emerge. Friendships form, rivalries rear, and animosities appear.

    • Red Hat Family

      • Centos 6.0 will be released in the next few hours

        According to Centos’ QAweb Blog, since July 2nd the ISO images of Centos 6.0 Final had been composed and built to be pushed to the staging machine which would then start syncing out to the internal centos.org mirror.

        Yesterday the os/ and isos/ tree had been finally synced out to the internal mirror servers. The updates/ tree were also signed. Since a few things have been fixed, the update should be on the way to the QA machines and synced out to the internal mirrors. So it is ready to be opened to public mirrors in a few hours.

      • Red Hat Previews JBoss Application Server 7

        Red Hat’s JBoss middleware division is now previewing the next generation of its Java middleware. JBoss AS 7 (Application Server) is currently in beta, providing developers and enterprise with an opportunity to see the future of Red Hat’s middleware server technology.

    • Debian Family

      • Get to Know Debian Goodies

        If you work with Debian-based systems, you probably know the basics of working with dpkg and APT’s tools. But there’s much more available. To find out which packages have release-critical bugs, hog the most disk space or still use older versions of files that have been upgraded, you want Debian Goodies.

      • Derivatives

        • Canonical/Ubuntu

          • Flavours and Variants

            • Xubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal review – Struggling

              A great fan of Xfce-flavored desktops, I am not. Xubuntu, specifically? Well, it has never really struck me as good as its brethren, the Gnome- and KDE-based desktops. However, once in a while, a refresh of bias and opinion is necessary. My last encounter with Xubuntu was back in 2009, almost two years back, a century-worth of time in the Linux frame of reference. So let’s perform another Dedoimedo transformation.

            • Seven Months of Bodhi Linux in Pictures

              Bodhi Linux is still a fairly young project. We gained a good bit of recognition for providing a usable Enlightenment desktop while many others still do not (if they offer one at all). We started back in just November of last year, but the project has matured a good deal in just this short bit of time. The following are screen shots (and some history) from the nine developmental and two stable releases we have had during the last seven months.

  • Devices/Embedded

    • Cars: The Next Big Platform Opportunity for Linux?

      If you cycled the clock back a few years, you would find that most people who were enthusiastic about Linux tended to debate its prospects as a desktop operating system. Fast-forward to today, and it’s clear that Linux is finding many of its biggest opportunities at the server level, in embedded Linux deployments, and in other scenarios that lie outside the desktop computing arena. There are more and more signs that the next frontier for Linux may be in cars, as evidenced by Toyota’s decision to join the Linux Foundation as a Gold member.

    • Phones

      • Android

        • GNU/Linux is out Java/Linux is in.

          Why has Java/Linux become so popular? Quite simply because it is being marketed under a single common name. Android. It is not seen as a hobbyist operating system. It is not seen as something done by rebels without a cause. It is recognised as a commercially viable operating system to add value to manufacturers products. In short it has the respect and recognition which GNU/Linux has never been able to achieve. It has become a household name. You ask anyone what Android is and they will be able to tell you. It is being mentioned specifically in television adverts. It is being describe as a feature in manufactured products. That has never been done for GNU/Linux to the extent is being done for Android.

    • Sub-notebooks/Tablets

Free Software/Open Source

Leftovers

  • Security

  • Finance

    • Goldman Sachs, The Federal Reserve – The Big Bad Wolfs

      Goldman Took Biggest Loan in Fed Program was reported today in Bloomberg both on Bloomberg TV and here on the internet…click here…to read story. While this was a secret loan program at the time – dating back to 2008 and other banks participated – Bloomberg TV reported that Goldman received the lowest interest rates of any of the participants, from near zero to 2.6% as well as the single biggest loan.

      Goldman Sachs & Co., a unit of the most profitable bank in Wall Street history, took $15 billion from the U.S. Federal Reserve on Dec. 9, 2008, the biggest single loan from a lending program whose details have been secret until today.

    • President Obama Calls Jon Corzine “Our Wall Street Guy”

      President Obama recruited the former Goldman Sachs CEO Jon Corzine to help him fundraise for his re-election campaign, according to the NYPost.

