In this article, learn how to use the open source Clonezilla Live cloning software to convert your physical server to a virtual one. Specifically, see how to perform a physical-to-virtual system migration using an image-based method.
Apple users are the most dedicated and fervent operating system fans with undying loyalty to their operating system, hardware and peripherals. And they're just as loyal now to the new Unix-based OS X as they were to the old proprietary Mac OS. However, when given the option of a Linux-based computer or a Windows-based one, 100% say they would rather use Linux.
You simply can't advertise in the computer market based on price alone. It just doesn't make sense. By following Microsoft's own logic, instead of purchasing a PC with a Microsoft Windows operating system that'll cost you, at the very least, around a hundred bucks, you'd opt for a free operating system, like Ubuntu - a GNU/Linux distribution that some mainstream manufacturers offer as an alternative to Windows.
Why stop there? Instead of paying hundreds of dollars for Microsoft Office, just give Open Office a download. It's free of charge and most users would never be worried by the small differences. It even reads and creates Microsoft Office files.
I'm past the years of my life where I can really dig into something like running a Linux system. I'm very sympathetic to the whole idea; Linux people always think the way I want to think.
Linux Fund has expanded its partnership with Sandro Santilli of the Gnash media player team to bring OpenStreetMap editing support to this open source Flash€® player. This work will also improve YouTube compatibility and joins Linux Fund's existing effort to bring the Real Time Messaging Protocol support to Gnash.
By no means are these the only levels of customization available, but the main six levels are:
1. Distro 2. Desktop Environment 3. Window Manager 4. Theme 5. Icons 6. Applications
The recession is apparently driving some firms to look at Linux as a cost-saving alternative to Microsoft – is it time for open source to take off?
There would be around 100 users online whenever you land on the home page of this site. It is clear that the author gives a lot of traffic to the websites who write about open-source and linux by giving them a direct credit of the news or the article.
This week on Linux Outlaws: Oracle buys Sun, Pirate Bay admins go to jail, Germany censors the Internet and even more WTFs.
We've had a number of reader requests to make available some of the imagery we use on the covers of Linux Format magazine. Naturally we're happy to share with you all, so we've put this page online where we'll upload cover artwork as it's requested
The Linux Plumbers Conference — so-called because it gathers top developers to work on the utilities and libraries that(the kernel, form the "plumbing" behind a Linux system — debuted to great success last year, even co-hosting the Linux Foundation's Technical Advisory Board elections with the invitation-only Linux Kernel Summit last September. This year's conference — running September 23 - 25 — will immediately follow the first-annual LinuxCon, the Linux Foundation's new conference aimed at all Linux users, scheduled for September 21 - 23.
Developers for AMD and Intel graphics chips have been extremely productive, having introduced a range of improvements, with others in the works. Late last week, AMD employee Alex Deucher released experimental drivers, DRM, and Mesa code that enables 3D acceleration in r6xx and r7xx graphics chips used in most of the Radeon graphics cards currently on the market. While the code is not fully mature, Glxgears should already work.
And by the way, I would like to point out that we do try to do better on “our side” of the equation too. The whole “stable” vs “development” kernels (2.4.x vs 2.5.x) was our fault, and I’ll happily admit that we really made it much harder than it should be for people who weren’t core kernel developers to get stuck on an irrelevant development branch.
There is an urgent need for identifying new targets for drug discovery. This urgency is even more relevant for infectious diseases affecting third-world countries, which have been historically neglected by the pharmaceutical industry. For example, only ~10% of the R&D resources have been spent on illnesses that represent the 90% of the total disease burden in the world (Munos 2006), which translates in that just ~1% of newly developed drugs are for tropical diseases (Maurer et al. 2004).
At the beginning of the 90s, an initial Linux kernel conceived and created by Linus Torvalds paved the way for a wealth of open and free software programs and operating systems. Here we introduce what we believe can be regarded as an initial kernel for drug discovery with the hope that it will sparkle new ways for developing drugs against organisms that cause tropical diseases. The TDI kernel (v1.0) includes 297 potential drug targets against the 10 selected genomes and is freely and publicly accessible in a World Wide Web server, which was developed with Web2.0 tools for easy dissemination of the deposited data.
