05.11.15
Links 11/5/2015: Linux 4.1 RC3, OpenELEC 6.0 Beta
Contents
GNU/Linux
-
4 Ways to Install Ubuntu Linux on a Windows Computer
You want to install Ubuntu on your Windows computer, don’t you? The thing is, you’re not 100% certain, yet. What if it goes wrong?
Fortunately, there are many ways in which you can try Ubuntu Linux and see whether you really like it, from running a Live CD to installing the OS in a virtual machine, before going all the way and installing it alongside Windows to dual boot.
You might even abandon Windows altogether, converting your device into a 100% Ubuntu computer!
-
Linux for Windows XP Holdouts
After all this time it still amazes me when I see Windows XP used among the public. Some of the most recent examples I’ve seen in ‘the wild’ have been with home users and some small businesses.
In this article, I’ll look into what the attraction is to continue using Windows XP and which Linux distributions might make the best candidates for a switch.
-
Desktop
-
Dell’s new computing appliance brings Windows apps to Chromebooks
After debuting its own Chromebook for education last year, Dell is turning its Chrome OS attention to offices. The company announced on Tuesday a new computing appliance to deliver Windows applications on Chromebooks.
In tandem with virtualization software, one Dell Appliance for Wyse – vWorkspace can serve up Windows apps to up to 350 Chromebooks or Chromeboxes. Dell says the cost starts at $180 per user for the server hardware and licenses, hypervisor and vWorkspace broker. The Chrome OS devices can also be managed or deployed through the new appliance.
-
-
Server
-
Docker Gets Serious About Security
Two months after Docker brings in new faces to lead security efforts, a new benchmark for securing Docker container deployments debuts.
-
Varnish Goes Upstack with Varnish Modules and Varnish Configuration Language
Varnish Software has just released Varnish API Engine, a high performance HTTP API Gateway which handles authentication, authorization and throttling all built on top of Varnish Cache. The Varnish API Engine can easily extend your current set of APIs with a uniform access control layer that has built in caching abilities for high volume read operations, and it provides real-time metrics.
-
CoreOS Advances Application Container Specification Effort
Apcera, Google, Red Hat and VMware are supporting CoreOS’ application container specification effort, which extends the reach of containers beyond Docker.
-
Give the Linux quagga router a try for SDN
The open source quagga router is garnering attention as a flexible choice for SDN. It’s easy to set up with the right hardware.
-
-
Kernel Space
-
Linux Kernel 3.10.76 LTS Released with Dozens of Improvements
-
Linux Kernel 3.10.77 LTS Is a Small Update That Fixes Btrfs, EXT4, and ARM64 Bugs
-
Linux 3.10.77
I’m announcing the release of the 3.10.77 kernel.
-
Linux Kernel 3.2.69 LTS Is Out with Updated Drivers and Networking Improvements
Ben Hutchings, the maintainer of the Linux 3.2 kernel branch, announced today the immediate availability for download and upgrade of a new maintenance release for one of the oldest LTS (Long Term Support) kernels.
-
Linux 4.1-rc3
Here’s a Mother’s Day Sunday release for you all, whether you’re a mother or not. Because hey, it’s Sunday afternoon once again, and that’s just how my -rc releases roll.
-
Linux 4.1-rc3 Kernel Is Out: The “Mother’s Day Sunday Release”
-
Linus Torvalds Announces Linux Kernel 4.1 Release Candidate 3 for Mother’s Day
It’s Sunday, so Linus Torvalds has just announced the third Release Candidate (RC) version of the upcoming Linux 4.1 kernel, which should be released sometime in summer.
-
Linux Kernel 4.0.2 Released with ARM, ARM64, NFS, and PowerPC Improvements
Linux kernel 4.0.2 is now available for download on the kernel.org website, and it is the second maintenance release to the stable and most advanced branch of the Linux kernel, version 4.0. This release brings a number of improvements, updated drivers, code cleanup, and bugfixes in various areas.
-
Linux Kernel 3.12.42 LTS Released with ARM64 and PowerPC Improvements
After the announcement of the Linux 3.14.40 LTS kernel by Greg Kroah-Hartman, Jiri Slaby had the pleasure of informing us about the immediate availability of Linux kernel 3.12.42, an LTS (Long Term Support) release that brings important fixes and updated drivers.
-
Graphics Stack
-
GeForce GTX 750 Series: Nouveau vs. NVIDIA Linux Driver Performance
With the forthcoming Linux 4.1 kernel there is finally out-of-the-box acceleration for the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 series on the Nouveau driver. With the Nouveau DRM/KMS driver able to self-generate the needed firmware/microcode to enable acceleration, it’s quite easy to get running. However, the performance leaves a lot to be desired.
-
Many OpenGL ES 3.1 Commits Land In Mesa
While OpenGL 4.0+ support continues to be tackled for Mesa, finishing up OpenGL ES 3.1 support within Mesa seems to be a pressing priority for Intel.
-
Libinput 0.15 Adds New Debug Events Utility
While a few months back there was talk of libinput 1.0 coming after libinput 0.13~0.14, libinput 0.15 was released today as the latest major pre-1.0 update to this input handling library used by Wayland compositors, optionally as an X.Org input driver, and is starting to be integrated on Mir.
-
Nouveau Lands GL_AMD_Performance_Monitor Support
Thanks to work by Samuel Pitoiset, NVIDIA’s hardware performance counters of their recent GPU generations are now being exposed through the open-source Nouveau Linux graphics driver.
-
Vintage X.Org DDX Drivers Updated
Julien Cristau of Debian has released updated versions of some of the older X.Org DDX drivers.
