09.09.15
Posted in Europe, Patents at 11:14 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: The EPO’s shameless assault on staff unions reaches an all-time high (or all-time low in terms of ethical standards) as voices of legitimate concern grow louder inside the organisation, whose employees are increasingly fed up with the management’s attitude and blatant disregard for European laws
WHEN Benoît Battistelli signed the Control Risks (CRG) contract, despite CRG being a Military-industrial Complex firm, he served to seriously discredit his entire organisation. We strongly encourage all of our readers to learn about how union busting is done (it’s extremely ugly and unethical, sometimes even illegal and literally murderous) in order to better grasp what Battistelli is up to. Another suicide at the EPO became just a matter of time and the frequency of suicides recently accelerated [1, 2, 3, 4] . For Battistelli, this is war. Here is a letter sent to the Administrative Council (largely Battistelli-occupied by now). Notice the number of signatures, some from high-level employees who are brave enough to add their names, despite the known hostilities and the union-busting spirit of Battistelli, not to mention that of his right-hand man Željko Topić).
To Heads of the Delegations
of the Administrative Council
of the European Patent Organisation
Fifth suicide since 2012
Dear Sir, Dear Madam,
We regret to have to inform you that another colleague, a married man, 42 years old and father of two, committed suicide at the end of August on the last day of his holidays. If our thoughts go in the first place to his family and friends, this tragedy also compels us to
recall some other recent tragic events.
This is the fifth suicide at the EPO in 39 months, and the third one in Patent Administration (DG2). This latest suicide puts the EPO statistically on a level with the infamous France Telecom.
The EPO has a duty of care towards its staff. While the circumstances of this tragedy are still being looked into, we must nevertheless ask ourselves whether there is anything the
Office could or indeed should have done that might have prevented it. It cannot be ignored that Patent Administration is the area most affected by constant restructuring as well as swingeing staff reductions imposed by Mr Battistelli since his arrival at the EPO.
Staff representatives have repeatedly warned both the Administration and the Council that a combination of too high work demands coupled with hasty reforms and brutal management methods have generated what we consider a toxic work environment, not just in Patent Administration, but Office-wide. Not only have these warnings been ignored, but also letters sent to you by the Central Staff Committee (CSC) on the following dates remain unanswered:
- 5 December 2013 (sc13181cl),
- 16 September 2014 (sc14193cl)
- 17 April 2015 (sc15164cl)
We herein restate the content of those letters and reiterate the requests made in them. We also remark that to date the EPO continues to prevent independent inspection of the EPO premises by national authorities. Furthermore, the Administration has yet to give the
“green light” to allow staff representatives to again organise an independent staff survey by Technologia, an external body trusted by staff.
A quick glance at the attached correspondence should suffice for you to understand how unwilling the President and his close associates are to tackle these issues promptly. Meanwhile and contrary to the “lip service” paid by the Administration in referring to a “renewed social dialogue”, the reality is that the working climate within the EPO has further deteriorated.
In the light of all the above issues, we urge you to ensure that the Organisation discharges faithfully and fully its obligations towards staff.
Yours sincerely
The SUEPO Central Bureau
Joachim Michels
Chair SUEPO Central
Elizabeth Hardon
Vice-Chair SUEPO Central
Chair SUEPO Munich
Alain Rosé
Vice-Chair SUEPO Central
Chair SUEPO The Hague
Wolfgang Manntz
Vice-Chair SUEPO Central
Chair SUEPO Berlin
David Dickinson
Vice-Chair SUEPO Central
Chair SUEPO Vienna
Annex 1: Letter of Alain Rosé to Mr Battistelli, 26 August 2015
Annex 2: Answer of Mr Battistelli, 28 August 2015
Annex 3: Letter of Alain Rosé to Mr Battistelli, 1 September 2015
Benoît Battistelli and his goons From Control Risks (CRG) respond with great force, quite frankly as usual.
SUEPO published the letter addressed to the Administrative Council of the EPO the day before yesterday or the day before that (it got leaked to us). “Investigations at the EPO,” told us a source, are not subjected to scrutiny. Things must change. “Here is the latest SUEPO publication on investigations by Control Risks,” told us one person. “It is self-explanatory.”
Here is an HTML version of the original PDF [PDF]
, which is suitably redacted:
From: Claudio Zanghi
Sent: Friday, September 04, 2015 4:30 PM
To: ██████████
Cc: ██████ ██████@controlrisks.com); ███████@controlrisks.com
Subject: Confidential document for your attention: case C-071
Dear
With this email, I am sending you a notification of allegations of harassment raised against you.
Please also find attached information relating to the process, your rights, obligations, and the expectations towards you. Kindly read this information carefully, and let me know if you have any questions. Our reference case number for this matter is C-071; please include this in any correspondence.
You are hereby invited to meet with the Investigative Unit for an interview, to which you may be accompanied by an Office employee of your choice not connected to the matter (see attached notification § 4), on:
Thursday 10 September 2015, at 13:30 hrs. in the Munich Isar building, room 126.
The interview is scheduled to take place in your preferred official language. Kindly inform us if you wish to hold the interview in a different official language of the Office.
As indicated in the attached notification, pursuant Art. 4 of Circ. No. 341 and 342 we have to inform you of the obligation to maintain strict confidentiality on the matter, including the present communication.
Sincerely
Claudio Zanghi
Head of Investigative Unit | Dep. 0.6.1.1
European Patent Office
Bob-van-Benthem-Platz 1 | 80469 Munich | Germany
Tel. +49 (0)89 2399 1607
Mobile +49 151 54404184
czanghi@epo.org
www.epo.org
Recall what CRG has been doing so far. We wrote about some of their abusive behaviour in articles such as:
EPO staff needs to support this union, which has been sacrificing personal calm and definitely work security for the betterment of working conditions and the welfare of fellow workers. Look how these people are treated merely for combating corruption and trying to uphold the law. █
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Posted in News Roundup at 11:00 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Contents
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Desktop
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My point is that Windows can have the desktop for the casual users (what is left of them). The casual users are all using tablets and phones anyway. The Chromebook and MacBook Airs are taking a nice percentage of the rest of the market.
The real computer users who have something specific and niche to do are more than likely going to end up using Linux at some point anyway. Linux isn’t going to be harmed by the release of a new Microsoft operating system because ultimately the target users are and probably always have been different people.
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One of the reasons cited by users when they are told about switching to Linux is the fact that they don’t have the same kind of apps as Windows does, but is that really enough?
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New reports claim that Xiaomi is developing its first laptop running on the Linux operating system and will be released in the second quarter of 2016.
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Server
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The reason Docker has so many people excited is that it allows for the creation of a strictly isolated environment that can contain everything that’s needed to develop, test, and deploy an application. The same container can run on a production server and the developer’s MacBook (with a lightweight virtual machine). Development environments can be distributed across multiple systems without anyone having to worry about having the right software versions. The containers can be pushed to dedicated servers, cloud servers, virtual servers, or any other instance of Linux.
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WeaveDNS is a service discovery solution for containers on Weave (network), a a networking solution for Docker containers from Weaveworks.
WeaveDNS was introduced in version 0.9 of Weave, but in Weave 1.1, it was redesigned and nicknamed Gossip DNS. With Gossip DNS, container “registrations are broadcast to all weaveDNS instances, which subsequently hold all entries in memory and handle lookups locally.” That has led to performance and latency gains and a few other benefits.
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The nonprofit organization, (The Linux Foundation) and IBM dedicated to boosting up the Linux and collaborative software growth, announced the OMP (Open Mainframe Project) at LinuxCon. With the announcement of new initiatives for the adoption of wider Linux at the enterprise level, IBM breathes new life into its open mainframe strategy. The mainframe is well and alive with Linux running via its circuits. The Open Mainframe Project’s founding Platinum members include SUSE, IBM, CA technologies and ADP.
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Kernel Space
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In some respects, the Linux Foundation now provides ‘Foundation as a Service,’ though that’s not the the goal that Zemlin has. Given the broader efforts of the Linux Foundation in 2015, Zemlin also has no plans to rename the Linux Foundation either.
“I do think there is a lot of value in the reputation that the name Linux implies, in terms of it being the most successful open source project in the world,” Zemlin said.
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The systemd developers, through David Herrmann, have had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download of the systemd 226 open-source init system for GNU/Linux distributions.
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While a lot of features/changes have merged so far for the Linux 4.3 kernel, one feature you won’t find at least not yet is KDBUS.
After originally being proposed for inclusion into Linux 4.1, KDBUS didn’t make it earlier this year. It wasn’t proposed for Linux 4.2 when in June, Greg KH mentioned he wouldn’t push it until Linux 4.3.
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Graphics Stack
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Applications
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In this tutorial, we’ll be discussing some random useful tools that can be used by system administrators for maintaining Debian and derivative distributions.
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Today I have released Tunir 0.7. Tunir is a simple CI which developers can even use in their laptops. There are few major changes in this release. The first one is about no database support. Tunir itself will not save any data anywhere, this also means –stateless command line argument is now unnecessary. Even if you do not pass that option, tunir will print out the output of the tests on STDOUT.
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At CERN the disk storage is managed by a system built in-house called EOS (developed by CERN’s IT Data & Storage Services group). EOS manages data from the LHC experiments and also from “regular” users and power applications such as CERNBox, a file storage/sharing service for CERN users.
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Terminator is terminal emulator which includes numerous useful features such as multiple terminals in the same window (split view), notifications, supports saving and restoring custom layouts and much more.
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The open-source PlexConnect is really just a brilliant translation layer that hijacks DNS (pointing http://trailers.apple.com to the PlexConnect server IP) and feeds the Apple TV data formatted like it expects. Rather than showing a listing of recent movie trailers, however, PlexConnect shows a direct interface with your Plex media server. And to be honest, the interface is actually surprisingly pleasant to use.
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Samba, the world’s most used open-source software solution for accessing shared Windows folders over a network from GNU/Linux and Mac OS X operating systems, has reached version 4.3.
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VirtualBox, a virtualization solutions that allows users to run and install operating systems inside other operating systems, has been updated to version 5.0.4 and is now ready for download.
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The DockBarX Xfce4 Panel plugin was updated to version 0.4.1 recently, bringing a pretty important new feature: panel blending.
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Instructionals/Technical
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Wine or Emulation
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Building off last week’s release of Wine 1.7.51 is the equivalent Wine-Staging update. Besides re-basing off this new Wine release that has XAudio2 support and other new functionality, the staging update has some new CSMT patches for boosting the Direct3D gaming performance.
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Games
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Torchlight II is an incredibly fun and extensive action RPG developed and published on Steam for Linux by Runic Games. Users can now pick it up with a huge 75% discount.