Interestingly enough, I recently upgraded to xorg-server 1.5 from 1.3. I removed my xorg file, and it works passably. It’s choice of graphics drivers is a little annoying - I’ve been using radeonhd and getting 3-5000 frames in glxgears. Now I’m getting about 1000, and it pegs my cpu.
The programs reviewed in this article are growing into wonderful applications, and I advise interested readers to try them all. If you're a power user of any of them, be sure to let the developers know what you'd like to see in their software.
Thanks to Nemoder for letting us know that S2 Games has released v2.0.0 of their RTS/FPS hybrid Savage 2: A Tortured Soul.
Featuring some of the free and useful Linux tools you can use to make backup on your machine. Some of these are server based while others can be installed on your PC. In either case you can easily make complete backup on a daily or scheduled basis.
EDE (Equinox Desktop Environment) is small and very portable desktop environment designed to be very lightweight in memory and resource usage.
I have installed KDE 4 on Arch Linux, it is the version 4.2, and I have installed it from the official repositories.
I found LXDE to a pretty nice desktop environment. It’s certainly fast, comes with a reasonable amount of good quality tools, and a nice appearance. There’s room for improvement, however, particularly when it comes to configuration. I would count it as a good option for recent Windows converts, particularly those with older hardware that might have trouble running a beefier desktop such as Gnome or KDE. Has it pulled me away from my beloved Window Maker? I don’t think so, but it’s progressing nicely and I’d love to see what the developers come up with down the road.
GDM or GNOME Display Manager will easily allow users to fully customize the login screen theme without having to use the command line.
There are tons of ready-made, user-submitted GDM themes available that we can just download and effortlessly install. In celebration of Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope's release, I’ve collected some of the most beautiful GDM themes for Ubuntu enthusiasts to appreciate...
Ulteo is out with a new release of its open virtual desktop (OVD) today that now enables Windows as well as Linux applications.
Anyway, I won't bore you with the details, but after getting it up on her system, I like it so well that I think I will install it on my laptop.
Sweden's Handelsbanken has deployed virtualisation technology using Red Hat Enterprise Linux on IBM's System z servers and operating system
One of Red Hat's big initiatives for FY 2010 is to increase the rate of adoption of its for-fee products from prospects still using for-free versions of its software (Fedora, CentOS, etc.), a process it only started in late 2008. As Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst notes in the earnings call, enterprises often find it "very expensive" to support themselves. As the data above suggests, Red Hat is getting better at convincing them to move to Red Hat's subscription offerings.
Such a wonderful release couldn’t have come at a better time.
Getting Ubuntu onto your hard disk is only the first step. It is still in the raw and unpolished state. To get the best out of it, you really need to configure and customize it to suit your needs. In part 3 of the series, I am going to go through the important things that you need to do after you have got Jaunty up and running.
Ubuntu 9.04 is a rocking release. In particular, it’s fantastic to see Netbook Remix and the Dust theme shipping for real, and the integrated Dovecot/Postfix mail server meta-package… Vorsprung durch Einfachheit. :-)
Congratulations again, Ubuntu and Canonical folks!
Yes, maybe I am writing to fast, but only a few hours left, and Ubuntu 9.04 will be realeased, there are already a lot of posts about it in the blogosphere.
REVIEW: Ubuntu 9.04, also known as the Jaunty Jackalope, delivers the latest in open-source software and will serve well in both desktop and server roles. Ubuntu 9.04 also comes with a preview version of Eucalyptus, which allows organizations to build their own Amazon EC2-style compute clouds, as well as a remix version for running Jaunty Jackalope on netbooks.
Well, to celebrate the release of Ubuntu 9.04 "Jaunty Jackalope" we're going to kick off a three-part celebration of this tenth release of the world's most popular distro with a quick look back at the highs and lows over the years, complete with lots of PDFs from Linux Format magazine from our archives. We've also gone back and installed all ten Ubuntu releases to discover just how much performance has changed over the years.
