Showing headlines posted by bob

« Previous ( 1 ... 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 ... 1158 ) Next »

Tiger Lake and 64GB NVMe squeeze onto Mini Type 10

  • LinuxGizmos.com; By Eric Brown (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2021 12:13 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Intel
Advantech’s rugged, Mini Type 10 sized “SOM-7583” module ships with an 11th Gen Core CPU plus up to 64GB NVMe, a 2.5GbE controller, and an optional “SOM-DB5830” carrier board. The SOM-7583 is the first module we have seen that deploys Intel’s 11th Gen Tiger Lake UP3 on an 84 x 55mm COM Express Mini Type […]

Contribute at Fedora Linux 34 Upgrade, Audio, and Virtualization test days

Fedora test days are events where anyone can help make sure changes in Fedora Linux work well in an upcoming release. Fedora community members often participate, and the public is welcome at these events. If you’ve never contributed to Fedora before, this is a perfect way to get started. There are three upcoming test events […]

Rockchip based thermal screening AiO includes 2MP camera

Advantech’s IP65-protected “One-to-One Visitor Thermal Screening Kiosk” runs Android on a Rockchip RK3288 and has a 11.6-inch touchscreen, a 2MP camera for face capture, and an Avalo thermal sensor. A year ago, we posted a story headlined Embedded Linux joins the Covid-19 battle, which covered various embedded solutions targeting a response to the coronavirus. Products […]

How to create an SQS queue on AWS using Terraform

  • Howtoforge Linux Howtos und Tutorials (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2021 4:23 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
In this article, we will create an SQS queue using Terraform on AWS. We will also add a policy that will allow all to send messages to the queue.

Teach anyone how to code with Hedy

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 7, 2021 12:17 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Learning to code involves learning both the programming logic and the syntax of a specific programming language. When I took my first programming class in college, the language taught was C++. The first code example, the basic "Hello World" program, looked like the example below. read more

Mini-PC features RK3568, dual GbE, PoE+, and WiFi 6

On Indiegogo: Firefly’s $122 and up “Station P2” mini-PC powers up with a quad -A55 Rockchip RK3568 with up to 8GB LPDDR4 and 64GB eMMC plus WiFi 6, 2x GbE with PoE+, 4x USB, HDMI, SATA, and M.2. Last year, T-Chip Technology’s Firefly community project launched a Station P1 Geek Computer mini-PC with a Rockchip […]

Experiment on your code freely with Git worktree

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 6, 2021 9:13 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Git is designed in part to enable experimentation. Once you know that your work is safely being tracked and safe states exist for you to fall back upon if something goes horribly wrong, you're not afraid to try new ideas. Part of the price of innovation, though, is that you're likely to make a mess along the way. Files get renamed, moved, removed, changed, and cut into pieces. New files are introduced. Temporary files that you don't intend to track take up residence in your working directory. read more

Use Apache Superset for open source business intelligence reporting

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 6, 2021 6:08 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Apache; Story Type: News Story
They say software is eating the world, but it's equally clear that open source is taking over software. Simply put, open source is a superior approach for building and distributing software because it provides important guarantees around how software can be discovered, tried, operated, collaborated on, and packaged. For those reasons, it is not surprising that it has taken over most of the modern data stack: Infrastructure, databases, orchestration, data processing, AI/ML, and beyond. read more

Yep, the 'Who owns Linux?' case is back from the dead

Not to worry, zombies with a gambling addiction probably won't eat your enterprise brains Column It seemed like a classic April The First spoof. Indeed, some tech titles had it on their lists of best pranks of the day. But it's true: the software zombie court case to end all zombie software court cases has woken from its slumber. Nearly 29 years after it first lurched from the crypt, SCO v The World Of Linux is back, and it smells just as bad as ever.…

Software Innovation Prevails in Landmark Supreme Court Ruling in Google v. Oracle

In an important victory for software developers, the Supreme Court ruled today that reimplementing an API is fair use under US copyright law. The Court’s reasoning should apply to all …