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Well now, this is unexpected. It seems we may be getting quite a few of the Saints Row games, as Saints Row: The Third is showing signs of coming to Linux.
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The Steam for Linux platform seems to be on an upward trend again, and it registered an increase in the number of users, for the month of August.
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The rather good strategy game Frozen Synapse is now available DRM free on GOG, along with the Red DLC.
Disclosure: Our lovely GOG contact and regular commenter on GOL provided me with keys, and I can confirm it works nicely.
Buying it on GOG grants you two copies like Steam does. It’s actually on sale right now, and the normal price is cheaper than on Steam for me.
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Desktop Environments/WMs
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The MATE Desktop Environment, which began as an effort to save GNOME 2 from oblivion, continues to evolve. Now, the open source interface for Linux operating systems is adding novel features of its own, a sign that it has come far since its humble beginnings.
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K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
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Tuesday, 08 September 2015. Today KDE releases a bugfix update to Plasma 5, versioned 5.4.1. Plasma 5.4 was released in August with many feature refinements and new modules to complete the desktop experience.
This release adds a month’s worth of new translations and fixes from KDE’s contributors. The bugfixes are typically small but important and include:
Fixes for compilation with GCC 5
Autostart desktop files no longer saved to the wrong location
On Muon Make sure the install button has a size.
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Plasma 5.4.1 has been released by the KDE Community, and the KDE desktop has received a number of smaller changes and a few bigger improvements.
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GNOME Desktop/GTK
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Epiphany 3.17.91 was released this morning, the near-final version of the GNOME web browser update ahead of GNOME 3.18 later this month.
Epiphany 3.17.91 is the controversial update to this web browser that enables ad-blocking and do-not-track by default. See that linked article for more of my commentary on the matter.
There are also a few other changes that worked their way into Epiphany 3.17.91.
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The activity overview is, probably, the most revolutionary feature introduced with the birth of Gnome Shell. While not every user loves this innovation, it clearly provides a new way of using our workstations. By pressing the “Meta” key, we can now have the opportunity to navigate through windows, installed applications, and active workspaces.
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New Releases
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Zbigniew Konojacki, the creator, maintainer, and lead developer of the 4MLinux distribution, was more than happy to inform Softpedia earlier today, September 8, about the immediate availability for download of the final release of 4MLinux 13.1.
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The developers of the Waha Linux distribution have announced earlier today, September 8, the immediate availability for download of the Waha Linux 8.2 release, dubbed Hijra.
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François Dupoux, the creator, maintainer and lead developer of the SystemRescueCd Live CD GNU/Linux distribution designed for system rescue and recovery tasks, has announced the release and immediate availability for download of SystemRescueCd 4.6.0.
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TheeMahn, the creator, maintainer and lead developer of the Ultimate Edition project (formerly Ubuntu Ultimate), has had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download of Ultimate Edition 4.6 Gamers GNU/Linux distribution.
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The OpenELEC team is proud to announce the 5th beta of OpenELEC 6.0 (v5.95.5)
The most visible change is Kodi 15.1 (Isengard). Beginning with Kodi 15.0 most audio encoder, audio decoder, PVR and visualisation addons are no longer pre-bundled into OpenELEC but can be downloaded from the Kodi addon repo if required. PVR backends such as VDR and TVHeadend will install needed dependencies automatically. For further information on Kodi 15.1 please read http://kodi.tv/kodi-15-1-isengard-maintenance-release/.
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Ballnux/SUSE
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One thing that particularly interested me was the screen size – at 13.3″ it is larger than my usual netbooks (10″-11″), but still smaller than the 15″ screen on my Asus which doesn’t fit very well in my backpack. I’m hoping this will be a good replacement for the Aspire E11 that I got nearly a year ago, with a bit more comfortable screen and a wi-fi adapter that isn’t as much of a pain as the E11′s Broadcom.
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Red Hat Family
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Red Hat announced the details for the company’s annual Red Hat Forum in Asia Pacific. In its fifth year, the forum series kicks off in Jakarta, Indonesia, this September, with thousands of attendees anticipated across 11 cities in Asia Pacific.
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Diane Mueller, director of Community Development for OpenShift at Red Hat, has been selected by the Cloud Network of Women (CloudNOW) as one of the Top 10 Women in Cloud for 2015.
CloudNOW, a non-profit group focusing on female-led teams solving business problems utilizing technology, will recognize the women at its fourth annual awards program later this month.
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In the case of an organization like Red Hat (the organization where I am the CEO) which operates as part of multiple open source software communities like Linux and OpenStack, these questions are all the more difficult to answer—like how to measure someone’s contribution to an external community—and traditional performance reviews just don’t cut it for us. For example, building open source software, like we do at Red Hat, involves collaborating with people outside of the company who volunteer their efforts. That means you can’t simply issue orders or direct what work gets done and when. What you can do is build influence and trust with other members of the community. But doing that can involve making contributions that offer no direct output or result. It’s not quid pro quo, and it’s not easy to track and measure.
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Finally, Red Hat Inc (NYSE:RHT), gained 3.22% Tuesday.
Red Hat declared that President and CEO Jim Whitehurst will serve as the keynote speaker at the 2015 Global Technology Distribution Council Summit of North America (GTDC NA).
Whitehurst’s keynote will focus on how open source software is driving innovation in the enterprise, particularly in the areas of the cloud, big data, mobile, and cloud applications. His presentation will also compare commercial to open source solutions and illustrate best practices as businesses shift to open source software.
Whitehurst will be speaking September 10, 2015, from 9:45 – 10:30 a.m. PDT, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport, in San Francisco, California. For more information about the event, or to register for the 2015 GTDC NA Summit, visit the GTDC website for details.
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Fedora
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So a number of people have been discussing the Internet of Things on Fedora for some time. We now have a Fedora IoT mailing list where these discussions can be more centralised and directed.
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I’ve always upgraded my Fedora laptop incrementally using the recommended tools (yum, preupgrade, fedup). For this reason, my initial decision to install i686 Fedora (back when 32-bit compatibility was important) has carried through, and I’ve always used i686 Fedora, even though the CPU supports x86_64.
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Last week, the official Fedora Project account asked users on social networks why Fedora is their distribution of choice. Probably the most frequent answer was that Fedora is THE GNOME distro, that it has the best supported GNOME, which really made me happy, but what made me even happier was that I found a lot of answers like “You won’t believe it, but I use Fedora for stability”. Indeed, the stability of Fedora has improved a lot since I started using it, especially in the last releases. How did we achieve it?
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Debian Family
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In response to the Snowden revelation that the CIA compromised Apple developers’ build process, thus enabling the government to insert backdoors at compile time without developers realizing, Debian, the world’s largest free software project, has embarked on a campaign to to prevent just such attacks. Debian’s solution? Reproducible builds.
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Derivatives
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RoboLinux has added another milestone releases to its inventory with the Xfce Raptor v 8.1 release. The first RoboLinux 8.1 releases debuted in July with the Cinnamon desktop and not is being expanded with Xfce. RoboLinux 8.1 is based on Debian Jessia and is focussed on helping new able Windows users to migrate to Linux.
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Canonical/Ubuntu
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Canonical’s Joseph Salisbury reported today, September 8, the summary of the Ubuntu Kernel Team’s meeting that took place earlier on the official IRC channel of the project.
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The next Ubuntu – 15.10, nicknamed Wily Werewolf – is beginning to take shape but, as before, the first beta code out of the gate doesn’t belong to the main desktop.
Rather, that honour belongs to the familiar clutch of Ubuntu fellow travellers – Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Ubuntu GNOME, Ubuntu MATE and Lubuntu.
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Wondering what Ubuntu—Canonical’s open source, Linux-based operating system—can do for your phone that Android and iOS can’t? If the answer is yes, the company is hoping you’ll take a look at a video showcasing Scopes, one of Ubuntu’s key features for user devices.
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One of the things that draws people to using Ubuntu is its package management. Despite upcoming changes to Ubuntu’s software management, the current Debian package has been a large part of Ubuntu’s success. One of the best parts about the Debian package management that Ubuntu provides is how easy it is to backup your software. In this article, I’ll talk about some of the best techniques for backing up your software and how they differ from one another.
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Erle Robotics, a Spanish company that makes robots, mainly drones, has started an Indiegogo campaign for their spider drone, called Erle Spider. This is the first legged drone powered by Canonical’s Snappy Ubuntu Core.
Erle Robotics is trying to raise $50,000 through the campaign in 45 days through different packages or perks. The best package for those enthusiasts who like ‘do-it-yourself’ is for $399. It will get you one spider kit for assembly; the kit comes with all needed parts. Those who are not into DIY can pledge $569 and a fully assembled, ready to crawl spider will be delivered to their doorsteps. The most expensive tier of the campaign is the $11,600 university pack, which buys 30 Erle Spider DIY Kits and comes with full tech support.
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Erle Robotics has launched a six-legged Erle-Spider robot on Indiegogo, with an Erle-Brain 2 controller that runs Ubuntu Snappy and ROS on a Raspberry Pi 2.
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The Ubuntu-powered land drone Erle-Spider is now on IndieGoGo and its makers are trying to raise enough money for manufacturing.
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We reported a month ago that a group of engineers, open-source aficionados, and Linux enthusiasts started a new Kickstarter campaign for a device called Mycroft, which has been dubbed “An Open Source Artificial Intelligence For Everyone.”
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Chip blueprint scribbler ARM has released some of the source code for its first public beta of mbed, its operating system for the Internet of Things.
The Internet of Things is today’s fancy word for embedded engineering, and ARM is all over that latter space: the tiny and relatively simple processor cores it designs are used in countless gadgets and gizmos, phones and tablets, controllers and sensors, smartcards, and so on.
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The Raspberry Pi Foundation released its long-awaited 7-inch, 800 x 480 capacitive touchscreen for the Raspberry Pi, selling for $60.
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How touching: the cheap-as-chips Raspberry Pi mini-computer now has an official 7-inch touchscreen for building a basic tablet or control panel.
The touchscreen comes from element14, the British company behind Raspberry Pi. The Raspberry Pi micro-computer brain is designed to be plugged into other components to custom-build everything from computers to media servers to smart home devices. It’s aimed at enthusiasts and newcomers to building computers and electronic equipment, and it also helps kids learn about coding and hardware.