-
OpenGL 4.1 Extension Implemented For Intel Mesa Sandy Bridge
-
-
Benchmarks
-
Linux 4.1 Power Consumption Appears To Improve For Intel Users
A Red Hat developer mentioned to us at Phoronix that they’re seeing “drastically improved battery life” in some cases with the Linux 4.1 kernel to the extent that it’s up to 2~4 hours of extra battery life with the kernel upgrade to Git. I’ve since started some fresh Linux laptop battery tests.
-
AMD Radeon R9 290: Linux 4.0 vs. Linux 4.1 Git
-
Fresh, 5-Way Linux Distribution Benchmarks On Amazon’s EC2 Cloud
It’s been a while since last running any extensive Amazon EC2 cloud benchmarks. However, in trying out the latest releases of a few distributions, I ran some quick cloud benchmarks yesterday.
-
-
-
Applications
-
Videos (Totem) 3.16.1 Arrives with Lots of Fixes
Video (formerly Totem) 3.16.1, the official movie player of the GNOME desktop environment based on Gstreamer that features a playlist, a full-screen mode, seek and volume controls, and many other features, has been released and is now available for download.
-
NetworkManager 1.0.2 Arrives As First Post-1.0 Release
NetworkManager 1.0 was released after more than one decade of development at the end of 2014. Nearly six months later, the first point release to NetworkManager 1.0 is now available.
-
Virt-Manager 1.2.0 Brings OVMF/AAVMF Support For UEFI In VMs
-
Excellent Console Log File Analyzers
Almost everything that happens on a Linux system is logged in some way. These log files are typically stored plain ASCII text in a standard log file format, although they can be in binary format. Most logs are stored in the traditional system log subdirectory /var/log. Logs keep track of events, such as system errors, user activities, and transaction histories. These log files are everywhere.
-
Enlightenment 0.19.5 Desktop Environment Now Available for Download
Today, May 4, we announce the immediate availability for download of the Enlightenment 0.19.5 desktop environment, a release that fixes a significant amount of issues discovered since Enlightenment 0.19.4, which is currently used by default in various GNU/Linux distributions.
-
procps using GitLab CI
The procps project for a few years has been hosted at Gitorious. With the announcement that Gitorious has been acquired by GitLab and that all repositories need to move there, procps moved along to GitLab. At first I thought it would just be a like for like thing, but then I noticed that GitLab has this GitLab CI feature and had to try it out.
-
The Raspberry Pi Finder Easily Locates Your Pi’s IP Address
Windows/Mac/Linux: If you’re running your Raspberry Pi in headless mode and you’re not using a static IP address, it’s a pain to locate the IP address. Adafruit made a simple little utility that makes the process as easy as a click of the mouse.
-
ownCloud 8.0.3 Out Now to Improve Microsoft SQL Server Compatibility
The ownCloud developers have released the third maintenance release for the open-source ownCloud 8.0 self-hosting cloud server software that lets anyone to build his/her own file hosting service without too much hassle.
-
ownCloud Desktop Client 1.8.1 Officially Announced as The Best Release Ever
The ownCloud development team, through Daniel Molkentin, has had the great pleasure of informing us about the immediate availability for download of the ownCloud Desktop Client 1.8.1, which has been declared by the project leader the best release ever.
-
VirtualBox 5.0 Beta 3 released
The third beta to VirtualBox 5.0 is now available. VirtualBox 5.0 is a big step forward to Oracle’s virtualization software and adds PV support to Windows/Linux guests, XHCI controller support for USB 3.0 devices, bi-directional drag-and-drop to guests, and more.
VirtualBox 5.0 Beta 3 brings more fixes over the earlier beta releases. There’s XSAVE/AVX/AVX2 extensions now exposed to the guest when available, GUI improvements for encryption handling, improved volume control, fixed SB16 playback, and a variety of other improvements went in.
Details on VirtualBox 5.0 Beta 3 can be found via the release announcement at VirtualBox.org.
-
VirtualBox 5.0 Beta 3 released
-
VirtualBox 5.0 Beta 3 Out Now with Support for Debian 8 Jessie
Oracle has announced today, May 7, the immediate availability for download and testing of the third Beta version of the forthcoming VirtualBox 5.0 cross-platform virtualization software for GNU/Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows operating systems.
-
Proprietary
-
CodeWeavers CrossOver 14.1.1 has been released
I am delighted to announce that CodeWeavers has just released CrossOver 14.1.0 for both Mac OS X and Linux. CrossOver 14.1.0 has important bug fixes for both Mac and Linux users.
-
CrossOver Linux 14.1.1 Improves Windows Desktop Interaction
CrossOver Linux, an application based on Wine that allows users to install popular Windows applications and PC games on a Linux computer, is now at version 14.1.1 and is ready for download.
-
Opera 30 Beta for Linux, Windows, and Mac Brings Sidebar and Tab Improvements
Opera Software, through Tomasz Procków, has announced the general availability for download and testing of the Opera 30 web browser, which has just been promoted to the Beta channel.
-
Opera 31 Web Browser for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows Is Now in Development
On May 7, Opera Software, through Mateusz Madej, announced the immediate availability for download and testing of the Opera 31 web browser in the Developer channel, available for GNU/Linux, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X operating systems.
