Links: GNU/Linux Advocacy, Kernel Space News
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2010-07-21 22:13:27 UTC
- Modified: 2010-07-21 22:15:14 UTC
Summary: Another large lump of GNU/Linux news items (almost caught up fully by now, still unloading some photos from the trip)
GNU/Linux
Just like Marcel Gagne said, stop apologizing for Linux! He wasn't talking about "invisible Linux", but that's another branch on the same tree. All these businesses who are profiting from Linux and Free/Open Source software are real big on branding and name recognition---until it comes to giving credit to Linux and FOSS. Linux/FOSS are the beneficiaries of considerable corporate support, both in code and money. So why the big hangup over the saying the L-word? Is it shameful? Will the other suits snigger? It doesn't help when we go all apologetic over things like Flash is a piece of junk, or forget that 64-bit Linux appeared months before 64-bit Windows, which to this day is plagued with problems and compatibility issues, while 64-bit Linux is plagued only by proprietary crapware like Flash, and performs beautifully on everyday systems and doesn't need elite gurus to install and maintain.
1. Defrag Windows disk drive 3X a day
Ask any PC expert and they will always tell you that to speed up Windows you have to defrag your hard disk as often as possible. So in order to make Windows really fast (faster than Linux), why not defrag your hard disk three times a day.
2. Remove anti-virus software
I know this will make Windows vulnerable to security threats such as viruses, spyware, trojans, fungus (sic), and worms. But since this is all about making Windows faster, we recommend that you remove your anti-virus software because it's a resource hog and it is one of the key reasons why your desktop is running slow.
3. Disable Automatic Updates
This is another bad idea in terms of security, but disabling automatic updates can help Windows gain some speed. Running automatic updates slows down your system as it uses computer resources to constantly check for updates like security patches. The system also regularly (more regular than normal) checks and hunts down those who are using pirated copies of Windows.
Some of the best open source software (OSS) around is multiple platform. You can run the exact same software with the same look and feel (I can understand the look part but how do you feel a program? Do a Vulcan mind meld with it?) no matter what operating system you use. Originally, many of these programs were Linux only and were ported to other operating systems due to demand.
[...]
Darth is ecstatic. His computer runs much faster, he has the exact same programs as before and he has no virus problems. Luke is also much happier, he now has far less support problems than before and the Deathstar is a much more peaceful place.
There you have it. A true story on how open source software was a gateway to a new Linux user. Do you have any stories like this? Either leave them in the comments or message me with them and I can put them in special Tales from the Borg ship articles.
My how things have changed. When I first became aware of the advantages Linux and more importantly Open Source Software, people would look at me like I had three heads when I mentioned Linux. That was five or six years ago. However, last Tuesday, I had a first. I was at a CLE that involved a web based bill entry system for the Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts. My Ubuntu based laptop kept hitting an error screen. I went to the techiest of the techy facilitators and said "I think I know what the problem is." She said, "What?". I said, "Well, I'm running Linux." Without missing a beat, she said, "But we tested it on Linux."
Dell certainly knows about the security facts described above, as does any Linux user. However, the ambivalent policy that Dell keeps undermines its Linux partner, Canonical. I mean, Dell did advertise that Ubuntu was SAFER than Windows but, maybe because of hidden pressure from Redmond, the statement on the Dell site was modified to read "UBUNTU IS SAFE" (read about it here).
This is interesting because Dell mostly sells computers running Windows. They were saying "Ubuntu is safer than Windows...don't you want to buy a Windows computer from us? No? Well, there's always Ubuntu." Very motivating...
Dell's INVISIBLE LINUX discourse is not helping anyone. I thought they had figured it out by now.
Who are they trying to please...Canonical, Microsoft, or costumers?
Colonel Panik, my good friend and constant commenter to this blog, asked me to give you all some insights about what we’re finding at the Felton Farmers Market every Tuesday.
[...]
There are other things that amaze me: The Google engineer who stopped by the table — “Oh, I’d better know what Linux is.” — and others who work “over the hill,” as we call the Silicon Valley, who would stop with strawberries in hand to take a look at what we had, and take a disk or two to try out. Also, what amazes me is that a lot of youngsters — teens, of course — who have used FOSS and don’t mind spending their time at the table talking about things like “Will GIMP ever have only one window?”
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Audiocasts/Radio
On this episode of Linux Outlaws: Google kills the Nexus Two, Mandriva avoids bankruptcy, arguments about “Open Core”, Monty acts up again, Google App Inventor and lots of Microsoft and Apple bashing as usual.