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Phones
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Tizen
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The Samsung Gear S2 features a User Interface that is nothing like Android wear or Apple’s iPhone, Dare to be different! Check out the hands-on video walkthrough of the User Interface…
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Android
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Floating apps have become emblematic of Android’s unique flexibility and range. No other mobile OS allows non-system apps to directly interact with users and overtake the screen while another app is supposed to be in the foreground. This capability allows for a powerful and customizable user experience, but it can also quickly become a problem if an app is poorly implemented or its developer abuses this privilege for malicious purposes.
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According to a rumor from the Wall Street Journal, Amazon is readying a $50, 6-inch Android tablet for a launch before Christmas this year. The company hasn’t had runaway success with its existing line of Android tablets, so it’s clearly hoping that cutting the price can get a few more people on board.
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UCWeb on Monday brought what it calls the “biggest update” to its UC Browser app for Android, pushing it to version 10.7.0. The Android browser app now comes with a new user interface and gives users quick and easy access to more content from the Internet.
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The Finnish gods of rebirth have sent an omen – live photos of the Android-powered Nokia C1. To be clear, that’s Nokia Nokia, not the Microsoft sub-division. The handset looks pretty much just like the renders we saw earlier.
Interestingly, the screen is now reported as 5″ 1080p, rather than 720p, which was the original rumor. Also, it allegedly runs Android 6.0 Marshmallow (pretty vanilla by the looks of it) on an Intel Atom chipset (with 2GB of RAM). From the photos it’s still not clear if the phone is made of metal or plastic.
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Earlier this year Nokia confirmed that it plans to return to the smartphone business, and soon after, revealed it was looking for a ‘world-class partner’ to manufacturing, sales, and marketing of the product. While the company is contractually barred from selling, or manufacturing smartphones until Q4 2016, a bunch of leaked images tip that the company has already started to work on an Android-powered smartphone.
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Sadly, Google didn’t go with M&Ms or Macaroon (our personal favourite). Instead it chose chemical, sugar fluff — otherwise known as Marshmallow. There’s even a new Android man too, which you can see below:
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Google’s new operating system, the Android Marshmallow 6.0, will be unveiled in this year’s Q3. The OS is expected to carry new features intended to improve user experience and functionality.
Compiled below are the most notable features of Android M 6.0.
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The Commission, which is in charge of antitrust issues in the European Union, accused Google in April of cheating competitors by distorting Internet search results in favor of its Google shopping service and at the same time opened the Android probe.
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After trying to win over consumers with pricier tablets, Amazon is said to be working on a slate for the more budget-conscious.
The Internet retail giant is planning to introduce a $50 tablet with a 6-inch screen in time for the holiday shopping season, the Wall Street Journal reports. At half the price of Amazon’s current 6-inch HD Fire tablet, the new slate would be one of the least expensive tablets on the market.
The tablet would be the first of a collection Amazon is planning to release this year that would include a 8- and 10-inch screens, the latter of which would be larger than Amazon’s current HDX 8.9 tablet, the Journal reports.
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Apple’s iOS, exclusive to the iPhone and iPad, has lost its crown as the smartphone operating system of choice in Australia, with sales of Android phones overtaking those of the iPhone in the first half of 2015, according to technology analyst firm Telsyte.
Smartphones running Google’s Android operating system – including those manufactured by Samsung, Sony, HTC, LG and more – made up 54 per cent of smartphone sales in the period, with iPhone sales sliding back to 41 per cent.
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Lenovo, Motorola, and Google are bringing Android Wear to China in the form of the Moto 360 smartwatch. The watches will work with any Android device — but they won’t work with iPhones. It might not seem like it, but it’s actually surprising to see this platform get released in the country. Unlike Android on phones and tablets, Android watches have relied heavily on Google’s services — services that are not available in China. And so, Google has decoupled Android Wear from its normal dependence on Google Now and Google Play.
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No one knows that better than Joaquim Vergès. Vergès built a polished and popular Android Twitter client called Falcon only to run into Twitter’s “token limit,” which puts a cap on the number of users third-party apps can support. Long story short, Falcon hit the 100,000-user mark — and Twitter cut Vergès off from allowing any more users to sign in.
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If you own an Android device, find four similarly outfitted friends and line up, shoulder-to-shoulder. Look to your left. Look to your right. Chances are, one of you has Lollipop, the latest Android mobile operating system. Twenty-one percent of Android devices use Lollipop, according to the company’s own breakdown. This figure is up significantly from May, when Android reported just nine percent of its devices used the new OS. The largest share of the Android OS pie goes to Kit Kat, with 39 percent, followed by Jelly Bean with 32 percent.
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If you don’t like what Google’s doing with Android, you can always make your own version of it. That’s what OnePlus did after it cut ties with Cyanogen. Rather than stick with the plain Google AOSP, OnePlus took the operating system and branched it out into its own, bonafied Android fork. The result is a version of Android that looks like it’s stock, with useful, well-integrated extra features.
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When I first got involved in Unix and open source, I was choosing a pseudonym for a little podcast that I do called GNU World Order. I naively thought that in a community that values technology and, frequently, speculative fiction, the name “Klaatu” would be a quaintly obscure reference to my favorite movies. Of course, I have since learned that “Klaatu” as your handle in the tech community is rather like “Bob Smith” in the real world, so online I am also sometimes known as “notKlaatu” to set me apart from the other Klaatus.
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Events
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On 3 October 2015 Free Software Foundation Europe invites you for the 30th birthday party of the Free Software Foundation. While the main event will take place in Boston/USA, there will be several satellite birthday parties around the world to celebrate 30 years of empowering people to control technology, and one of them will be at Endocode in Berlin.
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For the last two years, we had only lightning talks & workshops at the ownCloud Contributor Conference. This is an exceptionally good model for creation-type events like ours and your event might benefit from it, too.
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While the FOSS/Linux expo season is winding down – Ohio Linux Fest, All Things Open and the Seattle GNU/Linux Conference (SeaGL) next month, and Fossetcon in November in sunny Florida, before we ramp up for the first-of-the-year 2016 event at SCALE 14x in January – thoughts wander to other events that could possibly take place sometime in the future, with a little imagination.
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Last weekend, I had the first Inkscape workshop at smallworld. It was very successful, we had 13 participants.
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Web Browsers
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Mozilla
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Mozilla and seven other organizations will be participating in the Grace Hopper Open Source Day codethon taking place during the main conference event, on October 14. Emma Irwin is a Community Education Lead with Mozilla, and talks to me about why Mozilla is involved in the codethon, what she gets out of it, and what participants learn from it.
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The Bugzilla bug tracker has been a major part of how Mozilla has kept Firefox secure and stable for a long time, but according to the company, it was also the key to a recent attack on Firefox browser users. “An attacker was able to break into a privileged user’s account and download security-sensitive information about flaws in Firefox and other Mozilla products,” Mozilla said Friday in an FAQ about the security snafu (PDF doownload available). “Information uncovered in our investigation suggests that the user re¬used their Bugzilla password with another website, and the password was revealed through a data breach at that site.”
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SaaS/Big Data
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Open source platform as a service can ease cloud app development and deployment. But it also poses these six challenges for developers and the business.
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Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
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On September 8, The Document Foundation, the non-profit organization behind the world’s most popular free and open-source office suite, published details about the program of the LibreOffice Conference 2015.
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CMS
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Montreal-based Orckestra, a provider of cloud-based multichannel commerce solutions, expanded today with the acquisition of Composite, Danish open source content management software vendor.
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I recently received Debian bug report #798350 where the user had a problem with wordpress. After upgrading to version 4.3, the webservers performance degrades over time. The problem is also reported at the wordpress site with bug WordPress ticket 33423 including the fix.
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Education
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Now entering its third year, the ROSE (Red Hat Open Source for Education) Project is a cross-community effort that brings students from Tira together with students from Yonatan Middle School in Ra’anana to the Red Hat offices in Israel to learn about the Linux operating system and Python programming. The students spent six months on a weekly basis working and learning together. At the graduation ceremony executive members of both municipalities were present and awards were given to the students including two special achievement awards.
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I work at a university, in the computer science department, and my college-age students have access to all this technology and more. Imagine the things they’re able to do and create—better yet, imagine the things they’ll be able to do and create in five years with the next generation of all these technologies in the workplace and at home.
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FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
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We’re also endorsing hardware that respects users’ freedoms. Hardware distributors whose devices have been certified by the FSF to contain and require only free software can display a logo saying so. Expanding the base of free software users and the free software movement has two parts: convincing people to care, and then making it possible for them to act on that. Through this initiative, we encourage manufacturers and distributors to do the right thing, and we make it easy for users who have started to care about free software to buy what they need without suffering through hours and hours of research. We’ve certified a home WiFi router, 3D printers, laptops, and USB WiFi adapters, with more on the way.
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Public Services/Government
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The UK government on 7 September published recommendations and guidelines on the use and implementation of ODF, the Open Document Format. The compendium is authoritative, from its general introduction to the recommendations on procurement, a guide on integration of ODF with enterprise software, software that allows collaborating on documents and a review of ODF’s change tracking features.
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The arguably best town in the world is now even better! The beautiful city of Munich has become “a major contributor to open-source.”
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The city of Munich became famous in the open source community by ditching its dependency on Microsoft products and adopting open source. This, in turn, is having a secondary effect on the community because the developers working with the city are now contributing code back.
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Selor, the recruitment and selection agency for the Belgian public administration, is encouraging the use of Mozilla’s open badges, aiming to make the recognising of skills and achievements interoperable across organisations and systems. The HR agency is one of the organisers of the first Belgian workshop on Open Badges on 26 November.
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Openness/Sharing
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Working on the Open Web is a niche area of the greater open source community. Usually the work does not get the same level of fanfare of other areas of open source, but the work is very important.
Here, I’ve compiled a list of 15 people helping move the Open Web forward you should follow on Twitter. All of them are doing amazing work and have great content to share and will help keep you up to date on important things happening on the Open Web.
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If you ask Rosalind Poon about the science class of yester-year — the kind my generation, my parents’ generation and their parents’ generation attended, where the entire class follows the same instructions for an experiment like it was a recipe for baking cookies — it doesn’t explain how real science happens.
“If you think about champagne or penicillin,” said Poon, teacher consultant with the Richmond School District and a trained biology teacher, “a lot of our discoveries are discovered by mistake.”
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The journey of the AXIOM camera began years ago with simple, small devices, and then gained suuport in 2014 with a successful Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign that exceeded its funding goal. A couple months later, a grant from the European Union gave the project the financial momentum it needed to move forward.
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Open Data
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How much money do authors typically make? And how much does it cost an author to self-publish a book?
Questions like these are part of a new author survey launched by Reedsy, an all-encompassing self-publishing platform.
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Mark Headd is the key guy when it comes to developer evangelism at Accela — the firm provides cloud-based ‘civic engagement’ solutions for government.