-
-
Instructionals/Technical
-
How to monitor user login history on CentOS with utmpdump
-
A Shell Script to Monitor Network, Disk Usage, Uptime, Load Average and RAM Usage in Linux
-
How to convert MP3 ID3 tag encodings on Linux
-
Command Line Tool to Monitor Linux Containers Performance
-
Linux grep command with 14 different examples
-
Linux/Unix: OpenSSH Multiplexer To Speed Up OpenSSH Connections
-
Caddy – A Lightweight HTTP/2 Web Server to Deploy and Test Websites Easliy
-
How to install Shrew Soft IPsec VPN client on Linux
-
Three effective solutions for Google Analytics Referral spam
-
HowTo Block Internet Explorer Browser With Squid Proxy Server on a Linux/Unix Server
-
Pixiewps, Reaver & Aircrack-ng Wireless Penetration Testing Tool Updates
-
How to Install and Update Software on openSUSE Like a Pro
-
Install Magento on a CentOS 7 VPS with Nginx, PHP-FPM and MariaDB
-
How to view torrent file content on Linux
-
Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) Minimal Server Installation Tutorial
-
Shell Scripting Part 3: Decision Control Structures in Shell Scripts
-
Install Vtiger CRM on CentOS 7
-
Firejail Seccomp Guide
-
Install Question2Answer on an Ubuntu 14.04 VPS
-
RDO KIlo Set up for three VM Nodes (Controller+Network+Compute) ML2&OVS&VXLAN on CentOS 7.1
-
LEMP ( Linux, Nginx, MariaDB, PHP ) stack Docker image deployment
-
Pro tip: Take back control of resolv.conf
-
How to compile and install wxWidgets on Ubuntu/Debian/Linux Mint
-
Buy digiKam Recipes, Get Practical ExifTool
-
The GNU Make Book
Here’s a book that could teach you more than you ever thought possible about make.
-
-
Games
-
CryEngine Linux Support Coming Very Soon, Says Crytek
On May 8, the CryEngine team from Crytek published a brief announcement informing game developers about a small, yet very important modification to their EULA (End-User License Agreement).
-
Linux version of CRYENGINE becomes more mature
Crytek known from its very popular first-person shooter Far Cry promised better Linux support in the very near future, with its CRYENGINE game engine.
-
Project Ascension to Unify Steam, Origin, Uplay, and More Under Open Source Launcher
Project Ascension is the name of a new launcher that aims to provide a unified experience for gamers who have titles on multiple gaming clients, and to encourage said platforms to compete. Confused? We were too.
-
Unvanquished Alpha 39 FPS Game Officially Released to Fix Major Bugs
The Unvanquished development team, through Corentin Wallez, has had the pleasure of announcing today, May 10, the immediate availability for download of a new Alpha build of their first-person shooter game for GNU/Linux, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X operating systems.
-
GOG.com Launches Three Amazing Classic Star Trek Games with Linux Support
GOG.com is taking its job seriously, and they are working to promote Linux in any way they can. Now, the DRM-free digital platform has just released three classic Star Trek games, and they all come with Linux support.
-
How to Install and Play Diablo III and Reaper of Souls Expansion on Linux
Diablo III and its expansion, Reaper of Souls, are amongst the most played games from Blizzard, and they are now making a comeback after Blizzard made some serious changes to the gameplay by introducing adventure mode and rifts.
-
New SteamOS Stable Update Deprecates Support for Old Nvidia GPUs
Valve has announced today, May 6, the general availability of a new stable update for its popular SteamOS operating system based on Debian GNU/Linux and powered by the awesome Steam for Linux client.
-
Lethal League Fighting Game Now in Beta on Steam for Linux
Lethal League, a competitive projectile fighting game developed and published by Team Reptile on Steam, has just received a Linux version.
-
-
-
Desktop Environments/WMs
-
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
-
KDE Frameworks 5.10.0 Officially Released, Now Works Better with Ubuntu’s NotifyOSD
On May 8, KDE announced the general availability of KDE Frameworks 5.10.0, a maintenance release that fixes bugs and improves performance. All users of KDE Frameworks 5.9.0 and previous versions are urged to upgrade to KDE Frameworks 5.10.0 as soon as possible.
-
KDE Frameworks 5.10 Released
KDE Frameworks 5.10 was released on Friday as the latest add-on libraries complementing Qt within the KDE world.
-
KDE’s KWin Just Became A Proper Wayland Compositor
Martin Gräßlin just shared that with the forthcoming KDE Plasma 5.4 update, KWin will serve as a proper Wayland compositor!
For years now Martin and other KDE developers have been working toward Wayland support and separating out the X11 Linux support. A huge milestone was reached today with the latest KWin code now being able to function as a proper Wayland compositor.
-
Qt 5.5 Beta Is Coming Soon, Snapshot Released
The Qt 5.5 Beta was supposed to happen back on 12 March, but that goal failed to be realized. However, it looks like Qt 5.5 Beta is quite close now with The Qt Company putting out a beta snapshot.
-
Krita 2.9.4 Now Features Photoshop Layer Styles
Krita is an open-source digital painting software that is undergoing a big upgrade right now. Before the developers manage to get version 3.0 out the door, a new release was made available in the 2.9 branch.
-
-
GNOME Desktop/GTK
-
GNOME.Asia Summit 2015 (part 2).
Continuing with the first day: Shobha Tyagi elaborated on the acceptance problems when moving users from Microsoft Windows to Linux based systems at her university. That talk resulted in interesting follow-up discussions on regional differences.
-
GNOME.Asia Summit 2015 concludes
After three intensive days the GNOME.Asia Summit 2015 have concluded in Depok, Indonesia.
The 2015 Summit started off with a series of workshops with a focus on how to start contribute to GNOME.
-
-
-
Distributions
-
New Releases
-
Tiny Core Linux 6.2 Brings NFS4 Support and a Legacy-BIOS/UEFI Multi-boot Version
The Tiny Core development team had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download of the Tiny Core Linux 6.2 operating system, an independent distribution known for being one of the smallest Linux kernel-based OSes in the world distributed as Live CDs.
-
Meet Lakka, a Linux OS that Turns any PC Into a Retro Game Console
Today, we are happy to introduce you to the Lakka Linux kernel-based operating system that acts as a DIY (Do It Yourself) retro emulation console build around the RetroArch game emulator software.
-
How to Turn Your PC (or Other Device) Into a Retro Arcade with Lakka
-
Lakka is a DIY retro games console emulator
You don’t need a modern PC to run some 25-year-old game, of course, but that’s where Lakka comes in. It’s a lightweight OpenELEC/ RetroArch-based Linux distribution which transforms small computers into retro games consoles.