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Kernel Space
As a system administrator, I work with dozens of large systems every day–Apache, MySQL, Postfix, Dovecot, and the list goes on from there. While I have a good idea of how to configure all of these pieces of software, I’m not intimately familiar with all of their code bases. And every so often, I’ll run into a problem which I can’t configure around.
When I’m lucky, I can reproduce the bug in a testing environment. I can then drop in arbitrary print statements, recompile with debugging flags, or otherwise modify my application to give me useful data. But all too often, I find that either the bug vanishes when it’s not in my production environment, or it would simply take too much time or resources to even set up a testing deployment. When this happens, I find myself left with no alternative but to sift through the source code of the failing system, hoping to find clues as to the cause of the bug of the day. Doing so is never painless, but over time I’ve developed a set of techniques to make the source diving experience as focused and productive and possible.
All of the extra kernel modules needed are included on the hard disk as part of the Linux installation (with most of the mainline distributions like Fedora, Ubuntu, SuSE, etc.). This says a lot considering the small footprint needed by Linux compared to more bloated operating systems like Windows, when you consider this is 99% of the needed drivers, whereas Windows only includes the base set of drivers and uses about 2x to 4x the space.
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Graphics Stack
Yesterday we reported on the emergence of the 3Dfx Linux DRM/KMS driver that introduces Linux kernel mode-setting support for the decade-old Banshee and Voodoo graphics cards. This work was done by a lone developer, but at this time it doesn't play well with the 3dfx X.Org DDX driver, which diminished hopes of it entering the mainline kernel. However, it appears there is interest in this driver and that the developer is now working on adding TTM memory management support for these 3dfx PCI/AGP graphics cards.
NVIDIA has finally got around to issuing an update to two of their legacy drivers that allows those with old GeForce hardware to run it with newer Linux distributions using X.Org Server 1.8. Beyond the new X Server compatibility, the NVIDIA 173.14.75 pre-release driver update also fixes two bugs. The NVIDIA 96.43.18 legacy update doesn't bring X.Org Server 1.8 support, but it carries two bug-fixes.
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Applications
Over the last few days, I've incorporated configurable compression format support into Metro, and I am now creating Funtoo stages using the .xz compression format (these patches are in git, and not yet in an official Metro release.) On the mirrors, this is resulting in a very nice 40% size decrease over bzip2, with stage3's weighing in at around 95MB.
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Instructionals
Recent Techrights' Posts
- Moral Standards From the Masters of Linux
- They get hung up on minor language issue and promote this crazy theory that racism will go away if only everyone spoke a little differently (no matter where he or she came from)
- Hopping From One Set of Buzzwords to the Next
- Rotating hype and vapourware
- Currys PCWorld Hates GNU/Linux Even Though It Runs the World
- If more and more people choose to remove Windows, then Currys PCWorld will feel the financial impact of its dumb policies
- The Register MS Takes More Money to Boost Slop Hype, This Time From Snyk, a Notorious FUD Source
- At some stage or at some point they might even decide to stop doing so
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- The Register MS, Dominated by American Editors, Says UK Should be Run (Digitally) by Microsoft US
- The Register MS is sponsored by American money, run by Americans, and its chief editor is a Microsofter from the US
- Slopwatch: Google News and Other Slopfarms
- Google News is rewarding sites that misuse LLMs and cheat the Web
- Gemini Links 14/08/2025: Drought, Climate Experiments, and LLM Slop Considered Detrimental
- Links for the day
- Links 14/08/2025: Second-hand ThinkPad and Enhanced Surveillance on Chipsets from the United States
- Links for the day
- Links 14/08/2025: Data Brokers Hiding Opt-Out Pages From Google, "Fight Chat Control"
- Links for the day
- FSF Infrastructure Under Constant Attack
- The disconnect (literally) has had an effect on credibility
- Feels Like The Register MS is Trying to Diversify a Bit
- If The Register MS goes back to being The Register US (or UK), that will be a nice improvement
- Gemini Links 14/08/2025: Reading Journal and LLM Fatigue Revisited
- Links for the day
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, August 13, 2025
- IRC logs for Wednesday, August 13, 2025
- Internet Relay Chat and Gemini Protocol Help Us Relive the Net of the Dial-Up Era
- The kids were alright
- "GPT-5" is Another Microsoft Dead Cat Trying to Bounce
