Links 1/3/2012: WebOS Layoffs, Eclipse Board Elections
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2012-03-01 09:21:05 UTC
- Modified: 2012-03-01 09:21:06 UTC
Contents
-
Kernel Space
-
OpenGL 3.0 can only be used with Intel's new graphics driver if a potentially patented technology is enabled in Mesa 3D. A new version of util-linux standard utilities collection adds several new programs. Videos of ELC presentations offer useful information on testing the ktest.pl framework, the state of ARM code in the Linux kernel and function tracing with ftrace.
-
Applications
-
In "Tweaking Text in Scribus," I briefly described the tools available for manipulating text in Scribus. Now, it's time to really get your typographic geek on, and look in greater detail at how to adjust the spacing of text in Scribus: how to adjust the space between lines of text (leading), between characters (kerning), and upon a line (tracking).
-
Instructionals/Technical
-
Desktop Environments
-
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC)
-
-
New Releases
-
Red Hat Family
-
4t Networks now offers CentOS 6 for Linux-based VPS hosting and Cloud hosting services. CentOS 6 provides a free alternative to RHEL, for Linux-based clients.
-
Fedora
-
Debian Family
-
Derivatives
-
Canonical/Ubuntu
-
Last night we kicked off the new season of our little Ubuntu Podcast with some new segments. We thought we’d have a little debate between the presenters, with live listeners able to tune in and give their opinion and feedback. The motion chosen was “Unity is the best choice for the future of Ubuntu”.
-
-
The Raspberry Pi foundation attempted to launch its $35 Linux computer on Tuesday evening, but the organization's retail partners couldn't cope with the massive demand. Two British electronic component distributors that intended to sell the product were unable to do so--their websites went down, succumbing to the stampede of eager enthusiasts who sought to purchase the hotly-anticipated system.
-
Suddenly tiny computers running Linux are everywhere. Norwegian company FXI Technologies has started taking the first orders for its Cotton Candy Linux computer that can run either Ubuntu or Android 4.0.
The $199 (€£139) computer’s small size – it is enclosed within a USB stick case – belies its power. Underneath lies a custom design comprising a 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex A9 processor with 1GB or RAM, supporting for up to 64GB of microSD storage.
-
We spend time with Eben Upton, the man at heart of the $25 computer project known as Raspberry Pi. We learn all about the hardware, the dev board pricing scandal and – amazingly – why Ubuntu doesn’t want anything to do with it. Though otherwise candid, Eben refused to be drawn on the existence of a Bluetooth and Wi-Fi enabled Raspberry Pi ‘Model C’…
-
Phones
-
Android
-
The Android-x86 Project has published a release candidate of its Android 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich" port for the x86 platform. Aimed at netbooks and tablets, it includes the 3.0.8 Linux kernel with KMS enabled and, its developers say, should be able to run at most netbooks' native resolution.
-
When I show friends and colleagues the things I’m able to do on my rooted Android device, many of them end up asking me to work similar magic on their hardware. I’ve always been happy to help out, and after a bit of research at home (how to get root, custom ROMs that are available, etc) I usually come to work a day or two later equipped with my laptop and the appropriate software. Unfortunately, I’ve recently come to realize that this doesn’t always work out to the advantage of the other person, or to me for that matter.
-
Now that AT&T's lined up to get the just-revealed One X, and T-Mobile's taken claim to the One S (with Verizon always fed a steady stream of quality hardware), HTC's plans for Sprint seem to be up in the air, especially with the once cutting-edge EVO 3D closing in on its one-year launch anniversary. Well we've now learned from a trusted source that a high-end handset is in fact on its way to Sprint from the House of One, and it's codenamed the HTC Jewel.
-
French Zigbee and NFC specialist Taztag is to unveil the first Android phone to include support for both NFC and Zigbee wireless communications at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week.
-
Equalis, the leading provider of numerical analysis, visualization and simulation solutions for engineers and scientists, built on the Scilab open source numerical computation platform, today announced the availability of its Control and Power Systems module. These sophisticated new capabilities are included as part of the Equalis Pro Plus solution.
-
Robert Frosts’s classic poem, The Road Not Taken, concludes with the line “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I — I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.”
If you’re a road-less-traveled kinda geek, then come along as we learn more about Rockbox, an open-source firmware upgrade for portable media players.
-
Web Browsers
-
Mozilla
-
Once the darling of the web world Firefox has lost a little of its shine of late with many users being lured over to Google’s Chrome browser.