-
Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1 Released
Monday May 11, 2015 we are releasing Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1. Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1 is the first service release of the free release of our distribution. This included all security and bug fixes from our initial release until May 6, 2015 which includes several important bug fixes.
Along with security fixes Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1 completes our transition to one standard desktop, KDE. Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1 will not have separate ISO’s of the different desktops but you can download and install alternative desktop environments from the repositories.
-
Black Lab Linux 6.5 SR1 Officially Released, Based on Ubuntu 14.10
On May 11, the Black Lab Software developers announced the immediate availability for download of the first service release of the Black Lab Linux 6.5 computer operating system.
-
OpenELEC 6.0 Now In Beta, Powered By Kodi 15
With Kodi 15 coming along, the OpenELEC team has released their first beta of the next version of their multimedia focused Linux distribution.
-
OpenELEC 6.0 Enters Beta, Powered by Linux Kernel 4.0 and Kodi (XBMC) 15.0 Isengard
On May 7, the OpenELEC development team, through Stephan Raue, had the pleasure of announcing the general availability for download and testing of the first Beta version of OpenELEC 6.0, a Linux kernel-based operating system for embedded devices.
-
Final 4MLinux and 4MLinux Allinone Edition 12.0 Released with PAE Support
Zbigniew Konojacki has had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download of the final and stable 4MLinux 12.0 and 4MLinux Allinone Edition 12.0 distributions.
-
-
Screenshots/Screencasts
-
Arch Family
-
Manjaro Update 2015-05-08 (stable)
We are happy to announce our eight update for Manjaro 0.8.12.
-
New Manjaro Linux 0.8.12 Update Lets Users Install the OS from an SD Card
The Manjaro development team, through Philip Müller, announced this past weekend the immediate availability of a new update for the current stable branch of the Manjaro Linux operating system.
-
-
Red Hat Family
-
Red Hat: Meet Chacha20 and Poly1305
Meet ChaCha20 stream cipher and Poly1305 authenticator, together forming the ChaCha20-Poly1305 Authenticated Encryption with an AEAD construction. Currently, ChaCha20 is the preferred cipher for Google Chrome and Android 5.0+ OS. It is interesting to note that ChaCha20 was initially created as a variant of Salsa20 in 2008, by Daniel Bernstein (Google).
-
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Beta Released
Red Hat has announced today the immediate availability of the first public beta of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7.
-
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Beta Offers Better Active Directory Interoperability
On May 5, Red Hat had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download and testing of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Beta operating system, a pre-release version that brings a number of new features and fixes in order to keep the 6.x branch stable and reliable.
-
Fedora
-
F22 Cloud/Atomic Test Day May 7th!
Hey everyone! Fedora 22 is on the cusp of being released and the Fedora Cloud Working Group has elected to organize a test day for May 7th in order to work out some bugs before shipping it off to the rest of the world.
-
The Issues People Face With Fedora Workstation
Red Hat’s Christian Schaller had recently been collecting Fedora Workstation feedback on his personal blog in order to continue to improve Fedora moving forward. This week he’s summarized the feedback provided by the community to see what they dislike the most about Fedora and where improvements can be made in the future.
-
-
-
Debian Family
-
Run Debian 8 Jessie on Raspberry Pi 2 with RaspEX
From the creator of numerous GNU/Linux distributions, we are happy to introduce you today to RaspEX, a distro based on the Debian GNU/Linux 8.0 (Jessie) and designed to run on the Raspberry Pi 2 computer board.
-
New Debian Project Leader Talks Open Source Careers, PPAs, and More
Neil McGovern was elected as Debian Project Leader in April. The project is going through some major changes such as a switch to systemd. We reached out to McGovern to understand his roles and plans for one of the most revered open source projects.
-
Get All Debian 8.0 Jessie Live CD Editions into a Single ISO Image
Željko Popivoda, the lead developer of the Linux AIO (All-In-One) project, had the pleasure of informing Softpedia today about the immediate availability for download of Linux AIO Debian Live 8.0.0.
-
Derivatives
-
Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf) Is Open for Development, Derived from Debian 9 Stretch
The news comes after yesterday’s keynote of Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical and Ubuntu, where we learned about the goals of the next major version of the world’s most popular free operating system, Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf).
-
Canonical/Ubuntu
-
Ubuntu jumps into Internet of Things with Acer, GE, and Microsoft
-
Meet ChillHub, World first Linux powered ‘smart’ Refrigerator
Forget drones and warships, Ubuntu now powers the world’s first ‘smart’ refrigerator called ChillHub
-
Snappy Ubuntu Core makes the Chillhub internet fridge a cool idea
CANONICAL HAS BEEN chilling after announcing the first fridge powered by Snappy Ubuntu Core, the firm’s lightweight platform for the Internet of Things (IoT).
-
The ‘OS everywhere’ battle: Canonical has the pieces in place
-
IoT World: Canonical Collaborates with Industry Leaders to Drive the Next Phase in IoT Commercialization
-
Windows 10 for Phones May Lose Smartphone-PC Convergence Race To Ubuntu
Canonical has already come up with such feature with the Ubuntu Edge phone. The device reportedly has the feature to boot either to Ubuntu OS or Android and gives users the same experience PC experience when connected to a larger display.
-
Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf) to Come with GCC 5, Ubuntu 16.04 LTS with Python 3
During the Ubuntu Online Summit (UOS) event for Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf) that took place early this week, between May 5-7 on the UbuntuOnAir channel, the Ubuntu developers discussed the possibility of switching to the GCC 5 compiler by default.
-
New Unity 8 Application Switcher Shows Design Direction – Video
The new application switcher for Unity 8 has been demoed at the latest Ubuntu Online Summit and it shows the rapid progress that the Ubuntu developers are making with the latest version of the famous desktop environment.