- The hype, the momentum (or the inertia) is wearing off
- Microsoft Windows Losing Its Grip Near Turkey and Russia
- The 'corridor' nations connecting Iran to Europe
- Slopwatch: LinuxSecurity, Google News, and Serial Slopper (SS)
- The slop, the bad, and the ugly
- Links 13/08/2025: The “Incriminating Video” Scam and Corruption in South Korea
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 13/08/2025: Movie Memories and Mystery Machine Bus
- Links for the day
- "AI" Hype or LLM Slop is Not About Efficiency, It's About Lowering Standards
- It does not seem like IBM is genuinely committed to the same goals (or commitments) as the original Red Hat
- Links 13/08/2025: GitHub Trouble and Openwashing by Microsoft OSI With the Typical Buzzwords
- Links for the day
- If Free/Libre Software is Adding Trillions in Value to the European Economy, Then the European Commission Must Crush Software Patents
- Further to what we wrote yesterday
- Microsoft Swallows GitHub Losses
- Only Microsoft knows how much money it has already lost on GitHub
- Gemini Links 13/08/2025: Climate, Coffee, and Deploying Troops in Washington DC After Pardoning 1,000+ Insurrectionists in Washington DC
- Links for the day
- The Register MS Lowered MS Focus This Week
- We hope The Register recognises its errors and tries to make up for them
- Learning Ethics From Jeffrey Epstein's Enabler/Client/Ally, Coca-Cola, and Microsoft Accenture
- Whatever merits vocabulary changes initially had are being tainted or obscured by later iterations, which tell us to avoid word like "normal", which apparently offend some people (so they argue)
- Personal Attacks From Rust People Serve to Confirm They Have Lost the Argument
- "The discussion I find around the net so far has no technical merit and centers around ad hominem"
- Physical Meters and Purely Mechanical Meters Aren't Dumb; It's Dumb to Mock or Dismiss Them as Antiquated
- I've learned a lot this week, both online and over the telephone
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, August 12, 2025
- IRC logs for Tuesday, August 12, 2025
- GitHub Will End Up like XBox and Skype
- It is not likely that the XBox franchise will survive the next 5 years
- Stones Thrown in Glass Houses
- Projecting? You bet!
- As Europe Gets Increasingly Serious About Software Freedom and Digital Sovereignty It Needs to Enforce a Ban on Software Patents ASAP
- many councils in Europe move to Free software and US policy/companies cannot be trusted
- Windows 12 in Bahrain (Microsoft "Market Share" Down to 12%, an All-Time Low)
- They really ought to get away from Windows even faster
- The Web Needs 'Pest Control' When It Comes to LLM Slopfarms
- The goal is to discourage more sites becoming slopfarms
- Microsoft Can Now Stop Reporting the GitHub Layoffs (Even When They Happen)
- GitHub's original staff will see the true cost of becoming "b0rged" - something that Microsoft earned a bad reputation for
- How to Get Very Bad or Even Malicious Code Into Linux? Write it in a Language That Linus Torvalds and Most Other Linux Developers Don't Understand.
- One point nobody brings up is, what if code gets committed while evading audits and scrutiny?
- Links 12/08/2025: Wikipedia Fails at UK High Court, Perlmutter Still Fights to Squash the Slop Lobby
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 12/08/2025: Field Recording and Digital Legacy
- Links for the day
- Links 12/08/2025: WinRAR Zero-Day, SonicWall Does More Harm Than Good
- Links for the day
- Links 12/08/2025: More Sabotage of Underwater Cable Ahead of Russian Alaska Summit
- Links for the day
- Richard Stallman Will Not Miss Microsoft GitHub, It Was Only Good at Harvesting a Lot of Code for Plagiarism-as-a-Service
- investors are apparently willing to lose money for buzzwords
- Slopfarms Slopping Away at "Linux" and Spreading Microsoft Misinformation
- Slopfarms don't comprehend this as they lack actual comprehension, they're just parrots
- Links 12/08/2025: Science, Hardware, and Ukraine Excluded From Negotiations About Its Future
- Links for the day
- GitHub the Company Has, in Effect, Just Died (Time to Look for Alternatives)
- To Microsoft, what's left of GitHub after dismantling/folding it is some "training set" (people's code, without permission to "train" i.e. misuse under the guise of "GenAI" plagiarism)
- Linux Foundation Says "Housekeeping", "Hung", "Normal", "Native Feature/Support" and "Girl/Girls" Are Offensive Words
- Bombing people is OK, just use the right "terms"
- It Looks More Like Microsoft GitHub Layoffs
- GitHub is just losing loads of money
- Gemini Links 12/08/2025: Meditation, OpenStreetMap, Smolweb, and More
- Links for the day
- Google News is Dying: Most of Its Top Stories Now Are LLM Slop With Slop Images (i.e. 100% Fake 'Content')
- Google News has been drowning in this sort of stuff for quite some time
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Monday, August 11, 2025
- IRC logs for Monday, August 11, 2025
- Our Predictions Were Right: GitHub Dying as Losses Pile Up (as a Company It Cannot Continue to Exist, It's Not 'Free Hosting')
- GitHub always lost money