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Open Access/Content
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On International Literacy Day today Pratham Books threw open a portal that makes their collection of original books free to download, read, and disseminate.
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It’s part of children’s rights: the right to education. And Pratham Books takes children very seriously. Their motto: a book in every child’s hands has been something that they have worked together for, for many years.
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Programming
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HippyVM is an open-source project that’s striving for 100% compatibility with Zend PHP while being more than seven times faster than stock PHP and more than twice as fast as Facebook’s HHVM.
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Security
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Ormandy’s disclosures were made at the same time another researcher’s findings, Kristian Erik Hermansen, were posted online. Hermansen publicly disclosed a zero-day vulnerability within cyberforensics firm FireEye’s security product, complete with proof-of-concept code.
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A public vulnerability disclosure warns that an attacker could remotely download files from an affected hard drive, thanks to the hard-coded default password.
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An international agreement to treat certain software as weaponized is well on its way towards making computing less safe. Recent changes to the Wassenaar Arrangement — originally crafted to regulate the sale of actual weapons — have targeted exploits and malware. The US’s proposed adoption of the Arrangement expands on the definitions of targeted “weapons,” threatening to criminalize the work done by security researchers. While the Arrangement will likely have little effect on keeping weaponized software out of the hands of blacklisted entities, it could easily result in a laptop full of security research being treated like a footlocker full of assault weapons.
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Duo Security, a cloud-based access security provider protecting the world’s largest and fastest growing companies, today announced results from a Duo Labs research study focusing on mobile devices on corporate networks. Unpatched and end-of-life devices that are no longer supported by the manufacturer are much more prevalent than expected and create significant risk for corporate networks. The Duo Labs research draws on data gathered from thousands of customer deployments in more than 150 countries worldwide.
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Someone recently noticed a Washington Post story on the TSA that originally contained a detailed photograph of all the TSA master keys. It’s now blurred out of the Washington Post story, but the image is still floating around the Internet. The whole thing neatly illustrates one of the main problems with backdoors, whether in cryptographic systems or physical systems: they’re fragile.
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The tale of three backdoors: TSA locks, the CALEA interface, and the Dual_EC PRNG, all amply illustrate the dangers posed by backdoors in systems. For backdoors may fail catastrophically, degrade national security, and can potentially be used against those who demanded the backdoors in the first place. The scars born by the security field in dealing with failed backdoors provides ample illustration why we find the idea of backdoors troubling and dangerous.
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Yesterday I read an article on Motherboard about Debian’s plan to shut down 83% of the CIA with reproducible builds. Ostensibly this defends against an attack where the compiler is modified to insert backdoors in the packages it builds. Of course, the defense only works if only some of the compilers are backdoored. The article then goes off on a bit of a tangent about self propagating compiler backdoors, which may be theoretically possible, but also terribly, unworkably fragile.
I think the idea is that if I’m worried about the CIA tampering with Debian, I can rebuild everything myself from source. Because there’s no way the CIA would be able to insert a trojan in the source package. Then I check if what I’ve built matches what they built. If I were willing to do all that, I’m not sure why I need to check that the output is the same. I would always build from scratch, and ignore upstream entirely. I can do this today. I don’t actually need the builds to match to feel confident that my build is clean. Perhaps the idea is that a team of incorruptible volunteers will be building and checking for me, much like millions of eyeballs are carefully reviewing the source to all the software I run.
The original source document doesn’t actually mention deployment of the whacked SDK, just research into its development. Perhaps they use it, perhaps they rejected it as being too difficult and risky. Tricking a developer into using a whacked toolchain leaves detectable traces and it’s somewhat difficult to deny as an accident. If we assume that the CIA has access to developer’s machines, why not assume they have access to the bug database as well and are mining it for preexisting vulnerabilities to exploit? Easy, safe, deniable.
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Debian has been getting a lot of attention the last couple of days for Jérémy Bobbio’s work on Reproducible Builds. Bobbio has been working on this idea and implementation for a couple of years now, but after a presentation at Chaos Communication Camp last month it’s come back into focus. In other Debian news, updates 8.2 and 7.9 were released.
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Hidden backdoors into software have long been a concern for some users as government spying has increased around the world. Now the Debian project has taken aim at the CIA and other government spy agencies with reproducible builds that aim to stop hidden backdoors.
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Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
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Exactly twenty years ago the European Court of Human Rights found that the British Government had acted illegally in shooting dead three IRA members in Gibraltar, even though the court accepted that the government had a genuine belief that they were planning a bombing attack. Indeed the court accepted the victims were terrorists, and refused compensation to their families on those grounds. But the court refused to accept there was no possibility of foiling the plot through methods other than summary execution.
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Finance
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The EU/Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CETA) may have run into more trouble following news that the EU trade commissioner, Cecilia Malmström, has indicated that that there are now “no plans” to change the initialed agreement containing a rejected ISDS clauses – as she had previously said would happen.
The Investor State Settlement clauses – which allow secret courts to adjudicate on disagreements between companies and sovereign states and on the ability of companies to sue sovereign countries at the ISDS court if they believe a country has taken actions which effect their profits or interests – have been holding up what the commission has described as “legal scrubbing” – tidying up the legal language and drafting errors.
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PR/AstroTurf/Lobbying
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Government statistics suggest the number of employed journalists has declined by 6,000 from a peak of 70,000 in 2013.
The latest figures, for the year to June 2015, estimate that 64,000 people in the UK describe themselves as “journalists, newspaper and periodical editors”.
This is a slight increase on the figure for the year to June 2014 of 60,000, but still a decline on the 2013 total.
Meanwhile, the number describing themselves as “public relations professionals” as risen sharply from 37,000 in 2013 to 55,000 in the last data.
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Privacy
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IBM has scored a sweet new partnership with ARM, the company best known for designing the chips that power our smartphones and tablets. This deal will let IBM’s cloud watch and analyze data from billions of devices on the internet.
The Internet of Things is the trend of adding chips and sensors to everyday items (from dishwashers to thermostats) and connecting them to the internet.
Sensors will do everything from monitor the health of industrial equipment to monitor your medical issues in a fitness device.
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In an investigation involving guns and drugs, the Justice Department obtained a court order this summer demanding that Apple turn over, in real time, text messages between suspects using iPhones.
Apple’s response: Its iMessage system was encrypted and the company could not comply.
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The Obama administration on Wednesday will argue to a US appeals court that companies operating in the US must comply with valid warrants for data—even if that data is stored on overseas servers.
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Facebook doesn’t just want to be a social network. It wants to be your world.
At an event at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters today, Facebook said that 45 million small businesses worldwide are now using Pages as their digital storefronts. And Facebook wants to make it even easier for you to find businesses, and for businesses to serve you, all within its app.
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The crux of these new updates comes down to the increasing power of your phone. As more and more users gravitate to mobile, businesses are hoping to reach users where they are. But according to a recent Forrester study, 85 percent of time spent on smartphones happens within apps, not web pages. That’s a problem not just for small businesses but larger businesses, too, says Benji Shomair, Facebook’s product marketing director for Pages. Apps are difficult and expensive to build—plus most users wouldn’t want, say, a company-specific app anyway.
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Civil Rights
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Newly-released emails from the now-halted campaign finance investigation into Scott Walker and his allies are being touted by right-wing media as proof of the probe’s partisan motivations.
Yet in many ways, the documents show the opposite.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board trumpeted the two emails, sent between two lawyers in 2013, claiming that they demonstrate “that partisanship drove Wisconsin’s John Doe.” Wisconsin Watchdog calls the emails “explosive,” which “expose the regulator as hyper-partisan.”
In truth, the emails demonstrate that prosecutors had a stated goal of not influencing the gubernatorial election, and show a career federal prosecutor leaning over backwards to avoid doing so, ultimately erring on the side of helping Walker and undercutting claims of his opponent.
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The European Commission will not ask EU judges to decide on the legality of the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism in free trade agreements such as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).
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The United Nations’ top official in charge of migration says that the crisis rocking Europe needs a “global response” amid a warning from the European Union that the situation could last for years.
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During the past four years, 4 million Syrians have fled their country’s civil war. The US has accepted just over 1,500 refugees, so far allowing Europe to take the lead on the issue.
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The Tampa Police Department has suddenly been put in a very uncomfortable situation. On May 27, officers executed a raid on an alleged drug dealer. By the time it was done, one suspect had been killed by the SWAT team and only $2 worth of marijuana — 0.2 grams — had been recovered.
It was a righteous kill. Letting themselves in through an unlocked door after no one answered their knock, the SWAT team came across Jason Westcott in his bedroom. Westcott had a gun (a legally-owned one) which he raised when the cops came crashing through the door. He was shot multiple times. Open/shut. Officers in danger, suspect with weapon, etc.
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As we see pictures of German citizens cheering tens of thousands refugees arriving from Syria and other war zones, we may be witnessing an emerging pattern of the years to come: bureaucracy is failing (EU), systems collapsing (millions of Asylum seeking refugees in urgent need of helping hands) — AND: citizens rising to the occasion!
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DRM
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Now that some Amazon Prime subscribers are able to download movies and TV shows for offline viewing, rival streaming company Netflix has been left to defend its reasoning for not offering a similar service.
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Intellectual Monopolies
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It’s that time again. The White House’s IP Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) — often called the IP Czar — is asking for public input on the upcoming “Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement” that it will be releasing next year. The Joint Strategic Plan comes out every three years and is supposed to guide the federal government in how it handles priorities around intellectual property enforcement. Now, I recognize that the cynical among you will already be insisting that there is no value in responding to this, because the government is going to simply repeat the arguments of the legacy industries and its copyright extremists. However, in the past, these open comment periods have actually helped, and the two previous Joint Strategic Plans have not been as bad as expected. In 2010, we sent in our feedback and was pleasantly surprised that at least some of it was reflected in the plan. It recognized the importance of fair use and encouraging innovation. It also admitted that most studies on the impact of intellectual property on the economy were bogus.
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Copyrights
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Opening keynote speaker Julia Reda, MEP for the German Pirate Party, started the debate by calling for more and better evidence. Recounting a number of tales of poor stats, she warned that industry lobbyists are quick to fill the evidence void.
[...]
Closing keynote speaker Pamela Samuelson, Berkeley, encouraged academics to write more for non-academic audiences. She recounted her great fear that she would never be taken seriously again after penning an article for WIRED on the ‘Copyright Grab.’ Her fears were unfounded, but it does touch on a key point – there is a cultural taboo associated with non-academic publishing within academia. (Aha! That explains the slight terror I have every time I click the Blogger ‘publish’ button.)