-
New Ubuntu smartphone with desktop functionality
This Ubuntu smartphone should have “Converged Unity Experience”. This means it will be some kind kind of Smartphone with desktop computer functionality; it could hook up to a monitor, mouse and keyboard.
-
Unity 8 Won’t Be Customizable with Themes at First
The new application switcher for Unity 8 has been demoed at the latest Ubuntu Online Summit and it shows the rapid progress that the Ubuntu developers are making with the latest version of the famous desktop environment.
-
Ubuntu Devs Propose Stateless Persistent Network Interface Names for Ubuntu and Debian
Martin Pitt, a renowned Ubuntu and Debian developer, came with the proposal to enable stateless persistent network interface names in the upcoming versions of the Ubuntu Linux and Debian GNU/Linux operating systems.
-
Watch How a Linux Kernel Panic Is Solved with an Ubuntu Snappy Rollback – Video
The Snappy packages that are being worked on by Canonical are taking all the headlines and with good reason. They provide many advantages, and one of them is the ability to rollback an update, even for critical components, such as the Linux kernel.
-
IoT: Canonical and GE’s FirstBuild Collaborate on Smart Refrigerator
ChillHub is a refrigerator with two USB ports and built-in Wi-Fi connectivity. In addition, ChillHub has an open-source iOS-compatible app that provides seamless integration with the refrigerator by giving a user access to sensor data and control of the refrigerator’s components allowing for new interior accessories to be easily developed. This is a first-of-its-kind platform that enables the development of new hardware products that can operate inside a cooled space.
-
ChillHub Is a Smart Fridge Powered by Ubuntu
IoT is a new concept that stands for Internet of Things, and it basically describes the ecosystem that gathers all the devices capable of connecting to the Internet at the second annual Internet of Things World conference. People tend to think of phones, smart TVs, tablets, and computers when you say devices that can go online, but there are so many more out there that have online capabilities, and yet we don’t think of them very often.
-
Ubuntu Core Drone Is the First Drone That Has Apps
The world is changing, and it looks like everything will soon be powered by operating systems and apps, and that includes drones, as unlikely as it might sound.
-
Ubuntu 15.10 Is Codenamed The Wily Werewolf
-
An Ubuntu Phone Will Ship This Year With The Converged Unity Experience
-
It’s A Long Road Ahead To Get Ubuntu Snappy On The Desktop
-
Deb-Based Ubuntu Will Continue To Be Offered For The Foreseeable Future
-
Many Ubuntu Phone Updates Are Coming Up Soon
-
The Unity 8 Items Being Worked On For The Ubuntu Desktop
-
A Demo Of Ubuntu’s Unity 8 On The Desktop
-
Ubuntu Touch Is Making Progress On Porting To Systemd
-
Ubuntu Benchmarking Workloads + Clouds
-
Lubuntu Makes Progress On Switching Over To LXQt
-
Select Ubuntu Versions Are Working To Switch To Systemd’s Networkd
-
Ubuntu Plans For Python 3 By Default For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
-
Ubuntu Snappy To Work On Deduplication Support
-
The Exciting Ubuntu 15.10 Linux News Of The Past Week
-
Ubuntu 15.10 Wily Werewolf Daily ISOs Begin
-
Ubuntu MATE Is Becoming A Thriving Member Of The Ubuntu Family
Back when the GNOME 2 desktop was forked in 2011 as the MATE Desktop Environment, there were polarized views from the Linux community how this fork of GNOME2 could survive and what sort of future it would have. Four years later, MATE is still being maintained, there’s distributions shipping with MATE as the default desktop, and the project is managing to stay relevant.
-
Meizu MX5 Shows Its Bezeless Display in a Couple of Officially-Looking Renders
One of the most interesting smartphone makers to come out of China as of late is Meizu. The company has already introduced a few handset models on the market, and they have been getting pretty good reviews so far.
-
Ubuntu 15.10 Will Use The GCC 5 Compiler By Default
Given that GCC 5 (technically GCC 5.1) was released in late April, it was too late for Ubuntu 15.04, but now it will have six months of maturing for Ubuntu 15.10. This upgrade doesn’t come as a surprise given that it’s been that way for GCC’s major annual releases going back years. There’s been no discussions at all about making LLVM/Clang the default compiler in Ubuntu Linux, though this alternative compiler continues to be offered in the Debian and Ubuntu archives.
-
First Ubuntu Touch Update Based on Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) Coming by the End of May
The roadmap for the next major update of the Ubuntu Touch mobile operating system used in various Ubuntu Phone devices, including BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition and Nexus 4, was revealed on May 5 during a “Phone roadmap” session as part of the Ubuntu Online Summit event that takes place these days between May 5 and 7.
-
ClamAV Vulnerability Closed in Ubuntu 15.04
Canonical revealed details about a ClamAV vulnerability that has been found and fixed in Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and Ubuntu 12.04.
-
Flavours and Variants
-
Linux Mint KDE to Switch to Plasma 5 with the 18.x Version in 2016
Linux Mint is one of the most used open source operating systems, especially with the Cinnamon and MATE flavors, but the developers also have a few other distros in the works, including a KDE one. It looks like the latest KDE version won’t arrive by default too soon..
-
Xubuntu Team Announces “Xubuntu Core”
Xubuntu Core though isn’t to be confused with Ubuntu Core or Snappy package management as is the case with upstream Ubuntu. Xubuntu Core is simply a slimmed down version of the Xfce version of Ubuntu.
-
Ubuntu GNOME 15.04 Shipped with GNOME 3.14
Ubuntu GNOME 15.04 is an official ubuntu flavors based on ubuntu 15.04, released and announced by Ubuntu Gnome Team with the latest version of GNOME 3.14. This release is supported with security patches and software updates for only 9 months, until February 2016.
