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Links 22/9/2011: Red Hat Net Up 69%, Kororaa 15 Released





GNOME bluefish

Contents





GNU/Linux



  • Desktop

    • Samsung NP-P580 Notebook and Linux, of Course
      Once Windows installation is done, I booted my Linux Mint (Debian) 201109 Live USB stick. I know that Mint (and Ubuntu) always include gparted on their live media, so I can use that to reallocate the disk partition(s). I'm sure that there are plenty of other disk management tools that can be used for this, depending on what distribution you prefer. In this case all I had to do was delete the D: partition and recreate it as an Extended Partition, then make the necessary logical partitions within that for the various Linux distributions I plan to install. That whole process took less than 5 minutes. Then I went ahead and installed the new Linux Mint 201109 Gnome distribution. That was an absolutely routine installation, it took about 15 minutes and at the end it booted up to the installed Linux system with no problems of any kind. Everything works, including wired and wireless networking, Bluetooth, dual monitors (with an external monitor on the VGA port), sound, touchpad, everything. It took about another 5 minutes to install the latest updates, and the system was ready to use. I tried the obvious Fn-key functions, such as volume up/down/mute and brightness up/down and they work just fine. I even used the Fn-sleep keys to suspend the system, and that worked; press the power button and it is ready to use again in about two seconds. I added the CPU Frequency Monitor to the panel, and verified that frequency stepping was working automatically.


    • Linux desktop: Not pining for the fjords
      Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols points out in a recent article that the resounding butt-kicking that Android and Chrome are laying on the digital world these days doesn’t bode well for the Linux desktop. Vaughan-Nichols links to a blog post by Jason Perlow that says that, essentially, we are entering the post-PC era in which, while the x86 may be dead, personal computing across different-sized hardware will continue.

      I can see this and generally have no qualms with that, however I think this sales pitch for a brave new world of tablets and smartphones goes overboard. Arguably, what Perlow describes doesn’t sound like post-PC, but rather PC-plus-(fill in your additional hardware here).

      Linux’s success in the non-desktop realm is hardly an accident and I am neither belittling it nor taking this for granted. On the contrary: Linux’s superiority in servers, supercomputers and mobile provide resounding proof that it is a successful operating system, to the point where “the year of the desktop” has now become laughable since it is no longer the standard by which Linux’s success should be gauged (if that was ever the case in the first place).






  • Kernel Space



  • Applications



  • Desktop Environments



    • K Desktop Environment/KDE SC)

      • Users voted for best KDE-based Linux distribution... again!
        Strange enough, announcement did not stop votes. Other way round, number of votes almost doubled during last month! Is it a good reason to make another announcement of voting results? Yes, it is.


      • Nepomuk Stability and Performance
        Over at his blog, Sebastian Trüg is raising money for Nepomuk. Short version of this story--please give what you can to an important KDE project and a valuable KDE contributor. Background and details below.






  • Distributions



    • New Releases

      • Versiones estables de LliureX 11.09: adaptaciones Escriptori e Infantil


      • [pfSense] 2.0 Release Now Available!
        I’m proud to announce the release of version 2.0. This brings the past three years of new feature additions, with significant enhancements to almost every portion of the system. The changes and new features are summarized here. This is by far the most widely deployed release we’ve put out, thanks to the efforts of thousands of members of the community. We also have hundreds of customer systems that have been running 2.0 in production for months and years in some cases. More than 108,000 unique IPs have downloaded snapshots in 2011 from snapshots.pfsense.org alone, not counting downloads from the mirrors.


      • CAINE 2.5 - SUPERNOVA is out!
        CAINE (Computer Aided INvestigative Environment) is an Italian GNU/Linux live distribution created as a project of Digital Forensics Currently the project manager is Nanni Bassetti.




    • PCLinuxOS/Mageia/Mandrake/Mandriva Family

      • Happy Birthday, MAGEIA!
        Mageia was celebrating its first anniversary yesterday.

        A year! That was fast! Just like my daughter, baby Mageia is "a proud, promising and exciting toddler!"




    • Red Hat Family

      • Red Hat Reports Second Quarter Results
        --Second quarter deferred revenue of $813 million, up 25% year-over-year

        --Second quarter operating cash flow of $77 million, up 20% year-over-year


      • Red Hat net jumps 69%


      • Red Hat (RHT) Posts Quarterly Earnings Results, Beats Estimates By $0.03 EPS


      • Red Hat Q2 Profit Rises - Quick Facts
        Red Hat Inc. (RHT: News ) reported that its second-quarter net income rose to $40.0 million or $0.20 per share, from $23.7 million or $0.12 per share, in the year ago quarter.