In response the Mozilla Foundation has turned up the heat and is now piling on the changes in an effort to keep up with the competition. Mozilla’s latest offering is a beta version of Firefox 11.
The new version has a healthy number of new features, but will it be enough to hold off Chrome?
-
SaaS
-
Databases
-
Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
-
OpenOffice.org has long been one of the top competitors to Microsoft Office, but the open source productivity suite's future was clouded in 2009 when Oracle acquired Sun Microsystems, which had maintained OpenOffice.org since late 1999. Oracle eventually donated the OpenOffice.org code to the Apache Foundation, which promises a new release this year.
-
CMS
-
Business
-
FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
-
Vastness of open source can leave anyone in confusion. Whether it is distro hunting or phrases that are used to explain related concepts. The one which annoys every single beginner is that Open source is said to distribute free software, so far so good, but what exactly we mean by free? Free as is Beer or Free as in Speech? Keep reading.
-
Project Releases
-
Minix, the Unix operating system that inspired Linus Torvalds to create Linux, has been expanded to give users a wider range of commands and features, thanks in large part to a Google Summer of Code project from last year.
-
Public Services/Government
-
Chris Chant, Director of the government’s G-Cloud programme, has confirmed to Computerworld UK that the next iteration of the recently opened CloudStore will be based on open source software.
-
Openness/Sharing
-
Programming
-
The Eclipse Foundation has opened this year's elections for its board members. There are six seats on the board being elected, with three seats for elected representatives of the Committer Members (who contribute code to Eclipse projects) and three seats for the Sustaining Members (made up of of fee paying Solutions Members and Enterprise Members). There are four candidates for each set of three seats. The voting closes on 16 March 2012 and the final results of the election will be announced at the annual general meeting; this will take place at EclipseCon 2012, 26-29 March.
-
The question is whether open sourcing can turn hardware into easyware. The concept of open source hardware came into the forefront with Facebook and its Open Compute project becoming popular. Customized server hardware is not an unknown concept though and companies like Rackspace and Google have been getting customized designs for quite a while now.
-
Security
-
Google has officially withdrawn its sponsorship from the 2012 Pwn2Own security challenge. According to Google, they pulled out after they discovered that exploits demonstrated at the event did not have to be disclosed to the affected vendors.
HP's TippingPoint which runs the annual event, disagrees.
"Affected vendors always receive full details for vulnerabilities discovered during the Pwn2Own contest – this is a key benefit for the vendor community," Aaron Portnoy, Manager of the Security Research Team at HP TippingPoint, told InternetNews.com. "HP DVLabs analyzes each vulnerability it receives to determine the root problem, severity of the vulnerability, and its susceptibility to attack to help vendors assess the risks and deal with mitigating them."
-
Cablegate
-
The first blow came in December, when private analysis firm Stratfor - which gathers open-source and paid-source information on global issues for subscription-based clients - had its company e-mail hacked. It was reportedly the work of the loose-knit, yet well-feared group of hackers known as Anonymous.
This week, the second blow was delivered as the website WikiLeaks began posting what it says is a body of internal Stratfor e-mails numbering in the millions and reportedly laying out just how the sausage is made at a modern-day private intelligence firm.
-
Censorship
-
Internet freedom and innovation are at risk of being stifled by a new United Nations treaty that aims to bring in more regulation, Google's executive chairman Eric Schmidt has warned.
-
Intellectual Monopolies
-
Copyrights
-
Although we are constantly reminded (or "educated" as they like to put it) that the major studios and labels are only looking out for the interests of the artists, we are equally constantly reminded (by these artists) that this just simply isn't the case. The latest artist to remind us exactly what's wrong with the standing system? Director Alex Cox, best known for Repo Man and Sid & Nancy, both cult classic films and punk touchstones.
-
Following Rumblefish claiming copyright via YouTube's ContentID system (and putting ads on the video to monetize it) of a guy's nature video because the birds singing in the background sounded too much like a Rumblefish-licensed track, Rumblefish's CEO has gone into PR crisis mode, setting up an AMA (ask me anything) on Reddit to address the story. While he gets a smidgen of kudos for the funny title of it...
-
A couple weeks ago, we pointed to an absolutely ridiculous "Africa IP Forum" that was being organized by WIPO and the US Department of Commerce, where it appeared the entire event was around forcing extreme IP enforcement on Africa, despite plenty of evidence that developing nations, such as most of those in Africa, are hurt by such enforcement.