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Kim Dotcom and his former business partners want to delay an extradition hearing scheduled to take place in two weeks’ time. The U.S. government wants Dotcom to face the largest copyright infringement trial in history but the Megaupload defendants say a fair hearing will be impossible if they aren’t able to fund expert witnesses outside New Zealand.
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A raid last week by the UK’s Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit has done little to reduce the availability of packs containing the country’s most popular music tracks. Aside from the disappearance of the torrents usually uploaded by the individual who was arrested, it was very much business as usual during last Friday’s global release day.
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Getty Images has a bit of a reputation for being a ridiculous copyright troll at times — sending out threatening letters demanding large sums to “settle” for people who use an image from Getty’s database. But, now, it appears to have taken the trolling to a new level, as the German blog GetDigital.de revealed last week when it reported that Getty had demanded nearly $1,000 for one year’s use of an image of a penguin that is actually part of a semi-popular meme, better known as the Socially Awkward Penguin.
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Posted in Europe, Patents at 5:21 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
EPO has gone militant
Summary: Several independent reports of ‘BRAIN DRAIN at the EPO’, including so-called ‘interrogations’ of staff which make it no wonder that some people die
A TRULY TOXIC work environment is what the European Patent Office (EPO) became quite a long time ago. Employees have to cope with terrible, merciless rulers and give up many of their basic rights. Sick leave is the least of the problems, though media under the influence of EPO (like “media partners” [1, 2]) helps the management paint the situation and frame staff demands like this, essentially portraying the staff as arrogant and spoiled (the same media strategy the City of London used when Tube workers went on strike several times this past summer). The EPO’s management simply breaks some fundamental laws, ignores court rulings, and even bullies staff. People don’t want to work there and it’s easy to see why. Some want change, but some have given up. Some decide to go on strike, but some decide to just walk out the door for good. To use the words of one source of ours, the EPO Investigation Unit “illustrates the work sphere.” It’s like the Stasi, maybe worse, and it extends well beyond Munich (it is Office-wide across Europe). The Investigation Unit is international and it is aided by spies who even work outside of Europe. Good use of taxpayers’ money clearly it is not.
“The Investigation Unit is international and it is aided by spies who even work outside of Europe. Good use of taxpayers’ money clearly it is not.”A toxic work environment — sometimes literally toxic — is something that I last discussed with my wife yesterday as she recalled her time working in Taiwan. After confiscating all workers’ passports (having forcibly, as per the oppressive rules, visited the police where everyone had to register) they proceeded to taking fingerprints, faeces samples etc. (people treated like cattle and reduced to mere objects, assets, resources). They were then exposed to cancer-causing X-ray (more than once) and were led to machines that not only ruined their vision but also their general health (because of exposure to hazardous chemicals). Moreover, they were pressured to work very fast in order to meet quotas and not only underperforming staff (based on very demanding standards) got laid off but also ones who had charisma and merely suggested that meals can be shared among colleagues; not only one such worker got fired (and ended up in tears) perhaps because she was deemed a potentially unionising force and thus a ‘threat’ but also her friend got fired, merely for association (or maybe fear of retaliation by communication after her friend got unjustly fired). Union-busting may be very prevalent in places like Taiwan and China, but it is also alive and well in Europe, not just famously in the US (Walmart for instance).
The EPO’s management ruined what was supposed to be decent, at least on paper. It has become a nasty organisation that targets unionists and their friends. It is therefore no wonder that the management lost legitimacy and there is now “BRAIN DRAIN at the EPO,” one source has told us, expanding that “the EPO suffers from a massive BRAIN DRAIN. Many staff members (examiners, formality offices) leave the hell, if they can, by early retirement (between 50 and 60, you still can early retire, with certain amount of deductions), “normal” retirement, or they resign. I just received information about figures, but as long as I don’t have a proof, this info is in a kind of limbo.”
“The EPO is so unbelievably corrupt, but there are things people know but cannot say (at least not yet).”“Perhaps you receive such information from other sources,” said the source, “they are not lying, but simply telling the truth.” As pointed out in recent letters to Benoît Battistelli, this has become common knowledge now and we have been hearing it from several sources (independently). “I expect the office failing in the future,” told us a source, adding: “Who is responsible? Benoît Battistelli & clique damaged the EPO and patent system.”
For the time being, this is information that we can publish with the caveats, at least until we have some harder figures. We know about the fifth suicide, but what about people who make their way out of the EPO alive?
“Better wait until “hard” figures are published,” a source told us about this “BRAIN DRAIN” at the EPO, “or leaking.” It “may be needed to wait until the next year when the official yearly report for 2015 is published, with the staff figures. Personally I know of dozens of colleagues who retired, early retired or resigned.”
We will follow up with publication if someone can send us additional details and preferably hard proof, aside from many anecdotes. According to suepo.org’s silence as of late, the atmosphere of intimidation has had a chilling effect on people who may want to come forth with information (members of the union and outsiders). We have seen cases of hesitance to speak out, even when information is available that can seriously undermine the rogue elements at the organisation.
The EPO is so unbelievably corrupt, but there are things people know but cannot say (at least not yet). It’s almost as though fascist regimes are back with a vengeance even in Europe, but as long as they are compartmentalised, people don’t quite know about them. The EPO is a good example of a worrisome trend where an employer or a government treats staff and citizens like enemies, acting accordingly.
To better understand why there are many EPO staff suicides one needs to know what happens behind closed doors, including revolving doors. There are people who move from war in Afghanistan to the EPO and from spy agencies to the EPO, where ‘interrogation’ techniques are now being used on staff. If only more people knew the full extent of what the EPO does, there would possibly be a mass exodus.
“We kindly ask anyone with relevant information to consider contacting us.”Calls for the arrest of high-level EPO officials aren’t new, but apparently these thugs are too well-connected to face justice. To tackle the abuses of the EPO we don’t need MEPs to speak out; we need special units of German police and we need immediate action that is based on the hard facts. What the public really needs to know about the EPO is the stuff that EPO threatens people who speak out about.
Based on our research, the EPO now employs (not contracts) staff from CRG (Control Risks Group, or ‘British Blackwater’) and we know now who asked Battistelli to sign a contract with CRG, showing disturbing intersection between EPO management and the Military-industrial Complex. For those who forgot how CRG relates to the EPO, recall the following older articles:
We kindly ask anyone with relevant information to consider contacting us. We have never let down a source (in nearly a decade of operation) because we are prudent, discreet, and have strict policy on data security (my laptop, for instance, never leaves the house and messages are encrypted). If enough people speak out, things will change. European politicians access our article and occasionally interact with us because they are growingly disturbed by what is happening at the EPO, but they can only go as far as the information available to them allows. █
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09.08.15
Posted in Europe, Patents at 10:19 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: A letter addressed to Benoît Battistelli about staff suicides and his controversial response to it
EARLIER this year we showed and specifically highlighted French- and German-speaking articles [1, 2, 3, 4] where Battistelli, ringleader of the scandalous EPO, expressed outrage not over suicides themselves but over people who merely ‘dared’ to point out the correlation between suicides and the EPO’s poor management. The appalling treatment of staff will be the subject of numerous posts this month. It’s a lot worse than people have come to imagine. It’s almost definitely beyond what’s permitted by law (European law), but then again, if the EPO hires thugs and felons to join even the highest of levels in the organisation, this probably is perfectly in line with the current standards.
In the following series of letters, circulated among several people, Battistelli is shown yet again fuming at staff representatives and even threatening them (more than implicitly) because of their concern for colleagues. We have deleted names and other identifying parts in respect to the privacy of the deceased person and we can safely present it below for future reference.
The above does not need any further comment (especially as the last letter sheds light on what was wrong with Battistelli’s reply), except a reminder that this is not the first time that Battistelli acts in such a fashion. This is systematic and it is consistent with Battistelli’s past attitude. It’s not some hot-headed tantrum. This alone helps demonstrate how toxic EPO management has become, making life very unpleasant for highly-skilled employees, many of whom are leaving (more on that we shall cover separately). █
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Posted in Asia, Free/Libre Software, Patents at 6:31 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

From the Campaign for Document Freedom
Summary: India’s move towards software patents already encounters opposition from the Free Software Movement of India (FSMI) and China’s new obsession with software patents is addressed
SOFTWARE patents are truly a menace. Virtually no software developers would ever defend these, except maybe their ‘pioneer’. These are hurting even proprietary software companies, not just Free software developers. As the Microsoft booster Tim Anderson put it yesterday, “[l]egal woes (and cracked licence keys) cause dev favourites to throw in the towel”. He wrote about “Iron Speed, a firm which provided a rapid application development tool for creating .NET apps [which] is shuttering itself thanks to “litigation with a patent troll”, according to a letter sent to customers by co-founder and chairman Alan Fisher.”
The fight against software patents ought to be a common cause among proprietary and Free/Open Source software developers. Conglomerates such as Microsoft and IBM, which are not run by developers, want software patents in order to merely cement their monopolies, which they acquired only because of lack of software patents (back when they were small). Companies that focus on software can only succeed and thrive in the absence of monopolies on algorithms.
“The fight against software patents ought to be a common cause among proprietary and Free/Open Source software developers.”India’s policy on algorithm monopolies has been sound for a number of years, especially given the large number of software developers in India (both proprietary and Free/Open Source software developers). We were therefore rather stunned to learn that India is making a terrible, suicidal move. The Indian Patent Office sells out, causing huge issues for everyone, based on patent-centric sites. There is a panic among everyone except patent lawyers. Some rightly ask: “Will It Stifle Innovation in the IT Industry?”
Of course, it has been repeatedly shown in practice and in theory. India is making even more impact in the media (even international networks like Reuters [1, 2] by giving Pfizer the finger again. As PTI put it, “India rejects Pfizer’s patent application for arthritis drug”. Pfizer just wants another monopoly and India, realising the ethical impact, denies/declines. Why can’t the Indian Patent Office realise that patents on software too are unethical, irrational, and damaging to India? Who is this patent office working for? As one site put it: “The Indian Patent Office (IPO) has addressed limitations on patents for computer-related inventions to clarify the Patents (Amendment) Act 2002.”
It didn’t just address limitations; the word “limitations” has a negative connotation, as if patent maximalism is a good thing.
“Free Software activists against changes to patent norms” is the headline of this new article in English, which shows that the Free software types are already responding to this crisis. To quote the opening paragraph: “The Free Software Movement of India (FSMI) has alleged that the new Guidelines for Examination of Computer Related Inventions are illogical. It argues that they violate the spirit and law contained in the amended Patents Act of 1970 and could pose a grave threat to innovation in our country.”