      • VMware Rivals Further Expanding Open Virtualization Alliance


      • Open Virtualization Alliance Expands


      • RHEL Clones Advance
        Love it or hate it, Red Hat commands a significant share of the world's enterprise Linux revenues. This week on the Linux Planet, updated versions of Red Hat's enterprise clones were released, even as Red Hat moved forward with its own plans.


      • Fedora

        • Kororaa 15 Unleashed
          "The first stable release of Kororaa 15 (codename "Squirt") has been released and is available for download, in 32 and 64 bit with KDE 4.6 and GNOME 3." This is second release of the Fedora-based distribution since development resumed in late 2010. Kororaa, once based on Gentoo, aims to provide a "complete, easy to use system for general computing." It tweaks Fedora "to make the system 'just work' out of the box."


        • Kororaa Linux 15 Released, Based on Fedora 15
          Chris Smart proudly announced last evening, September 20th, the immediate availability for download and upgrade of the highly-anticipated Kororaa Linux 15 operating system.

          Dubbed Squirt, the new Kororaa 15 OS is now based on the Fedora 15 release, it features both KDE SC 4.6 and GNOME 3 desktop environments, and it is available for download (see download links at the end of the article) for both 32-bit and 64-bit architectures.






    • Debian Family



      • Derivatives



        • Canonical/Ubuntu

          • Is Ubuntu falling from grace?


          • Audacious 3.0.3 And 3.1 Alpha 1 Available For Ubuntu Oneiric (PPA)
            Audacious is a versatile music player for GNOME that has a low memory footprint and a clean GTK interface. It also comes with a Winamp-like interface that supports Winamp 2.x skins.


          • Don't trash that old PC, put it to good use
            Close the Windows

            While Windows works just fine, it does take up a lot of resources. And that can make an old machine run slowly. Consider replacing Windows with a Linux operating system such as Ubuntu. That often will pep up that slow machine.

            And, unlike with Windows, the operating system is free. You can read about it and download it at www.ubuntu.com/.

            There's another reason to try this. You may find you prefer Ubuntu for all your machines.

            Use the old machine to get familiar with how it works first and then, if you like what you see, move away from Windows entirely.


          • Flavours and Variants

            • Review: Linux Mint GNOME 201109
              That basically ended my time with Linux Mint GNOME. I really like the concept of update packs and the thorough testing of them, because it brings much-needed stability to what is otherwise a good rolling-release model. My small gripes about Compiz not working initially, inconsistent GTK+ theming, and Mozilla Firefox not getting the latest updates remain, but they're relatively minor. Of course, it's great that this is otherwise functionally and visually identical to the Ubuntu-based Linux Mint GNOME, yet it manages to be so much more lightweight and snappy. (Seriously, this was worlds more responsive than Linux Mint 11 "Katya" GNOME.) The gripes I mentioned might mean that a user considering this should make sure they have a technically-inclined friend to help them out in times of need, but otherwise, I can basically give it my highest recommendation, and I could see myself installing this on my computer and using this regularly. In fact, it is one of the contenders for replacing Linux Mint 9 LTS "Isadora" once its support runs out. It may partially be due to my fondness for Linux Mint in general, but I really like this a lot. You can get it here.












  • Devices/Embedded

    • Linux-based home automation system adds tablet controller, Android app
      Control4 announced a seven-inch tablet, meant for portable control of its Linux-based Control4 home automation, surveillance, and music-server system. In addition to the Control4 7" Portable Touch Screen, the company also announced a "Control4 MyHome -- Android" app.


    • Phones



      • Android

        • 4.1-inch Android 2.3 phone debuts on Verizon's 4G LTE for $100
          On Sept. 22, Pantech will start selling an Android 2.3 smartphone on Verizon Wireless' 4G LTE network for just $100, following rebate and two-year contract. The Pantech Breakout is equipped with a 1GHz processor, an 8GB microSD card, a 4.1-inch, 800 x 480 touchscreen, as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 3.0, says Verizon.


        • HTC Rhyme phone wants to charm women
          HTC announced an mid-range Android smartphone for Verizon Wireless that appears to be marketed at women. The "Rhyme" is equipped with a 1GHz processor, 768MB of RAM, 4GB of flash, five-megapixel and VGA cameras, plus accessories including a free docking station, headphones, and a "Charm" device that flashes a light to indicate an incoming call.