Recent Techrights' Posts
- BILD is Apparently Covering Up Cocaine Use at Europe's Second-Largest Institution, the European Patent Office, as It's Based on Germany
- Journalist contact details
-
- Flagging or Labelling LLM Slop Meaningfully to Discourage the Practice
- We're still refining the annotation for better contrast
- LLM Slop is an Addiction One Can Quit
- Sites that crossed over to "the dark side" (slop) can still return, and even fully regain the trust lost by betraying people with 'botspew'.
- Techrights Site Search Pushed to 'Stable'
- we've just added it to the navigation menu and footer
- Situation Publishing's DevClass (Sister Site of The Register MS, Run by MS Tim) Has Been Abandoned, Microsoft's MS Tim Now Interjects Anti-Linux Directly Into The Register MS
- Not only does this sell Microsoft; it's also googlebombing - as before - the real "maui" (or "MauiKit" in Linux).
- Many IBM Workers to Become Unemployed a Few Weeks - Maybe Just Days - Before Christmas
- as one last humiliating exercise IBM pimps/trots them out in social control media, telling "happy" stories
- Slopwatch: LinuxSecurity, WebProNews, and Linux Journal (Slopfarms)
- More fake articles about "Linux"
- Links 15/11/2025: Openwashing of Kubernetes and Austerity Planned for Canada
- Links for the day
- Links 15/11/2025: "Small Web, Big Voice" and China Cracking Down on Slop
- Links for the day
- Links 15/11/2025: Science, Conflicts, and International Politics
- Links for the day
- Annus Horribilis at the European Patent Office (EPO)
- The article explains how the EPO "Cocainegate" scandal is turning 2025 into an Annus Horribilis for Campinos
- Links 15/11/2025: Latest in "Component Abuse Challenge" and Qt Keeps Promoting LLM Slop
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 15/11/2025: Egoism, Misunderstood Universe, DeX, and "Why desktop Linux is growing"
- Links for the day
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Friday, November 14, 2025
- IRC logs for Friday, November 14, 2025
- Richard Stallman Talk Tomorrow in Ethereum Cypherpunk Congress 2
- It's not clear if a livestream of some kind will exist
- Many "Last Days" at IBM on Allegedly the "Last Day" for IBM to RA People This Quarter
- "Last day" is "social media code" for "got laid off", more so at IBM because they compel people to act like it's a happy departure with gratitude, photos and so on
- Slopwatch: Almost a Majority of Google News is Now Slopfarms (Fake Sites, Fake Articles)
- Google News is noise
- Gemini Links 14/11/2025: Boredom, "Twenty Percent Cooler", and Moving From Windows to Artix
- Links for the day
- Links 14/11/2025: YouTube's Trap for Publishers, Lack of Accountability a Growing Legal Matter/Concern
- Links for the day
- Many Times in the Past We Said That Microsoft Lunduke Was Becoming a Spokesperson/Voice for - and Occasionally Weaponising - 4Chan. He's Proving Us Right This Week.
- Stay away
- The Register MS is Profiting From Pyramid Schemes Run by Americans
- We cannot help but feel disgusted by what this publisher became
- IBM: Hiring, Then Disposing of, Unpaid or Low-Paid European Staff to Spread or Play Up Buzzwords and Hype
- Like Google With "Summer of Code", this seems like a low-cost marketing stunt more than anything substantial
- Casual Reminder That We Also Publish GNU/Linux Stories and News Coverage in Tux Machines
- Without trust in our robustness (including fearlessness, not just success in protecting stories and sources) we'd not have come this far, nor would I devote my life to it
- The Europe Conversation: The EPO Has Cocaine at the High-Level Management and Isn't Denying It
- Now we plan to ensure the matter is properly documented in European press
- Links 14/11/2025: Goddard Space Center Abused by the White House, Jeffrey Epstein Scandal Expands (Cheetos Need Distraction)
- Links for the day
- Corporate Media Helps IBM Relay Vapourware (Misinformation/Fake News)
- They compensate with words for a lack of compelling products
- Hacking on Recipes
- Maybe, in due course perhaps, we can also release some of our own cooking recipes or "forks"
- Web Searches Far Too Polluted, Gamed by LLM Slop and "Plagiarised Information Synthesis Systems" (PISS)
- old articles are already getting difficult to find in mainstream search engines, even if they are still online
- Privacy-respecting Metasearch Engine SearX/SearXNG Still Jailed by Microsoft
- The official site and code still sadly controlled by Microsoft
- "AI" is a Lie. It Always Was. What They Call "AI" Is Not.
