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New Atom SoC will target IoT devices, says Intel

At IDF Shenzhen, Intel announced a rugged IoT version of the Atom x3 smartphone SoC, with built-in cellular radios and supporting both Linux and Android. Intel introduced the Atom x3 (Sofia) system-on-chips, along with more powerful, 14nm-fabricated “Cherry Trail-T” Atom x5 and x7 models, at Mobile World Congress in early March. Some of the x3 parts are built by China-based Rockchip.

How to run Ubuntu Snappy Core on Raspberry Pi 2

The Internet of Things (IoT) is upon us. In a couple of years some of us might ask ourselves how we ever survived without it, just like we question our past without cellphones today. Canonical is a contender in this fast growing, but still wide open market. The company wants to claim their stakes in […]Continue reading... The post How to run Ubuntu Snappy Core on Raspberry Pi 2 appeared first on Xmodulo. No related FAQ.

Empower developers with a mix of community, communication, and custom tools

Open source developers can create an immense amount of value for any company that relies on open source software by giving it the ability to direct and influence aspects of the open source community. This allows the company to shape the tools they rely on and make them better fit company needs, a phenomenon otherwise known as "scratching their own itch." read more

A case for predictable databases

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 8, 2015 10:20 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Barzan Mozafari, Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), will be giving a talk on the predictability of performance in database systems at the OpenStack Live conference in Santa Clara, California on Tuesday, April 14. read more

Using Putty to remotely open GUI applications

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Apr 8, 2015 9:22 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
Remote connections can be established with system over a network through SSH (secure shell) easily, we can login, perform actions or send commands to another system remotely trough this conection on the commandline. But what we cannot do is launch a GUI application for viewing content present in the remote node. This is the disadvantage of using ssh in a terminal.

But this disadvantage can be easily solved by making use of "putty", a remote login application which can not only be used to login to a remote node, but also launch GUI applications. Examples of GUI applications are Browser, text viewers, etc.

News: Linux Top 3: Debian Jessie Gets a Release Date, OpenIndiana and CentOS Update

  • Linux Planet; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by bob on Apr 8, 2015 3:47 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Debian, Linux
At long last it would appear that the next major milestone release of Debian, version 8.0 also known as 'Jessie' is *almost* done.

Getting started with commandline encryption tools on Linux

Encryption is the process of encoding messages or information in such a way that only authorized parties can read them. With almost no privacy in this digital generation of our's, encryption of our data is one of the most required tools. Most of the applications like gmail encrypt our data, but the data on your system is still unsecured and there are hackers or unauthorised users waiting to access them.

diff -u: What's New in Kernel Development

Recently there was some discussion about ways to ease the tired backs of kernel maintainers. Apparently the merge windows are times of great labor, and some folks wanted to alert contributors to some preferable code submission habits.

'AwSnap' malformed HTML exploit crashes Chrome in one click

A bug in the most recent version of the Chrome allows miscreants to crash browser tabs simply by embedding a link with a malformed URL in the HTML of a page.

4 new tools for scholarly research

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2015 6:17 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Welcome to the second installment of a monthly feature in which I explore how open source software and the open source way are used in the digital humanities. Every month I will take a look at open source tools you can use in your digital humanities research as well as at humanities research projects that are using open source tools today. I will also cover news about transparency and open exchange as well as how the other principles of the open source way being applied to the humanities. read more

What is a good alternative to wget or curl on Linux

  • Xmodulo (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2015 5:20 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Linux; Story Type: News Story
If you often need to access a web server non-interactively in a terminal environment (e.g., download a file from the web, or test REST-ful web service APIs), chances are that wget or curl is your go-to tool. With extensive command-line options, both of these tools can handle a variety of non-interactive web access use cases […]Continue reading... The post What is a good alternative to wget or curl on Linux appeared first on Xmodulo. Related FAQs: How to use custom http headers with wget How to download multiple files with wget How to access VNC remote desktop in web browser How to monitor a Linux server and desktop remotely from web browser How to sniff HTTP traffic from the command line on Linux

Networking in the cloud is changing

Networking in the cloud is a rapidly changing area as new concepts, technologies, and standards continue to emerge and mature. To learn more about the landscape, we caught up with Valentina Alaria, head of product and solutions marketing for PLUMgrid, a cloud networking provider. read more

A better Internet of Things through open source culture

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2015 11:37 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Open source's influence extends far beyond sharing code, but this aspect sometimes goes unappreciated. For example, I previously wrote about how the special way of developing and collaborating associated with open source has come to also reflect many DevOps best practices, from transparency to iterative fast releases. I’d argue that it is many of these same default behaviors that are helping to make the Internet of Things a hot topic today. read more

Tiny wireless-rich COM runs Android on 2.5GHz Snapdragon

Inforce unveiled a tiny “6501 Micro SoM” that runs Android on a quad-core 2.5GHz Snapdragon 805 SoC, and offers A/V, camera, USB, serial, and wireless I/O. Inforce Computing’s 6501 Micro SoM taps the same Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 SoC used by its IFC6540 Pico-ITX SBC, but in computer-on-module form. The 50 x 28mm module, which is […]

Has the time come to kill the password?

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2015 7:48 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
How many passwords do you have? Probably more than you can easily remember or comfortably manage on your own. And I’m willing to bet that you dread coming up with new ones when you sign up for something online. Jonathan LeBlanc of PayPal is on a mission is to replace the password with something more secure and easier to use. read more

CoreOS is bringing Google's Kubernetes to the enterprise

  • ZDNet | Linux and Open Source RSS; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2015 6:51 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Thanks to CoreOS, Kubernetes, Google's secret sauce for managing containers on its clusters, is on its way to your data center.

Here, Have Some Money...

I love Bitcoin. It's not a secret; I've written about Bitcoin mining and cryptocurrency in the past. I'm the first to admit, however, that we're at the very beginning of the cryptocurrency age.

Bugs in Tor network used in attacks against underground markets

The operator of an underground marketplace hosted within the Tor network has reported a flaw in Tor that he claims is being used for an ongoing denial of service attack on the site.

CoreOS shakes up container world with Tectonic platform distro

Container-happy Linux startup CoreOS has launched a beta program for a new distribution of software designed to let enterprises run their own infrastructures the way large-scale software companies like Google run theirs.…

CoreOS is bringing Google's Kubernetes to the enterprise

Thanks to CoreOS, Kubernetes, Google's secret sauce for managing containers on its clusters, is on its way to your data center.

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