There are meanwhile reports also from China, the other Asian technology giant. “Last year,” said this article, “for the fourth year running, China topped the patent league with 928,000 patent applications compared to 578,800 patents filed in the USA.”
This is not because of increased innovation but due to patent maximalism. As this new article indicates, software patents are becoming widespread in China (we wrote about this trend before). To quote the lawyers’ site:
Patenting computer software inventions makes sense for the Chinese e-commerce industry for three reasons. First, the Chinese government wants more businesses to patent their technological innovations. This policy is supported at the national level and the central government pays for inventors to apply for patents. Second, e-commerce is very important in China. One quarter of all consumer purchases in China are done on-line. And that number is unlikely to get smaller. Third, today’s Chinese consumers have many options and they have grown to expect quality products, quick service and reasonable prices.
For most active businesses, the third reason is the key. Finding an edge in meeting those consumer expectations has made for a fiercely competitive marketplace. Protecting process innovations that involve software improvements is, as it is everywhere, problematic. How are computer software inventions protected in China as a matter of law?
China would not gain any advantage by allowing patents on software. It would just be wasting time and other resources composing documents in Mandarin. A lot of these so-called ‘innovations’ are not innovative at all; they can be found in existing patents (maybe in other languages) and refer to ideas that got implemented a very long time ago. These patents are good for nothing, except maybe serve as trophies (although the higher the number of such ‘trophies’, the less impressive each becomes).
Business hawks in the US are not resting [1, 2]. They still lobby against patent reform in the US, pretending it would “hurt innovation”, “weaken patent laws”, and the usual nonsense about hurting businesses, which is exactly what patent law does at the moment (hence the need for reform). To quote the latter example, here is why the hawks have just resumed this lobbying (it’s about timing): “Toward the end of each summer lawmakers travel back to their home states and districts for the August recess. This time away from our nation’s capital allows elected officials to reconnect with constituents and hear which issues matter most to folks back home.”
US officials will hopefully work towards a real reform, not the diluted one which had been tabled before they went on holiday.
It is rather worrisome to see software patents spreading to large parts of the global economy (India, China, and even Europe if the corrupt EPO management gets its way) while the US itself, the original source of these patents, is coming to grips with the harms of these patents and cutting down accordingly. █
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Posted in Microsoft, Vista 10 at 5:50 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Microsoft is trying to label everything ’10′ (like Vista 10), despite there being no significant adoption of the ’10′ franchise
THE Vista 10 charade is not quite over yet. Microsoft is now ‘spamming’ people (using its so-called ‘decisions’ engine) to get them to use proprietary spyware, essentially lock-in with back doors. A bait title (headline) was used in a Microsoft puff piece the other day, demonstrating what we consider to be Microsoft and Vista 10 ads in ‘article’ form. It is too easy to be fooled by the artificial hype and actually believe that ’10′ is a success. It’s not.
Now that Nokia is dying (due to Microsoft) and is belatedly moving to Android, Microsoft “kills off some of Nokia’s apps for Windows Phone”. To quote IDG:
Microsoft announced Friday that it will cease development of several apps Nokia developed for Windows Phone as the company streamlines the photo experience on Windows 10 Mobile.
This will never take off. Vista 10 has been a disaster even on desktop, so why would it ever gain a foothold on mobile devices, where Microsoft has such minuscule market share whereas Linux dominates? █
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Posted in News Roundup at 5:27 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Contents
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Working from the Terminal is really fun. Today, we’ll list really funny Linux commands which will bring smile on your face.
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Desktop
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When you train with The Linux Foundation you’re already getting the best Linux training available. And now, to make our courses even more valuable, we are including a free Chromebook with the purchase of any Linux Foundation training course in the month of September.
“We want students of Linux to experience a Linux desktop and Chromebooks are a great way to do that – either through Google’s Linux-based OS or by installing one of the many Linux distros available. We hope this offer can provide the freedom Linux developers and IT professionals value and spark new ideas and discoveries as they embark on our Linux training program.”
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In the few times I’ve looked at the Librem 13 crowd-funding campaign, it didn’t look like it would make its crowd-funded goal of $250k… Even with the campaign being extended on Crowd Supply. However, in the past few days it shot up sharply towards its goal.
It turns out that it looks like the Librem 13 is being self-funded by Todd Weaver, the CEO of Purism, in order to meet their goal with the crowd-funded campaign ending on 17 September.
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Chromebooks have been burning up the sales charts at Amazon, and one redditor recently had a question about which model to buy. He wanted to know if the Asus Flip or Acer 11.6 was a better value and a better bet to run Linux. It’s a tough question since both laptops are rated 4.5 stars by Amazon customers, and there are pluses and minuses to each model.
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New reports claim that Xiaomi is developing its first laptop running on the Linux operating system and will be released in the second quarter of 2016.
After making a big impact with its affordable range of powerful smartphones, Xiaomi, aka China’s Apple, is now reportedly entering the laptop market. According to Bloomberg, Xiaomi is in talks with Samsung for the supply of memory chips, which will be used to power its first laptop expected to be launched in early 2016.
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Kernel Space
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Sasha Levin, the maintainer of the Linux 3.18 LTS kernel series, is happy to announce the immediate availability for download and update of the twenty-first maintenance release of the long-term supported Linux 3.18 kernel.
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Overall it seems the file-system driver updates for the Linux 4.3 kernel aren’t too exciting with the work mostly consisting of bug fixes — XFS isn’t any different.
The Btrfs, EXT4, and F2FS file-system updates have largely been made up of bug fixes and that is the case too with the new XFS pull.
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The platform drivers pull for Linux x4.3 has big improvements to the Toshiba ACPI driver. Some of the Toshiba ACPI work includes adding a new /dev/toshiba_acpi device, transflective backlight updates, a set_fan_status function, and various other changes.
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Just over three years ago was a call by an open-source developer to deprecate the Linux kernel’s FBDEV drivers. While more companies these days are investing more into DRM drivers, FBDEV drivers are still maintained by the latest Linux kernel releases.
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The subject of process management, supervision and init(8) for Unix-like systems is one plagued by a large degree of ahistoricity and “pop culture” explanations. This leads to a lot of confusion and misunderstanding surrounding feature sets and how one formulates the problems surrounding reliable process management on Unix in general, making it a ripe topic for demagogues of all persuasions.
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Graphics Stack
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Emil Velikov from the Mesa development team has had the pleasure of announcing the release and immediate availability for download of the sixth maintenance version of the Mesa 3D Graphical Library 10.6.
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Nvidia has updated the Legacy branch of the Linux drivers and developers have fixed quite a few issues. This is a driver aimed at older hardware, so if you just got your shiny and new Titan video card, this driver will be of no use to you.
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Intel’s xf86-video-intel 3.0 display driver has now been in development for two years, but it doesn’t look like they are in a rush to release it before Wayland takes over the Linux desktop.
This week marks two years since the first xf86-video-intel 3.0 development release with the leading changes being defaulting to SNA acceleration by default rather than UXA and enabling XMir support, but that compatibility with Ubuntu’s next-gen display server was later dropped.
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The DRM changes landed in Linux 4.3 already and we’ve written about the prominent changes for these kernel graphics drivers for the next Linux kernel release.
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Applications
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The MPV movie player based on the MPlayer and mplayer2 open-source projects that supports a wide variety of video and audio file formats, as well as subtitle types and video codecs, has reached version 0.10.0.
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QEMU is the software that creates virtual hardware which guest operating systems run on top of. All (well, almost all — see note below[*]) the hardware that a guest OS has access to is actually written to some specifications in software — i.e. no physical hardware is involved. For the QEMU/KVM hypervisor, most of these devices are written in the QEMU source repository. A few devices are part of the KVM code in the Linux kernel. QEMU also handles a lot of host-specific stuff, like storage and networking for the virtual machines.
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Just a quick quick post to announce that I’ve set up a COPR repository where I host software used in neuroscience research.
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Proprietary
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Instructionals/Technical
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Games
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Looks like Saints Row 2 will be getting the Linux treatment too. We are truly blessed with games recently!
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Company of Heroes 2 is a real-time strategy game originally developed by Relic Entertainment and ported to Linux by Feral Interactive. Now, the studio that also took care of the porting process has announced that some DLCs for the game are also available for Linux players.
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A developer named Yanick Bourbeau wrote a post on Gamasutra about developing on Linux, and it’s a nice read. It’s not the most in-depth piece around, but it’s a positive one I felt the need to highlight.
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We announced a while back that the Mad Max game from Avalanche Studios is coming to Linux and we based that on information on an official press release. For some reason, the SteamOS platform disappeared a few months ago from all communiques, and there is no information as to why.
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Arma 3′s performance using Virtual Programming’s eON tech is rather amazing.
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Guild Software has announced a new maintenance release of their popular and cross-platform Vendetta Online 3D space combat MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role-playing game) title.
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The developer of Battle Worlds: Kronos and the highly rated The Book of Unwritten Tales games, KING Art Games, launched a Kickstarter campaign last week, and have now promised a Linux version of the upcoming game.
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The developers of the open-source and cross-platform Unvanquished FPS (First-Person Shooter) game have announced the immediate availability for download of a new Alpha build.
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The latest monthly update to the Unvanquished open-source first person shooter game is now available.
Unvanquished 0.43 boasts some new high resolution textures, mapping updates, some engine API updates are in the works, and other changes have landed over the past month. There are also bug-fixes to some high profile issues that were affecting gamers of this open-source, cross-platform title.
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Desktop Environments/WMs
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Pier Luigi Fiorini, the creator and lead developer of the independent and open-source SDDM (Simple Desktop Display Manager) login manager software used on numerous desktop environments, including KDE, LXDE, and Hawaii, has announced the release of version 0.12.0.
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K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
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The digiKam Team is proud to announce the release of digiKam Software Collection 4.13.0. This release is the result of another huge bugs triage on KDE bugzilla where more than 30 files have been closed. Thanks to Maik Qualmann who maintain KDE4 version while KF5 port and GSoC 2015 projects are in progress. Both are planed to be completed while sprint 2016.
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This does not seem like much, but, trust me, it is.
The KActivitiesStats library now supports mixing contacts (documents, etc.) that are linked to the current activity (aka favourites, or pinning), with the recently or frequently contacted ones.
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GNOME Desktop/GTK
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A new development release of the Nautilus (Files) file manager has been published as part of the second Beta milestone towards the upcoming and anticipated GNOME 3.18 desktop environment.
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OpenELEC, an embedded operating system built specifically to run the famous KODI (former XBMC) media player hub, has been upgraded once more and it’s now at version 6.0 Beta 5 and is now ready for download and testing.
