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Companies really want Linux-savvy employees and they want them now

According to the Linux Foundation and tech job company Dice, in the 2015 Linux Jobs Report, "Nearly all hiring managers are looking to recruit Linux professionals."But 88 percent of hiring managers report that it's "very difficult" or "somewhat difficult" to find qualified candidates.

Resurrecting the Armadillo

1999 was a crazy year for business on the Internet, and for Linux. It was when Red Hat went public, with a record valuation, and VA Linux followed with a bigger one. Both were cases in point of the dot-com boom, a speculative bubble inflated by huge expectations of what the Internet would mean for business.

Play with gravitational fields and pretty colors

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Mar 4, 2015 3:14 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
You’re on a city block. It's windy, and a light rain is falling. People scamper to and fro, carrying armloads of chalk and tarps. Many are crouched in the street, suffering over their chalk art and cursing the rain. The street extends to the south. A dingy concrete stairwell leads down, beneath street-level. read more

How to backup your Ubuntu Desktop with DejaDup

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Mar 4, 2015 2:17 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Ubuntu, Linux; Story Type: News Story
Déjà Dup is a nice graphical wrapper around the command line backup tool duplicity. It hides the complexity of backing up the Right Way (encrypted, off-site, and regular) and uses duplicity as the back end. Déjà Dup does not use cron or similar schedulers. Rather, it starts a program deja-dup-monitor when you log into your session. This keeps track of when you last successfully backed up and will wait until the next scheduled backup.

When the United Nations calls, MicroMappers acts

  • Opensource.com; By Patrick Meier (Posted by bob on Mar 4, 2015 11:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community
Open source and crowdsourcing—uttering these words at a meeting of the United Nations before the year 2010 would have made you persona non grata. In fact, the fastest way to discredit yourself at any humanitarian meeting just five years ago was to suggest the use of open source software and crowdsourcing in disaster response. Then, a tragic earthquake occured in Haiti in 2010, and OpenStreetMap and Ushahidi were deployed in the aftermath.

News: Linux Top 3: Xfce, Quirky and Tails 1.3

  • LinuxPlanet; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by bob on Mar 4, 2015 9:31 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux, Xfce
After nearly three years of development Xfce 4.12 was released on February 28, marking the first official major version update since the Xfce 4.10 release.

Mozilla Pushes Hot Fix to Remove Superfish Cert From Firefox

Mozilla has issued a hot fix for Firefox that removes the Superfish root certificate from the browser's trusted root store. The patch only removes the certificate if the Superfish software has been removed from the machine already, however.

Open source and humanities in the digital age

Welcome to the first installment of a monthly feature where 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 and some humanities research projects that are using open source tools today.

Fedora community in Mumbai, India celebrates the Fedora 21 release

Every time a new release of Fedora becomes available, Fedora user communities around the world gather to share the new release with each other, upgrade their systems, and eat celebratory cake.

Hadoop gets native C/C++ injection

  • The Register; By Gavin Clarke (Posted by bob on Mar 4, 2015 12:57 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Developer
Big data for the non-Java generation Like Hadoop but it’s just a bit too Javary? There’s now an answer for that: MapReduce for C (MR4C).…

Quad-core MediaTek SoC spins Cortex-A72 into Android tablets

MediaTek unveiled an “MT8173? SoC for Android tablets that mixes 2.4GHz Cortex-A72 and -A53 cores with a PowerVR GPU, and also showed an octa-core -A53 SoC.

Unity 5 Ships and Brings One Click WebGL Export to Legions of Game Developers

Mozilla’s goal of high quality plugin-free gaming on the Web is taking a giant leap forward today with the release of Unity 5. This new version of the world’s most popular game development tool includes a preview of their amazing WebGL exporter.

How to install latest Firefox, Chromium and Opera Browser on Ubuntu Linux

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Mar 3, 2015 9:08 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux, Ubuntu
The article will guide you through the installation process of the latest versions of Mozila Firefox, Chromium and Opera. Throughout the article you will see the download links and the commands needed to perform the installation of the the browser.

Jolla shows off Sailfish tablet, promises ultra-secure phone

Jolla released Sailfish OS 2.0, showed off the first tablet to run the OS, and announced plans with SSH to develop a security-hardened version of Sailfish. Finland-based Jolla had a huge success on Indiegogo last November with it Jolla tablet, the first tablet to run its Android-compatible, Meego Linux based Sailfish OS.

Has the Supreme Court made patent reform legislation unnecessary?

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Mar 3, 2015 6:29 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
As Congress gears up again to seriously consider patent litigation abuse—starting with the introduction of H.R. 9 (the "Innovation Act") last month—opponents of reform are arguing that recent Supreme Court cases have addressed concerns. Give the decisions time to work their way through the system, they assert. read more

Bringing Native Games to the Web is About to get a Whole Lot Easier

GDC 2015 is a major milestone in a long term collaboration between Mozilla and the world’s biggest game engine makers. We set out to bring high performance games to the Web without plugins, and that goal is now being realized. … Continue reading

Firefox 36 available in Fedora 21 and Fedora 20

Last week, Mozilla released version 36 of the Firefox web browser, and the updated packages are now also available from the Fedora repositories. This new update provides a handful of […]

NXP gobbles up Freescale in smart car and IoT silicon push

NXP Semiconductor has merged with Freescale Semiconductor, in a $11.8 billion deal that creates a $40 billion firm focused on ADAS automotive and IoT apps. Freescale, which is one of the largest semiconductor firms serving the embedded Linux market along with Texas Instruments, is being acquired by Dutch chipmaker NXP in a $40 billion merger […]

Be a responsible open source user

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Mar 3, 2015 12:18 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Too many of us who work with open source software in our daily lives think of ourselves as users, people who merely take advantage of open source tools without considering ourselves as an integral part of the development process. That's right. By working with an open source tool, you're automatically part of that tool's development process. You are not a user. You are a contributor. Whether you're a good contributor or a bad contributor is up to you—you still have a responsibility. read more

Exploring the world of OpenStack, ensuring successful deployment, and more

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Mar 3, 2015 8:29 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Cloud; Story Type: News Story
Interested in keeping track of what's happening in the open source cloud? Opensource.com is your source for news in OpenStack, the open source cloud infrastructure project. read more

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