Showing headlines posted by bob
« Previous ( 1 ... 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 ... 1158 ) Next »Google creates cloud code cache
Chocolate Factory wants to be your GitHub, eventually
With an uncharacteristic lack of fanfare, Google has decided to hang around the kitchen at the code repository party.…
Red Hat moves deeper into cloud analytics
Red Hat has made it clear that its wants to be a major cloud company. Now, it's making sure you know that it also wants to be your cloud analytic partner.
News: Linux 4.1 Goes Long Term for Support
EXT4 gets new encryption options.
Open source: from side to center stage
It was 1997 when I received an email from my brother asking me if I had heard of Linux. At the time, I had not, but soon after I was browsing through a computer store when I happened upon a box that contained "Red Hat Linux 5.0." I brought it home and tried to install it, but I couldn't get a graphical interface going and gave up.
Get the ultimate Python resource guide with the Python Book, out now!
Full of tips, tricks, tutorials and videos, the Python Book is your one stop guide to beginning and continuing with Python coding.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server for ARM goes beta
Linux-powered ARM servers are getting closer to reality.
Secure Server Deployments in Hostile Territory
Would you change what you said on the phone, if you knew someone malicious was listening?
Whether or not you view the NSA as malicious, I imagine that after reading the NSA coverage on
Linux Journal, some of you found yourselves modifying your behavior. The same thing
happened to me when I started deploying servers into a public cloud (EC2 in my case).
Take it from a former leader, the open organization is hard work
I'm probably one of the last people you want to comment on how to effectively lead and develop an organization. During my career, I twice held team lead positions. Both times I... well, I wasn't a disaster, but I do feel I could have been more effective.
read more
Content strategy: the new philosophy of technical documentation
Can we start by agreeing that documentation is important, and that we would like better documentation? Good. That saves me from writing a three-paragraph rant about why you should care, and you get to keep the extra time reading it would have taken you.
read more
If we've won, why are we still explaining open source?
At the most recent Apple World Wide Developers Conference, Apple announced they would "open source the next version of its programming language Swift." This minimally means they will publish the source code to Swift using an Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved open source license. That's all really.
read more
Take Control of Growing Redis NoSQL Server Clusters
You no longer have to convince developers that they should use a database. However, now the question isn’t whether you should use a database, but rather what database technology you should use. The debate between SQL and what has become known as NoSQL continues to go on.
Tiny SBC runs Linux or Android on dime-sized i.MX6 module
InHand’s tiny “Fury-M6? COM/SBC hybrid adds wireless, eMMC, battery support, and more to Freescale’s new, dime-sized, i.MX6 Dual based SCM-i.MX6D module.
Django Templates
In my last article (February 2015), I explained how to create a simple
Django project ("atfproject") and
inside that, create a simple application (atfapp). The
application worked in that if you went to the URL
http://localhost:8000/hello/Reuven,
you got the text "hello, Reuven".
How to benchmark your GPU on Linux
Linux is not famous for its gaming abilities and possibilities, and it is only natural that there aren't many GPU benchmarking tools available with which users can test their graphics hardware. There are however some benchmarking suites that can help you determine the various aspects of your GPU performance with precision. In this tutorial I will show you GLX-Gears, GL Mark 2 and the benchmarks from "Unigine Benchmark Products".
The Open Container Project and what it means
Yesterday saw the announcement of the Open Container Project in San Francisco. It is a Linux Foundation project that will hold the specification and basic run-time software for using software containers. This is all "A Good Thing™."
The list of folks signing up to support the effort contains the usual suspects and this too is a good thing: Amazon Web Services, Apcera, Cisco, CoreOS, Docker, EMC, Fujitsu Limited, Goldman Sachs, Google, HP, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Joyent, the Linux Foundation, Mesosphere, Microsoft, Pivotal, Rancher Labs, Red Hat, and VMware. (Disclosure: I work for HP.)
read more
Advice on leading innovative tech teams
Transitioning from being the leader of a small group to a large group is easier with a mentor and with colleagues who will give you honest feedback about your potential, strengths, and weaknesses.
SODIMM-style i.MX6 COMs include an UltraLite model
iWave announced two Linux-friendly, SODIMM-style COMs. One supports up to a quad-core i.MX6 SoC, while the other has the new i.MX6 UltraLite. In conjunction with this week’s Freescale Technology Forum (FTF, iWave Systems unveiled two Linux-ready computer-on-modules that extend the Freescale i.MX6. The iW-RainboW-G18M-SODIMM i.MX6UL follows TechNexion’s similarly SODIMM form-factor EDM1-CF-IMX6UL, as well as its […]
Doc sprint model helps teachers create course materials
This article is co-authored by Heidi Ellis.
Last week 11 academics and two industry professionals spent three days in New York participating in something that would look like a doc sprint to open source contributors. Instead of working on project documentation, though, this sprint was focused on producing computer science- and open source-focused learning activities, which are similar to "experiments" for those familiar with chemistry or physics courses.
read more
Red Hat enters mobile software market with Samsung
Red Hat has long been a power in Linux servers. Now, with a new software stack and a partnership with Samsung, the Linux giant is going for mobile business users.
First quad- and octa-core QorIQ SoCs unveiled
Freescale revealed two Linux-enabled QorIQ LS1 networking SoCs with four and eight 1.5GHz Cortex-A53 cores, and says it will offer a Cortex-A72 LS2 model. Visitors to the Freescale Technology Forum in Austin, Texas, this week have enjoyed a motherlode of product announcements from Freescale, not to mention a keynote from hardware hacker patron saint Steve […]
« Previous ( 1 ... 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 ... 1158 ) Next »