Showing headlines posted by Scott_Ruecker
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Mozilla’s mission is to make sure the Internet remains open and accessible to all. Four years ago, we launched Firefox Reality, a browser for mixed reality, and our exploration in browsing in new and emerging realities.
How to Install FileRun on Debian 11
FileRun is a free, open-source, and self-hosted file-sharing application for Linux. It is a very good alternative to Google Drive and dropbox. In this article, I will explain how to install FileRun with Apache and Let's Encrypt SSL on Debian 11.
Linux Arcade Cab Gives Up Its Secrets Too Easily
Sometimes reverse engineering embedded systems can be a right old faff, with you needing to resort to all kinds of tricks such as power glitching in order to poke a tiny hole in the armour, giving you an way in. And, sometimes the door is just plain wide open. This detailed exploration of an off-the-shelf retro arcade machine, is definitely in that second camp, for an unknown reason. [Matthew Alt] of VoidStar Security, took a detailed look into how this unit works, which reads as a great introduction to how embedded Linux is constructed on these minimal systems.
Capturing Packets with Tcpdump and analyzing them with Wireshark on Ubuntu
In this guide, I will show you how to analyze network Packets on Linux. I will use the Tools Tcpdump and Wireshark. This tutorial uses Ubuntu as OS, but it is applicable to other Linux distributions too.
How open source supports businesses impact on climate change
An open source strategy for measuring sustainable investments could fundamentally impact the transition to a carbon-neutral and green economy.
Interview with Keycloak Contributor, Takashi Norimatsu of HITACHI OSS Group
Jason Perlow, Editorial Director of Linux Foundation Research, spoke with HITACHI’s Takashi Norimatsu about the Keycloak project, an open source identity access and management platform.
Design and Prototypical Implementation of an IRC Chat Server in Erlang OTP
By the time of this article, digital services provide key functionality to businesses and everyday life. Due to the progress of digitization, the reliance on digital services has been growing rapidly. This process is not only shown by the growing number of inter connected devices that communicate with each other but also by the impact of unavailable services during an incident: On the 4th of October 2021, Meta (former Facebook) and all of its organizations (e.g. Instagram, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger) were unavailable for up to seven hours. The outage resulted in a huge profit loss for the company and connected businesses.
How to share files with Samba
The Samba project provides file sharing and print services for computers on a network. It uses the Server Message Block and Common Internet File System (SMB/CIFS) protocol, so the services created by running Samba are available to Linux, macOS, and Windows clients. It's an essential service to run in organizations that support multiple operating systems, and it's even useful on homogenous networks.
Oracle Linux appears somewhere unexpected: The Windows Store
On the last day of January, Oracle Linux 8.5, the current version of Big Red's RHEL-alike, quietly appeared on the Windows Store. It's packaged to run on the Windows Subsystem for Linux and says it needs Windows 10 version 19041.0 or newer. That's the much-delayed Windows 10 May 2020 update, also known as 20H1.
Breath of fresh air: v7.3 of LibreOffice boasts improved file importing and rendering
And better compatibility with some more proprietary word processors. Six months after LibreOffice 7.2, version 7.3 is out with faster and more accurate file importing and rendering for improved compatibility with Microsoft Office.
How to create a Load Balancer in Azure Cloud
A Load Balancer is used to evenly distribute the load on the backend servers. It acts as the single point of contact for client connections. In this article, we will create a Public Load Balancer and add a Virtual Machine to its Backend Pool. This Virtual Machine will have Apache running on it.
Tiny Core Linux 13 Released: Needs Just 46MB of RAM, 50MB of Disk
Tiny Core Linux has been updated to v13.0, following its recently established annual cadence. This veteran ultra light Linux distribution is remarkably compact by today's standards, requiring a mere 22MB download. However, it installs and presents the user with a fully graphical UI, with a modern Linux kernel, and allows you to install and run modern applications (but keep it simple if you install this OS due to your PC being ancient).
50 lines of Bash to bring a Wordle fan out of their shell
We are delighted to note that a version of the word game the New York Times bought for seven figures can now be played via a 50-line Bash script.
How to Install OpenNMS Horizon Network Monitoring System on Debian 11
OpenNMS is a free, open-source, and one of the most powerful network monitoring and network management platforms used for monitoring remote devices from a central location. In this tutorial, I will show you how to install OpenNMS on Debian 11.
MariaDB takes a dip into Angel Pond to clean up and go public with $672m valuation
How do you sell a product like Maria? How do you cash out within the cloud? MariaDB Corporation Ab, which sells the popular open source database by the same name, said on Tuesday that it intends to become a public company with the help of Angel Pond Holdings Corporation.
Securing the open source ecosystem: SBOMs are no longer optional
In the last year and a half, one cybersecurity mess after another -- the SolarWinds software supply chain attack, the log4j vulnerability, the npm bad code injection -- have made it clear that we must clean up our software supply chain. That's impossible to do with proprietary software, since its creators won't let you know what's inside a program. But with open-source programs, it can be done.
10 Reasons Why People Quit Linux for Windows and Why They're Wrong
Switched to Linux and found things aren’t working out as you’d hoped? Considering reinstalling Windows? Stop! Getting to grips with a new operating system is not always easy, but there are many reasons to stick with Linux. Perhaps more importantly, most of the reasons people give when they quit Linux are either wrong, ill-considered, or outdated. Before you download that Windows installer and copy it to a USB stick, here’s why you should stick with Linux.
AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT Linux Performance
AMD recently launched the Radeon RX 6500 XT graphics card for the $199 USD price point. While built on the current-generation RDNA2 architecture, this graphics card was widely panned for its price while only offering 4GB of video memory, limited to PCIe x4 bandwidth, and performance similar to the years-old Polaris GPUs. While all the major benchmarks online to this point have been under Windows, here is a look at how the AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT is performing under Linux.
Linux kernel patches “performance can be harmful” bug in video driver
Remember all those funkily named bugs of recent memory, such as Spectre, Meltdown, F**CKWIT and RAMbleed? Very loosely speaking, these types of bug – perhaps they’re better described as “performance costs” – are a side effect of the ever-increasing demand for ever-faster CPUs, especially now that the average computer or mobile phone has multiple processor chips, typically with multiple cores, or processing subunits, built into each chip.
Keep your multiple online lives private with Multi-Account Containers Add-on on Mozilla VPN
At Mozilla, online privacy has always been one of our top priorities. Recently we announced Total Cookie Protection on Firefox Focus to combat cross-site tracking, and last year we introduced Firefox Relay, a privacy-first product that hides your real email address to help protect your identity.
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