-
Here’s Ubuntu MATE 15.04 Running on a Handmade Raspberry Pi Lego Computer
We announced last week that the Ubuntu MATE operating system based on Ubuntu and built around the traditional MATE desktop environment was available for the Raspberry Pi 2 computer board.
-
Linux Mint Will Continue to Provide Both Systemd and Upstart, Users Will Choose
After Debian had adopted systemd, many of the distros based on this operating system made the switch as well. Ubuntu has already implemented systemd, but Linux Mint is still providing dual options for users.
-
Linux Mint 17.2 “Rafaela” Planned for End of June, Linux Mint 18 Arrives in 2016
The Linux Mint developers have announced today, May 7, in what appears to be the shortest monthly newsletter ever released, that the team works hard these days to bring you the second installment of the Linux Mint 17 operating system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Devices/Embedded
-
Arduino IDE now boarding for all
The Arduino IDE is heading into a rather neat consolidation of the numerous Arduino inspired boards out there. The introduction of a mechanism, in version 1.6.2, to allow people to plug their boards into the IDE easily is starting to snowball. To understand why this is important, before 1.6.2’s release if you had a custom board and the tools to make it work with the IDE, then to install them involved copying files into directories, editing files and crossing fingers (and being disappointed often). Anyone who used a lot of boards would find themselves with multiple copies of various versions of the IDE just to keep life simple.
-
Powerful $9 Mini PC Is Making a Killing on Kickstarter
A new Kickstarter campaign was launched for a small CHIP mini PC, and the response from the community was over the top. It’s the first device of its kind that arrives at this price, and its makers are surely surprised at the sheer amount of support that they have received. They initially asked for just $50,000 (€45,000), but in just a few days they managed to raise more than $550,000 (€445,000), and they still have 25 days left in their campaign.
-
SolidRun CuBox-i is a 2-inch Cube with Quad-Core ARM SoC, 4GB of RAM
Around two years back, Israeli company SolidRun launched CuBox-i, a line of ARM-powered 2-inch cube PCs with a starting price of $45. It’s now upping the ante on that front with a device it says is the “smallest ARM quad core 4GB mini computer” out there.
-
C.H.I.P. is the Raspberry Pi rival that’s only nine dollars
The Raspberry Pi is a heck of a deal at just $35 but now there’s a new option that significantly undercuts the foundation’s popular PCB. Meet C.H.I.P., a tiny barebones system billed as the world’s first nine dollar computer.
-
CHIP: $9 Linux ‘micro-computer’ takes aim at Raspberry Pi and Arduino
-
Compute Stick’s Linux offering not quite up to speed
The Compute Stick does come with a USB port, to which you could attach a 500 gigabyte USB disk drive, but unfortunately Microsoft won’t let you install Windows to a USB drive, either. If you buy the Linux version of the Compute Stick, you’re probably stuck with Linux.
-
Phones
-
Android
-
Android 5.1 Lollipop Release Date Update for Sony Xperia Z3, Z2 and HTC One M8, M7
While Android Lollipop OTA updates are already available for the Sony Xperia and HTC One series devices, users are now anticipating the inevitable Android 5.1 roll out. In the sections below, we will look at the Android situation for the following devices – Sony Xperia Z3, Z2 and HTC One M7, M8.
-
Android 5.0.2 Lollipop update for Nexus 9, Sony Xperia, Galaxy Note Edge release date
A new Android OTA update has been released recently for some select devices, bumping up their Android versions to Android 5.0.2 Lollipop.
-
Best alternatives to FaceTime on Android
FaceTime is Apple’s video calling system, and when it was introduced Apple promised to make it open source. We’re still waiting. One day, we hope, we’ll be able to tell you how to get Apple FaceTime on Android. But until that day comes, we’ll keep you posted with all the alternatives on offer.
-
Moto X 2013, 2014 to get Android 5.1 Lollipop update
The release notes proving that Motorola is ready to roll out the Android 5.1 Lollipop update for the Moto X 2013 and Moto X 2014 versions were finally unveiled, which means that the first two versions of the brand’s flagship smartphone will finally get the highly anticipated mobile operating system.
-
Android Users Can Now Pre-Register For Upcoming Apps On Google Play
Google has introduced an interesting new feature to the Google Play Store after it began allowing users to pre-register for upcoming Android apps.
-
Android M will offer more privacy controls to users, to launch at Google I/O 2015
Android M, the next version of the mobile OS from Google which will be unveiled at the upcoming Google I/O conference, will give users more control over their privacy, reports Bloomberg.
-
Samsung Galaxy Note Android 5.0 Lollipop Update Release Roundup: Note 4, Note 3, Note 2 and Note Edge
-
Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge Android 5.1.1 Lollipop OS Update to Improve Camera Features
Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge is reportedly bound to receive the latest Androids 5.1.1 Lollipop OS update and it will bring dramatic improvements in the camera features of both devices.
SamMobile cited sources who were close to Samsung saying that the South Korean tech company is working on a big software update that will be pushed to Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge. The camera update is similar to what HTC One M9 received that greatly improved the quality of the photos.
-
Google May Give Users Granular Control Over Android App Permissions
A report citing people familiar with the matter suggest that Google has plans to give Android users more control over what information the apps they install can access. The app permissions on Android are expected to receive more detailed choices, according to the report.
-
Android Overtakes iOS in Mobile Ad Revenues for the First Time: Opera
While traditionally iOS has seen higher mobile ad revenues than Android, this trend saw a reversal in the last quarter as per the new State of Mobile Advertising report by Opera Mediaworks.
-
Best new icon packs for Android (May 2015)
What’s one of the easiest ways to breathe in new life in your phone’s interface is by giving it an icon overhaul. There are already a great lot of totally awesome and beautiful icon packs for Android.