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Reviews
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Austrumi is a Linux distribution that is based on Slackware and developed by a small team from the Latgale region of Latvia, a small ex-USSR Baltic state.
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openSUSE announced the second milestone for the Leap 42.1 developmental cycle so I decided to give her a test run. I wasn’t the only one putting openSUSE through its paces this weekend though. Jamie Watson tested a recent Tumbleweed snapshot on yet another new Acer netbook and Neil Rickert tested both.
As my search for a Mint replacement continues, openSUSE Leap 42.1 reached Milestone 2 and thought I’d give it a whirl. I downloaded the install DVD and designated a pre-used partition for the install and formatted with ext4. I didn’t test any of the higher functions like encryption or LVM, and left the default KDE desktop as my choice. I didn’t bother selecting packages and just installed the default selections. That was 4 gigs. I had it put the boot files on both the MBR and the install partition and it didn’t balk. This is the first time in a long time I have a pretty Bootloader screen. It identified and listed all my Linux installs, even those I wish it wouldn’t.
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New Releases
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The Solus operating system is on track of an October 1 release, and it looks like the fundraiser was also a success.
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On September 7, we were informed by the developers of the recently introduced Apricity OS GNU/Linux distribution that a new Beta build was made available for download and testing.
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We’re happy to introduce you today to a new Live DVD ISO image from the well-known Linux AIO project, which contains the basic, freely distributed editions of the popular Zorin OS GNU/Linux distribution.
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Screenshots/Screencasts
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Arch Family
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Octopi v0.8 is about to be released. It will feature a lot of bugfixes and new additions.
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The Manjaro Linux development team, through Philip Müller, has had the great pleasure of announcing earlier today, September 7, the general availability of a new stable update for the Manjaro Linux operating system.
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The Manjaro Linux Team has announced earlier that the next major version of the Octopi GUI (Graphical User Interface) package manager software, version 0.8, is around the corner and a release is imminent.
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Red Hat Family
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Avnet will expand its decade-long partnership with Red Hat to provide the Netherlands with a range of open source offerings.
The distie giant will offer Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux and Enterprise Virtualisation solutions, alongside its JBoss Middleware offering.
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Red Hat (NYSE:RHT) has received a consensus recommendation of “Buy” from the thirty-two brokerages that are presently covering the firm, Analyst Ratings Net reports. Two analysts have rated the stock with a sell recommendation, six have issued a hold recommendation and twenty-three have assigned a buy recommendation to the company. The average 12 month target price among analysts that have issued ratings on the stock in the last year is $81.67.
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Debian Family
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Piwik told me that people are still sharing my post about the state of GNOME-Software and update notifications in Debian Jessie.
So I thought it might be useful to publish a small update on that matter:
If you are using GNOME or KDE Plasma with Debian 8 (Jessie), everything is fine – you will receive update notifications through the GNOME-Shell/via g-s-d or Apper respectively. You can perform updates on GNOME with GNOME-PackageKit and with Apper on KDE Plasma.
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Debian’s Jérémy Bobbio came with the proposal of introducing reproducible builds for all of the software packages (over 22,000) available in the software repositories of the Debian GNU/Linux operating system to get a verifiable path from source to binary.
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Shortly after introducing the second point release of the Debian GNU/Linux 8 “Jessie” operating system, the Debian Project had the great pleasure of informing its users about the immediate availability for download of a new maintenance release for their stable, long-term supported Debian GNU/Linux 7 OS.
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Unfortunately this weekend, with the 8.2 release, things broke in a significant way – The cron deamon was left in a broken state, such that all cronjobs failed to execute.
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Derivatives
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Canonical/Ubuntu
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We’ve been toying with the idea of a tablet powered by the Ubuntu Linux operating system from Canonical for quite some time now, as there have been a few attempts from various tech companies to create such a device, some of which proved to be a hoax.
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Ubuntu is now the most used Linux operating system out there, both for desktops and in the cloud, and there are some good reasons why that is true. We’ll go through a few of those reasons.
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Amidst all the news about Ubuntu Touch, Snappy, and other various products, we finally get to see something about the progress made by developers with X applications running natively in Mir and Unity 8.
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As reported late last month, the Aquaris E4.5 and Aquaris E5 are two phones based on the Linux Ubuntu operating system. These are now available for purchase via online retailer Snapdeal.
Ubuntu, a popular alternative operating system traditionally used on desktop, laptops and server, debuted for smartphones last year. The Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition is based on a 4.5 inch screen with a 540×960 resolution, and runs a MediaTek Quad-core Cortex A7 processor with 8GB of internal memory and 1GB of RAM. It also features a 5 megapixel front camera and 8 megapixel rear camera having autofocus, dual flash and Full HD video recording capability. It is powered by a 2,150mAH Li-Po battery.
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Erle Robotics has launched an Indiegogo campaign for what it claims is the “first smart robotic spider powered by Snappy Ubuntu Core,” which is a “transactionally updated Ubuntu for clouds and devices.” The six-legged robot weighs just over 2 kilograms (4.4lbs) and has 45 minutes of autonomy, according to the company.
Indiegogo options include a basic kit for about £250 ($400), and an assembled version for around £420 ($640). If the main Indiegogo goal of $50,000 (about £33,000) is exceeded, the stretch goals include a free Android app to replace the simple wireless gamepad that is included with the system ($100,000 pledged), and the addition of a 5-megapixel camera to all models if $150,000 is pledged. Oddly, there doesn’t seem to be a stretch goal to add two extra legs.
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Canonical posted a video today showing the state of running a Unity 8 session with Mir while supporting legacy X11 applications that lack a Mir back-end.
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Canonical’s Mark Shuttleworth has announced that Ubuntu will not drop deb packages in favor of snappy ones, the Snappy Ubuntu Core being a container full of DEBs.
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Flavours and Variants
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Team Peppermint are pleased to announce a respin of our latest operating system Peppermint 6 with full UEFI / GPT / Secureboot support (64bit edition only), and a new version of Ice (our in house Site Specific Browser framework) that now supports the Firefox web browser as well as Chromium / Chrome.
We’ve fixed a few minor bugs, and tweaked the Peppermix-Dark theme a little in line with user feedback
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The BQ Aquaris E4.5 and E5 Ubuntu editions have finally arrived in India via the Snapdeal and users should get some personalized scopes and various other localized content.
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elementary OS was officially updated to version 0.3.1 a few days ago, and it looks like the project has settled in a status quo, which brings good news and bad news. Stability is always something to be desired, but the project is no longer exciting.
I have recently installed elementary OS and it took quite a lot to get it to work, which is not encouraging. It’s a common “nomodeset” problem, but I managed to get passed it. New Linux users might not be able to do that. In any case, I’m currently reviewing the new version, and I’ve noticed that it sort of lost some of its appeal.
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Mark Greaves from the Peppermint project has had the great pleasure of announcing the release and immediate availability for download of the first respin of the Ubuntu-based Peppermint OS 6 Linux distribution.
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In the end we chose an industrial-quality display from our friends at Inelco Hunter based in the UK, who were able to create something very special:
RGB 800×480 display @60fps
24-bit colour
FT5406 10 point capacitive touchscreen
70 degree viewing angle
Metal-backed display with mounting holes for the Pi
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Phones
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Android
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When dialing 911 the situation isn’t always calm and it can be difficult to comprehend everything happening at the time due to high-stress levels. That’s why the newly enabled feature in the preview is so important. When users call 911 (or whatever their emergency number is in the country or region they reside) the screen will now display an overview of Google Maps with the name listed for the emergency service center they’re connected with during a call, and the information on the map is the current location of the caller so they can more easily give those specific details to the emergency dispatch person on the line with them, which could end up helping those who are dispatched out to that location to possibly get there quicker.
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The convenience and versatility offered by mobile devices and the ubiquity of connectivity has caused a shift in the way we live and work. Gone are the solitary cubicles and stodgy desktops of yore, replaced by the mobile workforce user.
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The Sunchip CX-S500 is a very tiny Android powered mediaplayer, about the size of a small smartphone charger.
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There are a lot of quite awesome and intriguing icon packs for Android – normally, a handful of noteworthy ones appear on Google Play each and every day. However, keeping tabs on all of these is quite a cumbersome task, even for those who are into such things. This is why we regularly show you the icon packs that have recently made their way to the Play Store and deserve your attention.
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HTC has silently launched new smartphone in its Desire-series in China, named HTC Desire 728 Dual SIM. The smartphone is up for pre-orders and is expected to start shipping by mid-September. The firm has not yet revealed the price of the dual-SIM handset.
The HTC Desire 728 Dual SIM runs Android 5.1.1 Lollipop with HTC Sense and features a 5.5-inch HD (720×1280 pixels) IPS display like the Desire 820G+ Dual SIM, which was launched in July. It packs the same 13-megapixel rear camera with LED flash, but a 5-megapixel secondary front-facing camera instead of an 8-megapixel one. Also, the handset is powered by a slightly less powerful octa-core MediaTek MT6753 SoC (clocked at 1.3GHz) and 2GB of RAM.
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Kali Linux is one the best love operating system of white hat hackers, security researchers and pentesters. It offers advanced penetration testing tool and its ease of use means that it should be a part of every security professional’s toolbox.
Penetration testing involves using a variety of tools and techniques to test the limits of security policies and procedures. Now a days more and more apps are available on Android operating system for smartphones and tablets so it becomes worthwhile to have Kali Linux on your smartphone as well.
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Sub-notebooks/Tablets
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Jolla is currently taking preorders for it’s next limited production run for delivery to EU, Norway, Switzerland, United States, Canada, Australia, India and Hong Kong, and are expected to ship at the end of October. The 32 GB version is selling for €267.00 (about $298 US), with the 64 GB version going for €299.00 (about $334.00 US).
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SaaS/Big Data
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Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
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Developers are preparing a LibreOffice viewer for the Ubuntu phones, and it looks like it’s coming along just nicely. It’s still early work, but its makers are already reporting great progress and really good performance.
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Pesaro is a town of about 100 thousands people on the northern adriatic coast of Italy. Its Public Administration has been facing lots of critics from Free/Open Source software supporters because, in the last five years, it changed twice the same, important part of its ICT infrastructure. Both those changes bring consequences and open issues, both for the critics and for Pesaro, that have had little or no coverage at all so far, especially outside Italy (1). Before talking about them, however, it is necessary to summarize what happened.
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BSD
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FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
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A few weeks ago, Manolis Ragkousis announced the completion of the GSoC project whose purpose was to port Guix to the Hurd. The system distribution, GuixSD, cannot run GNU/Hurd yet, but the package manager itself can both cross-compile from GNU/Linux to GNU/Hurd and build natively on GNU/Hurd. The work of Manolis is being gradually merged in the main branch.