        • 10 Best Free Android File Managers


        • Android Bluetooth Robot Sound Box Unboxing and Review
          I recently had a chance to play with an Android Bluetooth Sound Box with Hands-Free and would like to share my opinion with you all.


        • LG Optimus EX shows up in South Korea
          A new Android handset from LG has shown up in Korea, with the images and specs shared in a leak by SlashGear. The dual-core, 1.2GHz smartphone uses Android 2.3 and gets a four-inch 800x480 touchscreen much like the Optimus Black. The model number, LG-SU880, is also revealed by the spec sheet.


        • HTC Ruby: First Press Shot
          We've seen the 1.5GHz dual-core HTC Ruby in the wild a few times already, and now the first press shot of this impressive handset has come to light. Tipped for release on T-Mobile as the HTC Amaze 4G -- it will apparently also see an international launch under another name (possibly just Amaze, a la Sensation/Sensation 4G) -- Ruby was originally thought to be a codename for Sprint's HTC Arrive (7 Pro) Windows Phone, but subsequent photographs revealed it to be a high-end Android device.


        • Google and Moto: The Best- and Worst-Case Scenarios
          If Google is able to go ahead with its plans to buy Motorola Mobility, it will mean big changes in store for the Android world. Whether those changes are hurtful or helpful to the OS as a whole is up to Google. Will the Android creator take its OS in a more proprietary direction? Or will Google's acquisition actually make for a stronger, more diverse ecosystem?






    • Sub-notebooks/Tablets

      • Asus Slider tablet ships, combining Android 3.2 with slide-out keyboard
        Asus has begun shipping its Eee Pad Slider Android 3.2 tablet in the U.S. for $479 with 16GB storage and $579 with 32GB. The Slider is equipped with a 1GHz Nvidia Tegra 2 processor, 1GB RAM, 16GB flash, a 10.1-inch, 1280 x 800 display, dual cameras, and all the other standard Honeycomb features, but adds a slide-out QWERTY keyboard.








Free Software/Open Source



  • BRIC Countries A Huge Opportunity For FLOSS (Ed: correct URL this time)


  • PiCloud: Scientific open source computing in the cloud
    This week we interviewed Ken Elkabany, CEO of another company with a business model on top of scientific open source software: PiCloud. PiCloud allows running any Python code on an auto-scaling, high-performance cluster in a server-less cloud. That includes SciPy code. We hope this kind of interview inspires scientist and developers to turn into FLOSS entrepreneurs. Enjoy the interview and leave your comments!


  • OpenIndiana's fork of OpenSolaris sees new Illumos based release
    With the release of OpenIndiana version oi_151a, the developers of the Solaris 11 compatible operating system have followed up their first release with one that replaces Oracle's OS/Net operating-system and network component with the Illumos kernel. This new edition of OpenIndiana also includes emulation and virtualisation support through the inclusion of the open source QEMU emulator and the KVM kernel-based virtual machine.


  • 50 Open Source Apps for the Mobile Workforce
    As smartphones and tablets become increasingly popular with consumers, they're also becoming a common work tool for employees. A recent study by Dimensional Research found that 87 percent of enterprises allow employees to use personal devices for work. In addition, 80 percent of those companies allow employees to use personal smartphones for work.


  • Events

    • Apache at JavaOne 2011
      Oracle and Apache have had a somewhat 'interesting' relationship in 2011.

      On one hand, Oracle donated OpenOffice to the Apache Software Foundation. On the other hand, Apache resigned from the Executive Committee of the Java Community Process.




  • Databases



  • Oracle/Java/LibreOffice



  • Project Releases

    • [OpenShot] Version 1.4, Sweeties, and the Future!
      It's been 3 months since my last blog post, and I have so much to say. I have been working harder than ever before on OpenShot, and regret that I have not had more time for writing blog entries. I have new details on our next release, version 1.4, a request for translations, a GKT3 update, details on a new Daily PPA, enhancements to www.openshot.org website, an announcement about a new OpenShot video editing library, and more! Let's just call this... an information explosion for OpenShot fans. =)




  • Openness/Sharing

    • Open sourcing the post-Irene Vermont flood relief effort
      Two weeks ago, in the wake of tropical storm Irene’s devastating flooding in Vermont’s Mad River Valley, local residents organized a MRV Flood Relief initiative. What began as a self-organized volunteer effort to match needs and help offered in our communities, using telephone, handwritten posters, and a Mad-River-Valley-Hurricane-Irene Facebook page created by the Chamber of Commerce, quickly grew into a coordinated project based in downtown Waitsfield’s Masonic Lodge. Now, two weeks later, in an effort to more effectively provide daily coordination for ongoing flood relief efforts in 10 central Vermont towns, Mad River Valley flood relief headquarters has launched a new open source web site.