-
This clever hack turns an Android Wear device into an Apple Watch
Corbin Davenport already has some impressive smartwatch hacks to his name, but his latest coding effort may well be his best yet: The teenager has managed to get the original Macintosh II software running on Android Wear (specifically the Samsung Gear Live watch).
-
Android 5.0.2 release date on Sony Xperia Z news: Leaked photo give strong hints
A screenshot instigated all the frenzy but even before that, Sony had already made preliminary hints that Sony Xperia Z handsets are on the verge of getting an Android 5.0.2 bump.
-
Nintendo might release games for Android in 2017
In today’s open source roundup: Nintendo prepares games for smart devices. Plus: A $9 computer that runs Debian. And a Linux rootkit users graphics cards to hide itself
-
Nexus Player review: A first step in Android TV
The Nexus Player is Google’s set-top box. Built by Asus and announced alongside the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9, the Nexus Player brings Android Lollipop to your TV.
It acts as a bridge, giving Google an avenue to providing content for your TV and leverages a number of familiar technologies and services to do so. For those in the Google ecosystem, it seems like an easy option.
-
Kore Official Open Source Android Kodi Remote App Launches
This week the makers of open source home media centre application Kodi formerly known as XBMC have announced the release a new official Kodi Remote App designed specifically for Android devices.
-
Introducing the First Android-x86 4.4.4 KitKat OS with Linux Kernel 4.0 and GAPPS
Arne Exton, the creator of numerous Linux distros, had the pleasure of informing Softpedia about the immediate availability of a new build of his custom Android-x86 project, based on Android KitKat 4.4.4 and designed to allow users to run Android on their computers.
-
LG G4 Review – The hero Android needs
Life’s not so good when you’re stuck in the shadow of a big rival with deep pockets, but if anything can drag LG into the sunlight, it’s the new G4. LG’s flagship Android smartphone for 2015, the G4 takes what we loved about the G3 before it – and made it into the Android-to-have among those in the know – and hits the boost button. Screen, camera, performance, all have been in line for an upgrade. Nonetheless, the rest of the mobile world hasn’t stood still either, so does the G4 have what it takes to push back against Samsung’s excellent Galaxy S6?
-
-
-
Free Software/Open Source
-
Intel, Qualcomm, Broadcom firms join MIPS open-source push
Qualcomm Atheros, Lantiq (part of Intel) and Broadcom have appointed representatives to the board of the Prpl (‘purple’) Foundation, organisation set-up by Imagination Technologies to support open-source software on the MIPS architecture.
-
Events
-
OSCAL Open Source Conference Albania – DAY 1
Held in Tirana and with attention on gathering free libre open source technology users, developers, academics, governmental agencies and people who share the same idea. Oscal aimed to inform and promote that software should be free and open for the local community and governments to develop and customize to its needs; that knowledge is a communal property and free and open to everyone. The conference is supported and organized by Open Labs, the community that promotes free libre open source culture in Albania since 2012.
-
User stories at Summit and more OpenStack news
-
-
Web Browsers
-
Mozilla
-
Please welcome Jascha Kaykas-Wolff, Chief Marketing Officer and Nick Nguyen, Vice President of Product Strategy
Today we’re excited to announce two new additions to the leadership team at Mozilla, one joining us for the first time today, and the other returning.
-
-
-
SaaS/Big Data
-
Big data challenges? Look at your people, not your technology
As anyone pursuing a big data initiative knows, every big data strategy really has two components: the technology and the people. The technology part is actually very simple to solve, relative to the people. As long as you’re not trying to crack big data problems with relational database technology from 2004, this piece of the equation shouldn’t be a big scary beast.
-
Pivotal rolls out Hadoop distro update, new query optimizer
Just a few months ago, Pivotal announced that it would open source its entire big data stack: the Pivotal HD distribution, Pivotal Greenplum Database, Pivotal GemFire real-time distributed data store, Pivotal SQLFire (a SQL layer for the real-time distributed data store), Pivotal GemFire XD (in-memory SQL over HDFS) and the Pivotal HAWQ parallel query engine over HDFS. These updates, says Michael Cucchi, senior director of Outbound Product at Pivotal, underscore Pivotal’s continued commitment to supporting that open source strategy.
-
-
CMS
-
Education
-
ByWater Solutions empowers use of open source in libraries
Koha is a concept from Maori culture that can be translated as gift, present, offering, donation, or contribution. And, isn’t that concept the ethos of open source culture?
-
-
Funding
-
Interesting GSoC 2015 Projects: Wine D3DRM, GameStream, NaCL Fun
Besides the six new X.Org projects this summer, there’s also a lot of other interesting projects being pursued over the next few months via Google’s annual Summer of Code initiative.
-
-
BSD
-
Experimental DragonFlyBSD Code Adds Broadwell Graphics
DragonFlyBSD developers continue porting over code from the Linux kernel’s i915 DRM driver for supporting newer Intel graphics features on BSD. The latest work is for matching the DragonFlyBSD’s ported Intel driver up through the code found in the Linux 3.14 kernel.
-
GhostBSD 10.1 Beta Adds Vim To The Default Software Collection
The first beta of GhostBSD 10.1, the desktop-focused distribution using the FreeBSD kernel with MATE Desktop Environment, is now available.
-
-
Openness/Sharing
-
Open source, beyond technology
Here at Opensource.com, the staff, community moderators, and contributors strive to show how the ideas underpinning open source go beyond technology and apply to all aspects of life and society. Imagine organizing a conference around that idea.
-
Open Hardware
-
What if a robot can sense what you think
Surrounded by small yet sturdy pieces of 3D-printed plastic, a Macintosh and a couple of 3D-printers, sits 22-year-old Diwakar Vaish at New Delhi-based A-SET Training & Research Institute’s robotics lab watching a robot move its mechanical joints to groovy songs from old Bollywood movies. Vaish, who has a faint smile playing along his lips while watching the show, has jolted the robotics sector with his new first ever 3D-printed humanoid robot.