MS: Well, they’re very different. To me building Ubuntu for Linux enthusiasts remains a really important job and I don’t want to take anybody off that. But if I think, of the team that we started Ubuntu with, that team continues really to focus and work to that mission - make it great, free software power user’s desktop, every six months that’s stable and maintained. So we continue to do that, and I think that will continue to be important, if only to keep Andrew Tridgell productive, so Samba gets better.
Worth mentioning, however, is the fact that the Kubuntu 9.04 release updates to the all-new 4.2 version. This offers significant improvements over earlier Kubuntu releases based on KDE4, and is shaping up very nicely. Indeed, I can envision a day in a few years' time when the Kubuntu release may well have more user share than Ubuntu itself, especially considering the 9.10 release in October will be based on the even more promising KDE 4.3.
Thanks to the new Linux kernel (version 2.6.28) Ubuntu now offers support for the Ext4 filesystem and includes a new wireless package that should help those using newer wi-fi cards.
Fon, which claims to offer the world's largest WiFi sharing community, has updated its Linux-based Fonera WiFi router with updated firmware and a new USB port. Like the earlier Fonera routers, the Fonera 2.0 offers both private and shareable WiFi signals, says the company.
Android, the Linux-based operating system used in the G1 smartphone and others to come, is destined to be part of many other devices, including personal multimedia devices, mobile Internet devices, medical monitoring tools and home-entertainment controllers.
3) Linux will be able to run on these systems as well of course. But many Linux vendors are exploring another option: offering desktop Linux on ARM CPU-based netbooks that will be even cheaper than Atom-based netbooks.
Linux has been running on ARM processors for years. What's changed is that both ARM and Linux desktop distributors like Xandros and Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, are working on releasing full Linux desktops for ARM-powered MID (Mobile Internet devices) and netbooks.
The upshot of these efforts is that by the same time Windows 7 Home Premium will be available on $400 Intel Atom-based netbooks, Ubuntu 9.04 and Xandros Linux desktops will be shipping on sub $200 ARM-based netbooks.
Can you say price-war? I can.
4) Last, but never least, there's Google. The first Google Android netbooks have been spotted. I've said it before, I'll say it again, people who would never consider moving from Windows to Linux might be willing to give a Google Linux-powered netbook a try. With Google behind it, the Linux desktop will finally break into the mainstream.
I can’t stress strongly enough how much this business practice bothers me. I have been pushing Ubuntu Linux for nearly two years now because of these kinds of business practices. It is graphical in appearance, and out-of-the-box operates like Windows with graphics, a mouse, clicks, right-clicks, etc. It runs OpenOffice, Java, Firefox, comes with a built-in email client, and has a wide hardware support base which will allow most every feature of desktop PCs, notebooks and netbooks to be utilized.
I don’t want to turn this article into a sales pitch for Ubuntu, but I do want people to realize that Microsoft’s practices are not doing consumers any good. And we, the consumer base, have the power to send them a message. We can stop buying their products until they relax such restrictions. After all, it is we that have the power. We can vote a company into the number one slot, or out of business, with our dollars and our purchases.
I advise everyone to consider the harm Microsoft is causing the world with their OS business practices. Consider trying Ubuntu also. It has the ability to boot directly from the CD (without installation) so you can take it for a test drive (get it here). The new Ubuntu
A few months ago, Linux Format printed a pocket-sized mini-book called "Inside the Aspire One" that aimed to introduce Linux to first-time users through Acer's popular netbook.
The MSI Wind offers great portability, has a usable keyboard, enough ports for connecting to other devices and can have multiple operating systems installed, including Ubuntu Linux, making it the best option for the Fonera 2.0 bundle.
The Neutrino might not be a hands-on DIY kit, but after the dust settles how is it as an actual netbook? How about cost? Do you save money by selecting a Neutrino and a few components over purchasing a fully assembled netbook?
While this wasn't a complete review of Easy Peasy, and despite its silly name, I'm enjoying exploring this netbook distro.