Leftovers



  • Environment/Energy/Wildlife

    • Coal’s Terrible Forecast
      There are many unfortunate outcomes to Peak Oil. One of the more serious is the world’s transition back to coal. Expensive BTU from crude oil has influenced the energy adoption pathway of the Developing World for ten years now, pushing the five billion people in the Non-OECD towards coal. My work has documented this shift for some time. But, I have paid less attention here at Gregor.us to the effect this paradigmatic change will have on our climate.






  • Finance

    • As California Headed Back into Recession, the San Francisco FED Was Declaring Recovery
      In February of this year John Williams, head of research at the San Francisco Federal Reserve, gave a speech at Stanford in which he asserted the US economy had finally recovered, with 2011 real GDP expected to expand by 4.00% and then by 4.5% in 2012. (see: The Fed’s John Williams: recovery has achieved “liftoff”, Reuters 4 February 2011). Unfortunately, at the very same moment Mr. Williams was speaking in Palo Alto, data on California food stamp participation and employment was sending out a warning that America’s largest state was going back into recession.




  • Censorship

    • Ed Vaizey talks about website blocking
      Today ORG and a number of other groups had a constructive meeting with Ed Vaizey to discuss approaches to copyright and enforcement. The meeting was organized by Dominque Lazinksi of the Tax Payers Alliance after a Twitter storm following ORG and other group’s exclusion from the website blocking meetings.


    • Nominet and domain suspensions
      The draft as it stands is not, in ORG’s view, sufficiently precise and reasoned to be backed by us. While it gives plenty of indications of the approach Nominet might take, we feel the final document needs to be very precise, as well as robust and well-argued in order to convey truly useful advice to Nominet’s Board.




  • Intellectual Monopolies



    • Copyrights

      • Lib Dems say they want to scrap the Digital Economy Act


        It was very heartening to see the Lib Dems reject the Digital Economy Act as a broken and anti-liberal measure at their Conference yesterday. The main speakers included Julian Huppert, Neil McGovern and Bridget Fox, all making powerful points in favour of a more balanced approach to copyright enforcement.








Recent Techrights' Posts

A Month After "End of 10" analytics.usa.gov Says More People Use Vista 7 Than Use Vista 11
Does it get any more pathetic than this?
Techrights Protects Against Collective Amnesia (Forgetting History the Rich and Powerful Want Us to Forget or be Misled About)
Keeping full access to our material with a good search facility is a priority for us
Mainstream Media Compliments Techrights on Its Work
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LLMs Will Never Work, You Need to Type What You Know
Voice recognition is too imprecise to be practical or really save any time if you can type fast
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Red Hat (as a "company" with a Web site) will probably never announce layoffs again
Slopwatch: Spam, Scams, and Plagiarised Information Synthesis Systems (LLMs)
The way things are going, LinuxSecurity might become entirely inactive
IBM "Trying to Memory Hole the RA With Positive News."
it's clear they have no real plan, just vapourware
 
