Showing headlines posted by bob
« Previous ( 1 ... 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 ... 1159 ) Next »An IRC quickstart guide
With the basic concepts of IRC under your belt, you're ready to dive in and get started with IRC. This guide will help minimize the learning curve and get you into the conversations as easily as possible. Once you get started you'll find that IRC can be a great place for learning, fun, and friendships.
General
Types of input
IRC accepts two basic types of input:
read more
Firefox 48 beta brings 'largest change ever' thanks to 'Electrolysis'
Browser to split into a UI process and a content process, with secure sandboxes to come
Firefox 48 entered beta this week, complete with a feature called “Electrolysis” that Mozilla bills as “the largest change we’ve ever made to Firefox.”…
RIP ROP: Intel's cunning trick to kill stack-hoping exploits at CPU level
How Chipzilla and Microsoft hope to get one step ahead of hackers
Intel is pushing a neat technique that could block malware infections on computers at the processor level.…
Getting started with IRC
Recent years have shown a resurgence in online chat technology.
read more
How Bitcoin’s Blockchain tech could aid IoT interoperability
Blockchain technology’s qualities of universality and security could be applied to the IoT messaging protocol problem, said Benedikt Herudek at OpenIoT Summit. One of the main themes of this year’s Embedded Linux Conference and OpenIoT Summit was the challenge of bridging the growing number of Internet of Things (IoT) standards. Many speakers were hopeful about […]
Securing the server programs hiding in your Docker containers
People worry about how secure containers are to outside attackers. That's a legitimate fear. I think what's even more of a concern is whether the application within your container is secure, or if it's really what you think it is.
Preventing break-ins on your Linux system
All too often we hear about breaches in security where usernames and passwords were obtained and published online. Most of the time, what's revealed is that most passwords are very simple or iterative of a previous version (e.g., 12345 followed by 123456 on the next change). Implementing password requirements can help keep weak passwords out of your environment. These forced changes have their pros and cons, but when it comes down to it there are still flaws in authentication.
read more
KDE neon User Edition 5.6 Available now
KDE neon User Edition 5.6 is based on the latest version of Plasma 5.6 and intends to showcase the latest KDE technology on a stable foundation. It is a continuously updated installable image that can be used not just for exploration and testing but as the main operating system for people enthusiastic about the latest desktop software.
Help Make Open Source Secure
Major security bugs in core pieces of open source software – such as Heartbleed and Shellshock – have elevated highly technical security vulnerabilities into national news headlines.
How to Automate Web Application Testing With Docker and Travis
This tutorial is part of a series on how to create CI/CD pipelines for your web applications using Docker containers. It is following up the first part focused on how to use Docker Hub to automatically build your application images.
Apricorn's Aegis Secure Key 3.0 USB Drives
Packing a mighty punch in a tiny package is the Apricorn's Aegis Secure Key 3.0 line of software-free, hardware-encrypted USB drives, which recently added a 480GB version.
Why Microsoft is turning into an open-source company
Microsoft now has its own BSD Unix operating system, supports Ubuntu as a subsystem on Windows 10, and recently open-sourced the Xamarin software development kit. This is not Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer's Microsoft.
Carrier board aims DragonBoard 410c SBC at UAV apps
Gumstix and Arrow launched a customizable DragonBoard 410C expansion board for UAV and MAV applications, that adds NimbeLink LTE and camera support. Gumstix and Arrow Electronics announced the availability of a $149 variant of its AeroCore 2 board called the “AeroCore 2 Expansion Board for DragonBoard 410C.”
How to record your terminal session on Linux
Recording a terminal session may be important in helping someone learn a process, sharing information in an understandable way, and also presenting a series of commands in a proper manner. Whatever the purpose, there are many times when copy-pasting text from the terminal won't be very helpful while capturing a video of the process is quite far-fetched and may not be always possible. In this quick guide, we will take a look at the easiest way to record and share a terminal session in .gif format.
Open source data logger board is Arduino compatible
The $60 Arduino-compatible “Mayfly Data Logger” board has 128KB flash, offers Grove module and Xbee wireless expansion, and targets environmental apps. EnviroDIY.org, an open source spinoff of the Stroud Water Research Center in Pennsylvania, announced the EnviroDIY Mayfly Logger in December, and began selling it on Amazon in mid-May, as reported in this Adafruit blog […]
How to get started with LightZone
In the previous two months, we've looked at Darktable and digiKam as open source photo management and editing suites. A third open source photographer's suite, called LightZone, has been around since 2005 as a closed source application, but got open sourced when its parent company dissolved in 2011.
read more
Microsoft has created its own FreeBSD. Repeat. Microsoft has created its own FreeBSD
Redmond will support it inside Azure and send code back to the FreeBSD Foundation
Microsoft has published its own distribution of FreeBSD 10.3 in order to make the OS available and supported in Azure.…
3 open source alternatives to MATLAB
For many students in mathematics, physical sciences, engineering, economics, and other fields with a heavy numeric component, MATLAB is their first introduction to programming or scientific computing in general.
read more
Dynamsoft's Barcode Reader SDK
What's slick about Dynamsoft's Barcode Reader SDK is that just a few
lines of code from scratch are required instead of potentially hundreds of
them, which could save months o
Open source tools enable professional photography
"Having an expensive camera and Photoshop doesn't make you a professional photographer—not needing them does."
I'm not sure who the original source of that quote is, but I heard it from one of my professors in college. While most focused on the "expensive camera" part of that quote, I prefer to focus on the "Photoshop" part. Historically, the topic of photography workflow on a computer always brought thoughts of older Macintosh or Apple systems. Over time, however, Windows became just as capable in most people's minds.
read more
« Previous ( 1 ... 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 ... 1159 ) Next »