-
Hackaday Prize Entry: Open Source Diesel
But what about the motors themselves? For his entry to The Hackaday Prize, [Shane] is designing an open source engine. It’s small, it’s a two-stroke, and it’s diesel, but it’s completely open hardware; a great enabling project for all the open source dirt bikes and microcombines.
-
-
-
Standards/Consortia
-
Khronos Group Releases Final SYCL 1.2 Specification
The Khronos Group today announced the official release of the SYCL 1.2 specification. SYCL is the Khronos Group’s single-source heterogeneous programming language that serves as an abstraction layer for utilizing OpenCL while writing standard C++ code.
-
Leftovers
-
Google killing PageSpeed website service
-
Hardware
-
Security
-
Top OpenStack Security Dev from Nebula Didn’t go to Oracle, He Went to Netflix
Lots of chatter in my news feeds the last few days about Oracle allegedly hiring most of Nebula’s OpenStack devs. Trouble is it’s not entirely accurate.
[...]
I can’t speak to the rest of Nebula staff, and no doubt some of them have landed at Oracle – but not all.
-
The Internet of Things to take a beating in DefCon hacking contest
Hackers will put Internet-connected embedded devices to the test at the DefCon 23 security conference in August. Judging by the results of previous Internet-of-Things security reviews, prepare for flaws galore.
-
The Increasing Problem Of FOSS Mailing List Flooding Attacks
Recently, I have received a large amount of subscription confirmation emails. These mails are from public mailing lists, especially lists of Free and Open Source Projects, included but not limited to OpenBSD, FreeBSD, GNU Project, Ubuntu, CentOS, and Qt. The “subscribers” are from multiple IP addresses. After I shared my experience to social networks, I have found more than 10 victims of the same attack, included a famous Chinese tech-blog writer. One of us received more than 10k email for 24 hours. Some of our emails have already stopped operating and refusing all new incoming emails.
-
-
Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
-
The Killing of Osama bin Laden
A worrying factor at this early point, according to the retired official, was Saudi Arabia, which had been financing bin Laden’s upkeep since his seizure by the Pakistanis. ‘The Saudis didn’t want bin Laden’s presence revealed to us because he was a Saudi, and so they told the Pakistanis to keep him out of the picture. The Saudis feared if we knew we would pressure the Pakistanis to let bin Laden start talking to us about what the Saudis had been doing with al-Qaida. And they were dropping money – lots of it. The Pakistanis, in turn, were concerned that the Saudis might spill the beans about their control of bin Laden. The fear was that if the US found out about bin Laden from Riyadh, all hell would break out. The Americans learning about bin Laden’s imprisonment from a walk-in was not the worst thing.’
-
-
Censorship
-
The left has Islam all wrong: Bill Maher, Pamela Geller and the reality progressives must face
Whatever her views on other matters are, Pamela Geller is right about one thing: last week’s Islamist assault on the “Draw Muhammad” cartoon contest she hosted in Texas proves the jihad against freedom of expression has opened a front in the United States. “There is,” she said, “a war on free speech and this violent attack is a harbinger of things to come.” Apparently undaunted, Geller promises to continue with such “freedom of speech” events. ISIS is now threatening to assassinate her. She and her cohorts came close to becoming victims, yet some in the media on the right and the center-right have essentially blamed her for the gunmen’s attack, just as far too many, last January, surreptitiously pardoned the Kouachi brothers and, with consummate perfidy to human decency, inculpated the satirical cartoonists they slaughtered, saying “Charlie Hebdo asked for it.”
-
-
Privacy
-
Snoopers’ charter set to return to law as Theresa May suggests Conservative majority could lead to huge increase in surveillance powers
The Conservatives are already planning to introduce the huge surveillance powers known as the Snoopers’ Charter, hoping that the removal from government of the Liberal Democrats that previously blocked the controversial law will allow it to go through.
The law, officially known as the Draft Communications Data Bill, is already back on the agenda according to Theresa May. It is expected to force British internet service providers to keep huge amounts of data on their customers, and to make that information available to the government and security services.
-
US reviews use of cellphone spying technology
Faced with criticism from lawmakers and civil rights groups, the U.S. Department of Justice has begun a review of the secretive use of cellphone surveillance technology that mimics cellphone towers, and will get more open on its use, according to a newspaper report.
-
7 reasons why the feds shouldn’t mess with encryption
Information security professionals were overwhelmingly opposed to a plea to rethink encryption by the Department of Homeland Security at last week’s RSA conference.
-
-
Civil Rights
-
DEA to traveler: Thanks, I’ll take that cash
But it’s too late for that now. All the money – $16,000 in cash – that Joseph Rivers said he had saved and relatives had given him to launch his dream in Hollywood is gone, seized during his trip out West not by thieves but by Drug Enforcement Administration agents during a stop at the Amtrak train station in Albuquerque.
-
Citizens Looking To Safely Record Interactions With Law Enforcement Have A Couple Of New Options To Consider
The ACLU has a “new” app available that allows users to record interactions with the police and automatically upload them to the ACLU’s servers to preserve the footage in case the phone is seized… or smashed on the ground.
-
-
Intellectual Monopolies
-
Copyrights
-
You Can’t Defend Public Libraries and Oppose File-Sharing
Public libraries started appearing in the mid-1800s. At the time, publishers went absolutely berserk: they had been lobbying for the lending of books to become illegal, as reading a book without paying anything first was “stealing”, they argued. As a consequence, they considered private libraries at the time to be hotbeds of crime and robbery. (Those libraries were so-called “subscription libraries”, so they were argued to be for-profit, too.)
-
-