I think the conference was a great success. The talks were of high value and we got good questions. The audience was quite mixed, ranging from managers to developers. Even though they had simultaneous translation of the talks, the majority of the people listened in English... this gives me hope that some of these folks will end up becoming involved in the international open source community.
The "open" characteristic of open source tools helps enhance, rather than complicate, the teaching process, say its exponents.
Roman Tuma, software practice director at Sun Microsystems, Asia South, said the open source model offers an entirely new way for developers and "increasingly knowledgeable", interactive users to collaborate and build upon the shared work done in the development of OSS.
Migrating from a proprietary licensed mindset into open source can be perceived as a pretty challenging task. It is incredibly common for me to see that branding power often blinds people in a way that the functionalities of a software are disregarded in favor of the comforting sound of a brand name.
In this issue…
* This Wednesday: QA Meetup * Cool new Firefox 3.5 demos * Firefox 3.5 beta 4: 70 localizations * Automating tests for Fennec * JavaScript 3.1: Brendan Eich interviewed * Bespin community update * Proposed Mozilla accessibility strategy * Friday April 24: Test day for Firefox 3.5 beta 4
The Mozilla Foundation says it is still on track to release Firefox 3.5 Beta 4 sometime later this week despite the lack of a firm release date. Beta 4 will likely be the last test version before Mozilla moves on to the release candidate of Firefox 3.5. However, Mozilla has not made good on many of Firefox 3.5's deadlines: earlier this year, Mozilla delayed the release of Beta 3 -- twice -- before moving on to Beta 4, as well as dumping the name Firefox 3.1 for the snappier Firefox 3.5 to reflect the significant differences between versions 3.0 and 3.5.
You may have installed countless add-on in Firefox to enhance your using experience, but if you want to get the most out of Firefox, you really have to hack your way into the about:config.
Changes, New Features, and Fixes
Both Monty Widenius, founder of MySQL, and Marten Mickos, former CEO of MySQL and until recently, VP of the Sun database group, have both commented on Oracle's acquisition of Sun Microsystems and MySQL. Observers had noted that Oracle may not be interested in pursuing development of MySQL, despite Oracle's announcement saying MySQL would join the ranks of its other database products.
Despite some of the concerns floating around the MySQL Conference this week, there’s some good news coming out of the event. The MySQL developers are returned to a “release early, release often” schedule and the pending 5.4 release has a number of features worth keeping an eye on.
It will be interesting to see whether Widenius is able to pull this off, and whether Oracle, or whoever ends up owning MySQL, decides to help or hinder the attempt. There's always been a tacit assumption that it's not really viable to take this route, because the open source company simply has too much of an advantage through its ownership of the copyright, and the fact that it can always incorporate any code produced by a fork into the commercial variants. If this attempt to create a self-standing but quite separate version of MySQL succeeds, it could have major ramifications for all open source companies that think they own the project simply because they own the copyright of the code.
The bigger news, however, may be IBM's partnership with EnterpriseDB, the commercial backer of the open-source PostgreSQL database, to embed EnterpriseDB's Postgres Plus Advanced Server technology into IBM's DB2 9.7 database product. EnterpriseDB's technology basically allows applications written for the Oracle database to run on EnterpriseDB's PostgreSQL...and now IBM's DB2.
It's working out for Open-Xchange, which is reporting a rosier Q1 than expected, and has seen a number of new partnerships and customers thanks to the promotion.
The Malaysian Administrative Modernisation and Management Planning Unit (Mampu) expects all government agencies to implement open source software (OSS) by end of next year.
We covered a 3D graphics initiative from Mozilla and Khronos here, and we've written widely about how open source, 3D worlds, and 3D gaming are converging, including here, and here. Mozilla and Khronos have their eyes on browser-based 3D graphics tools that can lead to gaming applications within browsers, and 3D environments all around the web, including on social sites such as Facebook and MySpace. The Canvas 3D graphics Firefox extension is found and discussed here.
Are the Arduino boards not quite up to your latest project? Maybe you should take a look at the Illuminato, a 100% Free Hardware / Open Hardware Arduino clone.