      The main news is that Corzine has been working on Obama’s 2012 campaign for months. IE: He hosted a fund-raiser at his Fifth Avenue home for Obama. He’s attended secret meetings with Obama, and he organized a meet-and-greet at the Four Seasons for key finance-industry execs and Obama’s new chief of staff, former banker Bill Daley.

  • Civil Rights

  • Internet/Net Neutrality/Telecom

  • Intellectual Monopolies

Reader’s Picks

Clip of the Day

YouTube Copyright School


Credit: TinyOgg

Don’t Support Mono

Posted in Microsoft, Mono, Novell at 4:05 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Thoughts on Mono and a summary of reasons why Mono is not good for Free/open source software agenda

Microsoft MVP Miguel de Icaza has this new update about Mono, but frankly, it would be better if he and his team just let the project rest in its deathbed, which following layoffs at Novell is where the project really belongs. Due to lack of time* I’ve done some quick videos where I explain without preparation why Mono is a bad idea and a dangerous project that should not be supported (the wiki page on Mono has better explanations which took more time to write).

YouTube: Thoughts on Mono – Part 1

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Thoughts on Mono – Part 2

Or as Ogg:


[More below...]

Read the rest of this entry »

07.06.11

TechBytes Episode 54: Patent Extortion, Economy Shifting, Tablets Lacking

Posted in TechBytes at 6:26 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

TechBytes

Direct download as Ogg (1:17:05, 17.0 MB) | High-quality MP3 (28.4 MB) | Low-quality MP3 (8.8 MB)

Summary: Tim and Roy catch up with Microsoft’s latest patent extortion, gaming consoles, and a lot more that our conversations haven’t managed to cover yesterday

TONIGHT’S show was recorded for the second day in a row and it covered some very new topics. The show closed with “My Love Is Real” by Voodoosouljahs. We hope you will join us for future shows and consider subscribing to the show via the RSS feed. You can also visit our archives for past shows. If you have an Identi.ca account, consider subscribing to TechBytes in order to keep up to date.

As embedded (HTML5):

Read the rest of this entry »

Thoughts on Novell – Part II

Posted in Novell, Patents at 5:02 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Also see Part I

Summary: A personal perspective on what Novell was before and after its software patents deal with Microsoft

YouTube: Thoughts on Novell – Part 5

Or as Ogg:


[More below...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Links 6/7/2011: Linux 3.1 Predictions, ‘Garshasp’ Comes to GNU/Linux

Posted in News Roundup at 3:14 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

Contents

GNU/Linux

  • ASUS Eee Pad Transformer Running Ubuntu 11.04[Video]

    This is one of the advantages of having an open device running an open OS. ASUS Eee Transformer Pad is already among the fastest selling Android tablets out there and it is powered by latest Android 3.0 Honeycomb OS. YouTube user lilstevie89 have managed to install and run Ubuntu 11.04′s classic GNOME desktop in his ASUS transformer TF101.

  • Kernel Space

    • DRM Changes Coming Up For Linux 3.1 Kernel

      There’s still a few more weeks left until the Linux 3.0 kernel will be officially released, but there are already some changes worth looking forward to with the Linux 3.1 kernel as it pertains to the Direct Rendering Manager drivers.

      In going over the drm-next Git tree of David Airlie’s, for what will ultimately go in as the pull request when the Linux 3.1 kernel merge window is opened, there’s a few items to mention at this time:

  • Applications

  • Desktop Environments

    • GNOME Desktop

      • Lunch With A Side Of GNOME

        Sometimes your plans for the day are altered greatly because of external circumstances. Nomachine released the latest NX 4 preview last night. We have been very anxious for this technology in order to deploy iPad/tablets, so this was my primary project for today. Prior releases inched closer to our goals, but were *far* too slow to do any beta testing. VNC testing over EVDO was painful as well. At this time no native client is offered for the iPad, instead it works by just using the Safari browser and then connecting to a web server. X is started inside the browser and your desktop appears. Performance on Firefox/Linux/Wired is very snappy and fast. Safari/iPad/WiFi works fairly well as does Safari/iPad/EVDO. So for the first time ever, I was able to take an iPad to lunch with me and log into our new GNOME server. I present, lunch with a side of GNOME:

  • Distributions

    • Debian Family

      • Derivatives

        • Canonical/Ubuntu

          • Unity Mail Gets GNOME Keyring Support, Graphical Configuration Dialog

            Unity Mail is a Unity-specific application to display the email unread count on the Unity launcher.