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Tomorrow it'll be one week since we turned 19
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If you're into fashion, find another job or keep cruft out of the workplace
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If one counts offline (historic) instances, it's even worse than this
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IBM is sacrificing Red Hat for Wall Street (share price)
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Published last night
The Register MS Has Just Taken Money to Promote Microsoft Windows Under the Guise of "HEY HI" (AI)
Just 'consume' the ads disguised as "journalism" at The Register MS
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Is Apple doing as well as Apple-sponsored (paid to run Apple ads) claims?
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Does anyone even pay attention to anything IBM promises these days?
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be sceptical of people who say Apple hasn't got layoffs
IRC.com is Vendor-Locked (Freenode)
Web client
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GNU/Linux news for the past day
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IRC logs for Wednesday, November 12, 2025
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Links 12/11/2025: Botulism Outbreak and Increased Russian Censorship
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British Army Officer Said Ubuntu Needed to Abandon Sudo for Rust's Imitation of Sudo and You Can Guess What Happened Next...
The not-so-drop-in replacement
The Open Web Has Fallen, It's Just Chrome
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Patients' Data Should Not be Outsourced to Any Party at All, Let's Redo the Storage Scheme
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The EPO's Central Staff Committee Complains About the EPO's Management Faking "Production" (Monopolies) to Make More Money
The Central Staff Committee has a new communication
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The EPO will have some more shake-ups
Ethical Consumer Could Use a Mention of "Ethical Software"
Maybe the Free Software Foundation (FSF) can get in touch with them
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The EPO's Own 'Drug Bust': Berenguer is Gone, But Who Else?
EPO latest news
Trying to Cancel People and Projects That You Don't Like by Changing the Focus to Politics
Don't fall for it
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In 2022 and 2023 Cory Doctorow was one among many who asserted "AI" was a bubble
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"Why AI won't "Kill Open Source”
Improving Clarity When Presenting LLM Slop and Slop Images
There will likely be more changes (improvements) to improve the visibility of our labels
Groklaw Won't be the Latest (Nor the Last) Major Site We Lose
Many other sites will go offline; the more popular among those will get hijacked by rogue actors
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Mozilla seems to be the biggest enemy of Firefox at this point
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IRC logs for Tuesday, November 11, 2025
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"No answers from VP1 to our letters to two Directors"
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The court system or the courts of a nations are meant to serve the nation and its media, not media lawyers or litigation profiteers
Articles About "Linux" That Are Actually Promotions of Microsoft Windows
The solution is to leave Windows, not get something "like Linux" or "similar to Linux"
Local Occupational Health, Safety and Ergonomics Committee (LOHSEC) in The Hague: Staff Representation Surprised at "Recent Changes in the Staffing of OHS Occupational Health Services (OHS)"
Once upon a time the Office offered to-notch services to all staff
Slopwatch: Many Fake Articles About "Linux" on Monday and Today
A lot of the Web is pure garbage. A lot of 'articles' are 100% fake.
IBM Exits Continue This Week
Some people talk about it anonymously, naming their role/position/unit, number of years (or band) etc.
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Adrian & Diana von Bidder-Senn, Debian: detailed history of a death
Reprinted with permission from Daniel Pocock
The Voice of Microsoft
Marketing disguised as a science
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Just like IBM, they're chaining buzzwords now
Rust Keeps Breaking Ubuntu in All Sorts of Extraordinary Ways (and All Distros Based on Ubuntu Will Break Also)
The FSF's stance on this is unclear
Boot-locking Laptops and Desktops After Falsely Marketing That As 'Security' and Not Obligatory
If anyone can confirm this to us
With Net Income of One Billion Dollars Tesla Claims It Can Pay a Fake Founder (Who Paid for This Lie) 1,000 Billions
What does this tell us about Wall Street?
GNU/Linux Cannot Buy Fake Journalism and It Won't Bribe Large Publishers
Free software developers don't purchase "sponsored" placements and that will never change
The 'Politics' of Operating Systems (or Exclusion for Inclusion's Sake)
This whole 'wrongthink' policing is getting out of hand
Static Site Generators (SSGs) Save You Lots of Money and Problems
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Too Much of Today's Web is Fake, Not Just Fake News
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Simulating a Downtime Tomorrow Night
It is expected that network redundancy will make this maintenance invisible to us, but IRC hangups or general slowness are still a possibility
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Links 11/11/2025: Conflicts and Politics From National Broadcasters
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Gemini Links 11/11/2025: Poetry and Electronics Studies
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Apple's Debt Grew by About 16 Billion Dollars This Past Year, "Disappointing iPhone Sales" Reported
People who buy Apple's goods based on some false notion that Apple is "cool" or ethical or "underdog" (late 90s) aren't just living in the past; they're fools
Turning Down Proprietary Software is About Making Society Better
We should not be tempted to shame people for merely trying to keep programmers honest and human rights-respecting
Debian GNU/Linux Became the Most Popular (Most Distros Are Based on It) Owing to Richard Stallman
New presentation
The Internet is Becoming Dead or a Zombie
The Internet is becoming like a giant botfarm
A Day for Poppies
This site will run as usual today. We continue our fight for Software Freedom.
"Modern" Doesn't Mean Better, It Typically Just Means Newer
RMS demonised as someone who rejects "modern society" ("rejecting modern society") by a site that uses slop extensively
The Cocaine Patent Office - Part IV: European Patent Office to Come Under Media and Political Scrutiny
We'll persist until we get some answers