SERCOS International (SI) has announced it will provide an open source software driver library for the SERCOS lll real-time Ethernet communication system master implementation. SERCOS III thus will be the first high performance real-time protocol which makes driver software available as source code, without any license fees and without any usage limitations.
[...]
OSADL eG is an international cooperative that promotes and coordinates the usage of open-source software in the context of machine and plant control systems. OSADL represents the interests of machine builders, manufacturers of automation hardware and software, and open-source service providers. Any company can become a member of the cooperative.
Intel Corp., the world’s biggest computer-chip maker, faces a European Union fine and a ban on rebates on sales to computer makers, according to two people who have seen a draft decision in an eight-year-old antitrust case.
The 500-page draft was circulated to 27 national competition authorities over the past few weeks in preparation for a ruling in the case, two people with direct knowledge of the document said. The people asked for anonymity because the document isn’t public.
Just a couple weeks ago, I received a ridiculous PR pitch from the entertainment industry lobbying group Arts+Labs, suggesting that a story that "hasn't really gotten the attention it deserves" is the "threat" from P2P software being used to "expose private documents to the world." The PR guy offered to help walk me through the process of downloading Limewire and finding such "exposed documents."
Even though the internet is 40 years old, and the Web 20, it's only in the last couple of years that European politicians have started to take a deep interest in its workings – and implications for society. However, the flurry of activity we have seen in recent months more than makes up for that long neglect.
What's truly remarkable, though, is how unpredictable all this stuff is proving. For example, the fight over the “three strikes and you're out” approach, see-saws dramatically between the two sides – those in favour, and those against – as the so-called Telecoms Package wends it way through the system.
Over the past 24 hours, the European Parliament and its member states have moved further apart on the key stumbling block that's holding up passage of a massive telecom reform package: the proposed three strikes rule that would see repeat copyright infringers have their 'Net connections cut.
The controversial Great Aussie Firewall got a big boost yesterday when Australia's second largest ISP Optus agreed to join the pilot.
The testing of filtering technology has suffered credibility problems since the refusal of iiNet to take part, after it was unable to reconcile the trial with its opposition to censorship. iiNet said the proposed blacklist of unwanted material was much wider than just child sex abuse images.
He says that as if there is anyone out there who claims that artists shouldn't get "rewarded" for doing something great. The problem is no one is saying that. We're just debating how they will (not should) get rewarded. And, of course, plenty of artists who embrace things like The Pirate Bay are getting rewarded for doing so. Claiming that they're not is simply false and suggests ignorance of the subject.
One of the biggest cases in file-sharing history ended last week with The Pirate Bay Four sentenced to huge fines and jail time. Today it is revealed that far from being impartial, the judge in the case is a member of pro-copyright groups - along with Henrik Pontén, Monique Wadsted and Peter Danowsky. There are loud calls for a retrial.
We're working with some device manufacturers. We're primarily focussed on client development and improving it and serving our users.
The BBC is reporting that the United Nations' World Digital Library has gone online with an initial offering of 1,200 ancient manuscripts, parchments and documents. To no great surprise, Europe comes in first with 380 items. South America comes in second with 320, with a very distant third place being given to the Middle East at a paltry 157 texts. This is only the initial round, so the leader board can be expected to change. There are, for example, a lot of Sumerian and Babylonian tablets, many of which are already online elsewhere. Astonishingly, the collection is covered by numerous copyright laws, according to the legal page. Use of material from a given country is subject to whatever restrictions that country places, in addition to any local and international copyright laws. With some of the contributions being over 8,000 years old, this has to be the longest copyright extension ever offered. There is nothing on whether the original artists get royalties, however.
Copyright, licensing, and digital rights management are some of the more complex issues any future all-digital research library must face. Others have tackled this issue in treatises and textbooks. What follows is an over-simplified discussion of copyright and licensing and how it relates to the feasibility of an all-digital library.
The European Parliament has voted 377 to 178 in favour of extended the copyright term for new sound recordings from 50 to 70 years. It's only a first reading, but it's a strong indication of approval for the bill, introduced by Irish MEP Brian Cowley.