          • Overlay Scrollbars – Update

            When we introduced the new overlay scrollbars we knew it was a bold decision and we were expecting some critics because of the use cases we didn’t support.

            As hoped, we had a lot of very useful feedback. Most of the people very liked this innovation and understood our need to be consistent to our design principles. But because we were hoping for the minimal impact, it was important for us to understand when this wasn’t the case.

          • Ubuntu Linux ‘Natty Narwhal’ debuts in PHL

            Linux and open-source software fans can now keep up with Windows and Mac users with the release of the latest flavor of popular Linux distribution Ubuntu.

            Aside from being free, the open-source Ubuntu release 11.04 —codenamed “Natty Narwhal”— touts the improved graphical user interface (GUI) dubbed “Unity.”

            “Over other Linux desktop [distributions], Ubuntu has the advantage of being easy-to-use, as well as having a solid infrastructure underneath. Ubuntu also has a broader coverage of language support, with the widely used Unicode as the default character encoding,” Zak Elep, head of Ubuntu Philippine Team Local Community (LoCoTeam) said in a statement.

          • Free Official Ubuntu Book For Approved LoCo Teams
          • A new snapshot of Unity 2D
          • Weekend Project: Create Virtual Hosts with Apache
  • Devices/Embedded

    • Sub-notebooks/Tablets

      • HP Debuts TouchPad as Thunderbird Accelerates

        No, the HP TouchPad is not a pure-breed Linux up-front tablet. The HP TouchPad, which was released this past week, runs on HP’s webOS, formerly the operating system used by Palm, which HP acquired in 2010 for $1.2 billion.

Free Software/Open Source

  • FOSS misfits: Rusty Russell’s take

    It is even less often that a person who has the integrity of Rusty Russell does so. His comments about social misfits in the community – whom he refers to as arseholes (he used the American spelling, assholes) – has not received much attention, understandably, given the insular nature of most commentary about FOSS.

    Russell is a senior kernel programmer, a good guy, very funny and a genuinely impulsive person. He is well-known as a prankster; one of the pranks he pulled in 2010 resulted in the well-known Debian developer Bdale Garbee having to sacrifice his beard at the hands of Linux creator Linus Torvalds.

    [...]

    And senior FOSS people need to speak out more often about the problems within. Drawing a ring around things will not make problems disappear – when they do see the light of day, they will be akin to Murray Cummings’ blast in 2007.

  • Interview with Libre Graphics Magazine at Libre Graphics Meeting 2011

    I was recently able to attend the 2011 Libre Graphics Meeting in Montreal, and there i had a blast meeting lots of people and founding out about so many great projects. One of these, is Libre Graphics Magazine and the fantastic people behind it: ginger “all lowercase” coons along with Ana Carvalho and Ricardo Lafuente of Manufactura Independente.

  • Openness/Sharing

    • FabFi: An open source wireless network built with trash
    • The Uzebox: An open source hardware games console

      Anybody who has even a passing familiarity with IT — and even most who don’t — encounters open source software on a daily basis. Whether it’s Mozilla’s Firefox Web browser, the Apache HTTP Server, which powers most of the world’s Web sites, or Google’s Android mobile platform, open source software has gone from being solely the domain of geeks to part of many people’s everyday life — and it’s become big business.

  • Programming

Leftovers

Clip of the Day

Minecraft- Redwall Abbey (Survival)


Credit: TinyOgg

Thoughts on Novell – Part I

Posted in Microsoft, Novell, Videos at 2:27 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A personal perspective on what Novell was before and after its software patents deal with Microsoft

YouTube: Thoughts on Novell – Part 1

Or as Ogg:


[More below...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Red Hat President: Novell would “try to switch them to the stuff that wasn’t open source.”