More recently, Mark H Weaver posted a series of patches porting GuixSD to MIPS (Lemote Yeeloong), making it the first GuixSD port to non-Intel-compatible hardware (the package manager itself has supported mips64el for two years already.) By removing several platform-specific assumptions, this work paves the way for future ports.
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Public Services/Government
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The city of Munich is a major contributor to free and open source projects, sending bugfixes to upstream developers, making available software solutions and sharing best practices and technical information. In August, Munich IT staff members shared the city’s accomplishments with the community of Debian developers, one of the main free software distributions.
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Munich may have put out the fire but they still are far from optimal in IT. There’s no reason at all they have to support 20-year-old computers. Such things can be replaced rather readily in today’s market with savings in energy-consumption, size, space, noise, dust,… Why spend a lot on labour to maintain obsolete technology far past its “best before” date? It’s not as if they are just getting full value out of previous expenditures nor keeping junk out of the landfill. Ten years’ support does that very well. Twenty years is just silly. 20 years ago, I was using a ‘486, for pity’s sake.
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Openness/Sharing
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Open Data
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Are we on the cusp of seeing dramatic changes in the way governments operate by publishing and consuming open data? Mark Headd, Developer Evangelism at Accela seems to think so. He’ll be leading a panel discussion at the All Things Open conference in October about open data and wants to explore just that—how open data is changing government, both institutionally and operationally.
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Open Access/Content
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Not-for-profit organization Pratham Books launches an open source digital platform on Tuesday to help spread literacy among children on World Literacy Day.
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Open Hardware
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While 3D printing businesses are crucial within the community, few initiatives have been as meaningful or as life-giving as the RepRap movement for making 3D printing available at every making level. That’s why we are always very supportive of new RepRap(-based) initiatives, and a very promising one has just caught our eye. Called the Fusion 3D printer, this is a very promising machine designed through RepRap principles to be portable, open source, excellent in performance and affordable. While a Kickstarter campaign for this interesting machine is forthcoming, you can already order this 3D printer as a kit for just $249.
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Kano is a handsomely-designed modular kit of parts that assembles into a computer, and its office, while not a computer, is also assembled from a handsomely designed modular kits of parts.
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Programming
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C is everywhere and in everything. C powers the Mars Curiosity rover, every computer operating system, every mobile OS, the Java Virtual Machine, Google Chrome, ATM machines, the computers in your car, the computers in your robot surgeon, the computers that designed the robot surgeon, the computers that designed those computers, and, eventually, C powers itself as its own implementation language.
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The launch of the iPhone 6s, fourth generation Apple TV and iPad Pro is impending…
[...]
Apple knows it can’t rely on the annual iPhone hype-release cycle
forever.
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Health/Nutrition
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Glance at a lawn in East Porterville, California, and you’ll instantly know something about the people who live in the house attached to it.
If a lawn is green, the home has running water. If it’s brown, or if the yard contains plastic water tanks or crates of bottled water, then the well has gone dry.
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Security
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The Linux Foundation’s recently published security checklist may draw more attention to best practices for protecting Linux workstations, even if IT pros do not embrace all of its recommendations.
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There’s a critical shortage of IT security experts in Australia to meet an otherwise welcome increase in the demand for ICT executives after months of employment uncertainty for the country’s tech executives.
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Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
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Given the disgraceful Sun front page and middle spread urging war on Syria, and the all-out propaganda on Sky News, it is important to understand why Murdoch is pushing so hard for war. I therefore reproduce my article from February 2013. It is important to note that the links are to industry publications: this is very genuine, hard information.
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DAVID CAMERON revealed yesterday that the RAF carried out a secret drone strike in Syria which killed two British citizens fighting for Islamic State (Isis).
The Prime Minister insisted the strike was “necessary and proportionate” to stop attacks being planned on Britain.
But campaigners described it as a an “extrajudicial killing” that “violated” the will of Parliament.
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Finance
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In the past I sold a few personal items on eBay that were paid for with PayPal. On those occasions I had immediate access to the money I received.
However, in recent weeks I have sold some other items, also paid for with PayPal, but was able to access the money only after 21 days, even though PayPal deducted its fees immediately. Have things changed?
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About a decade ago, home prices exploded to bizarro levels, then millions of families got behind on their mortgage payments. A financial crisis spiraled out from there, almost destroying the world. Things have improved a bit since then, but it still sucks for lots of people. If you can’t make your payments, the bank squares the debt by seizing your home, and you’re left out in the cold. In the modern world, it’s one of the worst things that can happen to you that doesn’t involve a somber doctor asking you to please sit down.
That’s where Evelyn comes in. As part of her real estate job, she works with banks to handle foreclosures, evictions, and lockouts. We asked her what it’s like watching this tragedy unfold again and again.
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PR/AstroTurf/Lobbying
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After exceeding his $1 million crowd-funding goal, Harvard Law School professor Larry Lessig announced today on “This Week” that he is running for president.
“I think I’m running to get people to acknowledge the elephant in the room,” he told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. “We have to recognize — we have a government that does not work. The stalemate, partisan platform of American politics in Washington right now doesn’t work.”
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To many of us who have been in conflict zones without a sanitised cordon around us, and actually seen the effects close-up (and that excludes almost all of the political class), it is astonishing that the neo-cons constantly seek to promote war, any war. They just cannot sit comfortably unless we are blowing somebody, somewhere, limb from limb.
Little Aylan Kurdi and his family were fleeing Kobani, a town the US Air Force have been bombing relentlessly for weeks. Bombs are entirely agnostic over who they kill, and have not made life notably better for the population.
Yet the news media are now insistently beating the drum for British bombing in Syria.
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Censorship
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Despite scaling dizzy heights in recent months, the record for DMCA notices being sent to Google’s search engine has been smashed again. In a single week Google just processed a mind-boggling 13.68 million URLs, or to put it another way, almost 23 copyright complaints every second. So what’s behind the massive surge?
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The Norwegian Pirate Party has made a big statement by launching a free DNS service which allows Internet users to bypass the local Pirate Bay blockade. The party advocates a free and open Internet for everyone and believes that the recent website blockades set a dangerous precedent.
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Following a court-ordered block of The Pirate Bay and a number of other file-sharing websites in Norway, the Norwegian Pirate Party (Piratpartiet Norge) has now set up free, uncensored DNS servers that anyone can use to bypass the block. While the DNS servers are based in Norway, anyone can use them: if your ISP is blocking access to certain sites via DNS blackholing/blocking, using the Piratpartiet’s DNS servers should enable access.
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Privacy
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With dozens of cases under his belt Oregon lawyer Carl Crowell can be considered an expert when it comes to suing BitTorrent pirates. However, a recent claim that pirates can’t be anonymous online conflicts with day-to-day reality.
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Civil Rights
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A former Geelong Grammar headmaster paid a teacher to retire early, in order to avoid a formal complaint about sexual abuse, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse has heard.
The former headmaster, Nicholas Sampson, is now the principal of elite New South Wales school, Cranbrook School.
Former teacher Jonathan Harvey was jailed in 2007 for 10 months, with another 22 months suspended, after pleading guilty to abusing a former student, known as BLF, between 1976 and 1978.
In his testimony to the royal commission on Monday, Harvey claimed the elite school’s then-headmaster Nicholas Sampson suggested that he retire early, after hearing of his misconduct relating to a student.
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Saljanin appears to have stopped at home in Yorktown Heights, New York, where he left the large, rented Penske truck in a parking lot overnight. When he came back the next day, he told police, the truck was gone. Of course, he told the authorities, he had no idea who could have done such a thing, nor did anyone else know that he was making the delivery.
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Internet/Net Neutrality
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Reddit user demian87 recently posted a letter from Comcast notifying him or her of a new Comcast internet access pricing plan being trialed in Fort Lauderdale, the Keys, and Miami, Florida. According to this letter, Comcast will set a limit beginning on October 1 of 300 GB per household per month. Customers who exceed this limit will have to pay $10 for every additional 50 GB needed after that, or sign up for an unlimited data plan for an additional $30 per month.
Comcast spokesman Charlie Douglas confirmed that the letter is authentic, along with the company’s new unlimited pricing plan. Douglas explained that “the company has trialed three other pricing plans since 2012 when Comcast had a static limit of 250 GB per month.”
In a related development reported by the New York Times, Comcast will campaign to win over the quintessential cord-cutter class with new TV services designed to entice them into subscribing to its internet access service. Comcast will begin offering a $15-a-month TV service called Stream that includes broadcast networks and HBO for its internet customers. The new service will be available in Boston, Chicago, and Seattle later this year and across the company’s coverage areas in the United States in 2016.
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Intellectual Monopolies
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Copyrights
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As summer is sadly approaching its end, there may be nonetheless some reasons not to feel completely blue, one of these being that the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has just resumed its activity.
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Send this to a friend
09.07.15
Posted in GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Vista 10 at 4:59 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Microsoft’s aggression against GNU/Linux as witnessed in light of the company’s multi-boot policies and handling
AT THE very end of July we noted (in several articles in fact) that Microsoft continues to attack dual-boot setups (meaning GNU/Linux). After all these years and despite having the manpower, Microsoft still claims to be incapable/unable to do what very few Linux hackers could do decades ago in order to facilitate OS co-existence. grub
is maintained by very few people (almost none) and lilo
is dying. As we noted here 4 days ago, "Microsoft's Vista 10 Still a Failure, So Focus Shifts to Attacks on GNU/Linux, Android". Below [1,2] there are some newest rants about dual-booting. Microsoft, now with the UEFI trap (some computers won’t made ‘secure boot’ toggle-able with the introduction of future versions of Windows), continues to making life hard for GNU/Linux users. It’s not a coincidence, it’s intentional. Formal complaints were made as recently as 2 years ago to European authorities, which are too slow or apathetic to take action.
“Formal complaints were made as recently as 2 years ago to European authorities, which are too slow or apathetic to take action.”Vista 10 reportedly gets some users banned from particular sites, notably torrent sites. It is not as though many people are affected because according to the most Microsoft-friendly data/surveys, Vista 10 has not even reached 5% market share. The market share share of Vista 10, based on the past week’s logs in Techrights, is 0.8%. This is not a success story considering the zero-cost ‘upgrade’ in the summer vacation months (when people have time to undertake this task). The market share share of Vista 10 based on the past week’s logs in Tux Machines is even lower (0.18%). Deterrence against exploration of GNU/Linux is now high on the agenda at Microsoft, as recent stories of ours served to demonstrate. █
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