- This MSM does no favours to the economy
- Our First Week of Our Twentieth Year
- My wife and I have had a very productive week here and in Tux Machines
- Links 14/11/2025: Sleep Research, France to Suspend Pension 'Reform' Law, and Linux Foundation's Latest Openwashing
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 14/11/2025: KDE vs XFCE and Leaving the Web
- Links for the day
- Google Admits It Lost Control of Slop (While Google Itself is Selling Slop, Currently Under the Name "Gemini" Instead of "Bard")
- Slop is nothing to be celebrated
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Thursday, November 13, 2025
- IRC logs for Thursday, November 13, 2025
- Mozilla Handed Over Control Over Firefox to Microsoft, Now Firefox is Preloaded With Microsoft Spyware and It's Proprietary
- Who would still want to download Firefox?
- Slopwatch: LinuxSecurity, Brian Fagioli, and WebProNews
- becoming a slopfarm is a site's suicide
- "Sponsored Posts" in The Register MS
- That's The Register MS in 2025
- IBM RAs in India (Apparently)
- IBM is a bad place to work
- Another Richard Stallman Talk in Two Days
- His talk will be a remote talk, as he won't be travelling to Argentina
- Links 13/11/2025: "Fight for Control Over In-Car Technology" and "Climate Crisis is a Health Crisis"
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 13/11/2025: Disbelief in the Moon Landings and Doom That Came to Scrolling
- Links for the day
- 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?
- Links 13/11/2025: Ghost (E-mails) of Jeffrey Epstein Chases Cheeto, Uproar Over SLAPP Threats Against British Broadcasters
- Links for the day
- IBM Layoffs Seem to Have Reached Europe
- Is it Europe's turn to fall on its sword?
- A Lot of What's Left of the Online "Media" is Paid-for SPAM
- How much of online media can people still trust?
- Synopsys, Which Controls a Microsoft FUD Operation (Black Duck), to Lay Off Hundreds of Workers
- Microsoft had plenty of layoffs this year, well over 30,000 in total, including at least two waves of layoffs last month
- The EPO Has Spent Years Attacking European Media, Led by a Cocaine Addict (the EPO's Spokesperson)
- The EPO silences critics
- Prominent German Media Dares Not Mention Cocaine at the European Patent Office, Germany's "Cash Cow" (Seller of Monopolies for the Whole of Europe)
- It seems like a case of the corrupt hiring the corrupt to bully those who speak about the corruption
- 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
- Google isn't "the Web" and this site isn't "the Web" either
- Microsoft-Sponsored FSFE is Exploiting the Success of Jean-Baptiste Kempf to Market Itself and Its GAFAM-Funded Messaging (While Pretending to be "FSF" Europe)
- No doubt Jean-Baptiste Kempf accomplished a lot (not limited to VLC) in not so many years
- A Week of Techrights Search
- Tomorrow it'll be one week since we turned 19
- 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
- Your Computers Are Work and Entertainment Tools, Not a Fashion Statement
- If you're into fashion, find another job or keep cruft out of the workplace
- The Federation? Almost 90% of Its Users Have Quit Participating.
- If one counts offline (historic) instances, it's even worse than this
- Under IBM, Red Hat Isn't a Linux Company, It's Sold to Clients as "AI Company"
- IBM is sacrificing Red Hat for Wall Street (share price)
- IBM Will Carry on or Carry Out Mass Layoffs Until Tomorrow, Based on Unverified Claim (Silent Layoffs Under Secrecy Clauses/Deals)
- Red Hat (as a "company" with a Web site) will probably never announce layoffs again
- It Looks Like Microsoft is Really Abandoning XBox (the Brand "XBox" Means Just an Online "Games Store" or Streaming)
- 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
- Apple is Waning, Shows Data (Web Stats)
- Is Apple doing as well as Apple-sponsored (paid to run Apple ads) claims?
- IBM is a Buzzwords Vendor
- Does anyone even pay attention to anything IBM promises these days?
- It's Patently False That Apple Has Avoided Layoffs
- be sceptical of people who say Apple hasn't got layoffs
- IRC.com is Vendor-Locked (Freenode)
- Web client
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, November 12, 2025
- IRC logs for Wednesday, November 12, 2025
- 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
- Gemini Links 13/11/2025: Pictures From the Aurora and Cryptography of the Internet
- Links for the day