Posted in GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Novell, Red Hat at 2:10 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Bad decision

Summary: Paul Cormier remarks on the death of Novell and what Novell actually did before it got sold (and its patents passed to Microsoft)

OVER THE YEARS we’ve explained how Novell was migrating people to proprietary software while preserving a sort of bogus public identity of an “open source” company. In this new interview from the Massachusetts press, Paul Cormier says about Novell: “It’s a travesty. An absolute travesty. Customers were starting to want open source. So they’d come in with open source and [Novell would] try to switch them to the stuff that wasn’t open source. I think that was one of the nails in the coffin. And I also think cozying up to Microsoft. The Linux community felt sold out. It hurt their credibillity [sic] with the Linux community.”

In the next post, “Thoughts on Novell”, I will try to explain what happened to Novell over the years. I will try to do this in video because it’s quicker (too busy at work these days).

Report: Microsoft Wants $15 for Each Android Phone Sold, Without Contributing a Single Line of Code

Posted in GNU/Linux, Google, Microsoft, Patents, Samsung at 2:02 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Clipboard

Summary: Microsoft jots down monetary demands from rival platforms, virtually at gunpoint (as in, pay up or get sued frivolously)

MICROSOFT reportedly gets $5 for each HTC Android phone that gets sold and it wants even triple that amount, based on this other new report which helps show how Microsoft’s strategy of buying patents and then extorting rivals plays out:

Microsoft Corp has demanded that Samsung Electronics Co Ltd pay $15 for each smartphone handset it makes based on Google Inc’s Android operating system as the software giant has a wide range of patents used in the mobile platform, local media reported on Wednesday.

Samsung would likely seek to lower the payment to about $10 in exchange for a deeper alliance with Microsoft for the U.S. company’s Windows platform, the Maeil Business Newspaper quoted unnamed industry officials as saying.

Samsung had no immediate comment.

They should be reporting racketeering [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7] and the USPTO should really come under scrutiny from the USDOJ. What is this?! Microsoft has been running around with a loaded gun quite a lot recently. Time to send out the police. What ever happened to the RICO Act?

Even a Microsoft apologist is appalled by this? Is this the future of Microsoft? A patent bully and parasite?

Well, paint me red and call me a girl scout, I totally did not see this one coming at all. This is so utterly surprising it made my brain explode. Hold on to your panties, because this will rock your world. After pressuring several smaller Android vendors into submission (and yes, HTC is still relatively small compared to other players), Microsoft is now moving on to the big one: Redmond is demanding $15 for every Samsung Android device sold. Samsung’s choices are simple: pay up, or face another epic lawsuit.

Then he adds:

Update: As pointed out in the comments, more accurately would be to say that the USPTO resisted software patents until the mid-’90s, with lower courts sometimes overturning USPTO decisions. Software patentability then developed further in the court system, until the 1998 decision, in which the patentability of software was established beyond any doubt. More here.

So, even without software patents, the computer and software industry flourished before 1998. Basically every computer and software technology we use today is older than 1998, so this means innovation and progress occurred just fine without software patents. Arguing that software patents are needed to foster innovation is akin to arguing that progress was hampered pre-1998.

As I’ve said before, ideas should not be patentable. A patent should cover an implementation, but since with software the implementation comes in the form of code, the implementation is already protected by copyright. Hence, software patents are not only idiotic, they are simply not needed.

It takes a lot of time and research to write a good science fiction novel, yet you’ll see few people arguing that the idea of a space novel should be patentable. Yet, this is exactly what software patents are.

Meanwhile, one of the patent trolls which attack Google celebrates getting more patents. From the press release:

Red Bend Software, the market leader in Mobile Software Management (MSM) with more than 1 billion Red Bend-Enabled™ devices, today announced it has been granted six more patents relating to the company’s unique update technology used in its software management products and solutions. These additional patents further enhance Red Bend’s leadership position in Mobile Software Management.

While Bill Gates and his friend Nathan Myhrvold lobby against substantial patent reform we are increasingly seeing an industry destroyed and Gates getting another form of tax on every chipset sold. This whole corruption of the system needn’t be tolerated. We forewarned about this in 2006.

“Intellectual property is the next software.”

Nathan Myhrvold, Microsoft patent troll

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