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Not everyone buys into the whole "New Year's resolution" thing. But we know some of you have a personal to-do list that you hope to tackle in 2014. And we can't help but wonder if any of your resolutions have something to do with open source?
2013 Book Roundup
I'm always amazed to hear about the death of the publishing industry.
True, books and (gulp) magazines are often fighting for their lives,
and the state of journalism is in tatters.
LG to bring Palm's webOS BACK FROM THE DEAD in TVs next week's report
Can Korean chaebol succeed where Palm and HP failed? South Korean electronics giant LG plans to debut its first smart TV based on the webOS operating system next week, industry insiders claim.…
Learning PHP, Part 2: Upload files and use XML or JSON to store and display file information
This tutorial is Part 2 of a three-part "Learning PHP" series teaching you how to use PHP through building a simple workflow application.
Take this tutorial if you have a basic understanding of PHP and want to learn about uploading files from the browser, sessions, or using PHP to process XML or JSON.
News: Linux Top 3: SteamOS, Chromebooks and Ubuntu Edge
Consumer Linux efforts are alive and growing in 2013
Learning PHP, Part 1: Register for an account, upload files for approval, and view and download approved files
This tutorial is Part 1 of a three-part "Learning PHP" series teaching you how to use PHP through
building a simple workflow application. This tutorial walks you through creating a basic PHP page using HTML
forms and covers accessing databases.
2013: A Linux Christmas
Amazon's preliminary Christmas sales information is in and Linux-powered gear was a holiday-season winner.
Google and Apple in DRAG RACE: It's fanboi Mercs VS fandroid Audis
Fast and furious firms battle to design dashboard of the future
CES 2014 Apple and Google are preparing to compete on yet another front. They reportedly plan to race each other to design the world's most powerful smart car dashboard.…
Intel Releases A Boatload Of Haswell Documentation
As an extra holiday present for Linux and open-source fans, Intel has quietly released a large batch of new programming documentation that covers their latest-generation Haswell graphics cores. The new "programmer's reference manuals" cover the 2013 Haswell HD Graphics, Iris Graphics, and Iris Pro Graphics. This massive batch of documentation is spread across twelve volumes and does document their hardware registers...
Opigno aims to be a true e-learning platform
Over the last five years, e-learning platforms have gained popularity and notoriety for alleviating some of the strain caused by our education problems. Namely, for helping bring resources and materials to classrooms and countries that can't afford the proprietary and closed options.
Release early, release often in scientific research
Why don't academics discuss research before starting the work?
In a recent blog post, Jack Kelly asked this simple question, and it is a striking one for those of us who are familiar with collaborating at high levels as part of an open source community. One of the pillars of the open source way is rapid prototyping and the idea of: release early, release often.
In the scientific research community, however, the history of and current state of affairs is closed and secretive. Jack Kelly even began his post with:
Warning: this is a hopelessly idealistic proposal...
NSA reportedly intercepting laptops purchased online to install spy malware
According to a new report from Der Spiegel based on internal NSA documents, the signals intelligence agency's elite hacking unit (TAO) is able to conduct sophisticated wiretaps in ways that make Hollywood fantasy look more like reality. The report indicates that the NSA, in collaboration with the CIA and FBI, routinely and secretly intercepts shipping deliveries for laptops or other computer accessories in order to implant bugs before they reach their destinations. According to Der Spiegel, the NSA's TAO group is able to divert shipping deliveries to its own "secret workshops" in a method called interdiction, where agents load malware onto the electronics or install malicious hardware that can give US intelligence agencies remote access.
ASUS Zenbook Prime Linux Benchmarks
Last week I began sharing my Linux performance benchmarks from the ASUS Zenbook Prime UX32VD, an Intel ultrabook with some nice hardware and build quality. In last week's initial testing I carried out NVIDIA Optimus benchmarks on Ubuntu Linux and compared it to Windows 8.1. In today's article I have a number of reference benchmarks comparing the performance of the ASUS Zenbook Prime to six other systems, all running Ubuntu 13.10.
First Samsung Tizen phone hits the FCC?
Samsung’s first Tizen phone reportedly will debut at Mobile World Congress Feb. 23, and will reach consumers in Europe and Japan in the second half of 2014. Samsung will likely announce the first Tizen phones at Mobile World Congress on Feb.23 in Barcelona, according to a recent report in IDG News Service. The story repeated […]
KDBUS & Systemd Now Yields A Working System
Open-source developers this week achieved a pleasant late Christmas present for Fedora users of having a working system with using the in-development Linux kernel DBus implementation (KDBUS) paired with the latest systemd code can now yield a booting system...
Be a Mechanic...with Android and Linux!
"Check Engine Soon"—that little orange light on your car's instrument
panel is possibly one of the more annoying things about modern
automobiles. Ever had it pop on during a trip and wonder whether it was just
something mundane, like your gas cap being loose, or whether it's something
deathly serious and a piston could come shooting out the side of your
engine block at any time?
Year-in-Review: Health and science hot topics on Opensource.com
The year 2013 brought great progress for the adoption of open source in the health and science industries. We covered some excellent open source stories, here the highlights from 2013.
Termistor: A New Tabbed Wayland Terminal
Giulio Camuffo has announced a new pet project he's been working on for Wayland: Termistor. The open-source Termistor is a drop-down, tabbed, terminal for Wayland...
Steering science back to its roots of reproducibility (a TEDx talk)
I gave a talk at this year's TEDx Albany event, "Saving Science - Open Up or Perish," where I talked about something that I am very passionate about. For me, TEDx was an opportunity to try out a very different format from my usual technical talks and dig deep down to tell a very general audience about what's going on in science that should matter to them. I shared my journey from my education in Physics to becoming a software developer working almost exclusively on open source software for scientific research and development.
GCC 4.9 Compiler Benchmarks On A Dual-Core Haswell
While extensive benchmarks of the GCC 4.9 development compiler are currently ongoing, here's a preview of the performance that the GNU Compiler Collection is set to offer in 2014 with its next major update. For this article an Intel Pentium "Haswell" dual-core processor was tested on a GCC 4.9 development snapshot and compared to GCC 4.8.2 and GCC 4.7.3 in a wide variety of C/C++ workloads. New LLVM Clang 3.4 benchmarks are also happening.
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