Over a decade on, and millions in legal fees, Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle in Java API legal war

America's top judges decide copied code in Android is fair use. The US Supreme Court on Monday ruled in a 6-2 decision that Google's limited copying of Oracle's Java APIs in its Android operating system constitutes fair use under US law.…

Scaling Microservices on Kubernetes

Applications built on microservices can be scaled in multiple ways. We can scale them to support development by larger development teams and we can also scale them up for better performance. Our application can then have a higher capacity and can handle a larger workload. […]

7 Git tips for managing your home directory

I have several computers. I've got a laptop at work, a workstation at home, a Raspberry Pi (or four), a Pocket CHIP, a Chromebook running various forms of Linux, and so on. I used to set up my user environment on each computer by more or less following the same steps, and I often told myself that I enjoyed that each one was slightly unique. read more

How different programming languages do the same thing

  • Opensource.com (Posted by bob on Apr 5, 2021 6:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Whenever I start learning a new programming language, I focus on defining variables, writing a statement, and evaluating expressions. Once I have a general understanding of those concepts, I can usually figure out the rest on my own. Most programming languages have some similarities, so once you know one programming language, learning the next one is a matter of figuring out the unique details and recognizing the differences. read more

FreeDOS commands you need to know

  • Opensource.com; By Kevin O'Brien (Posted by bob on Apr 5, 2021 7:39 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
FreeDOS, the open source implementation of DOS, provides a lightweight operating system for running legacy applications on modern hardware (or in an emulator) and for updating hardware vendor fails with a Linux-compatible firmware flasher. Getting familiar with FreeDOS is not only a fun throwback to the computing days of the past, it's an investment into gaining useful computing skills. In this article, I'll look at some of the essential commands you need to know to work on a FreeDOS system.

Compact DIN-railer with 10GbE runs Ubuntu on quad -A72 SoC

IEI’s fanless, rugged “DRPC-330-A7K” embedded computer runs Ubuntu on a Marvell Armada 7040 and offers 10GbE SFP+, 2x GbE, 4x isolated serial, 2x USB, and 3x M.2 connections. IEI announced a networking-oriented embedded computer called the DRPC-330-A7K that runs Ubuntu 18.10 on Marvell’s Armada 7040 (88F7040). The DIN-rail form-factor system has a -20 to 60°C […]

A practical guide to using the git stash command

  • Opensource.com; By Ramakrishna Pattnaik (Posted by bob on Apr 4, 2021 4:19 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Developer
Version control is an inseparable part of software developers' daily lives. It's hard to imagine any team developing software without using a version control tool. It's equally difficult to envision any developer who hasn't worked with (or at least heard of) Git. In the 2018 Stackoverflow Developer Survey, 87.2% of the 74,298 participants use Git for version control.

Compact Whiskey Lake system has four USB 3.2 Gen2 slots

Advantech’s rugged “UNO-238” embedded PC runs Linux or Win 10 on Intel’s 8th Gen UE-series and offers up to 32GB of easily swappable DDR4 plus 32GB eMMC, 2x GbE, 4x USB 3.2 Gen2, 2x serial, 2x M.2, and DP and HDMI. Advantech announced a fanless, Whiskey Lake based IoT edge computer called the UNO-238 that […]

Linux Foundation and OpenTreatments Foundation team up to fight rare genetic diseases

  • ZDNet | open-source RSS; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by bob on Apr 4, 2021 7:33 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Rare diseases kill millions, but because they don't make the headlines that coronavirus does, they're often ignored. Now, the Linux Foundation and the OpenTreatments Foundation are joining forces to create open-source gene therapies for rare genetic diseases.

Tiny, dual-GbE Raspberry Pi CM4 carrier sells for $30

DFRobot’s $30, 66 x 55mm “Compute Module 4 IoT Router Carrier Board Mini” extends the Raspberry Pi CM4 with 2x GbE, 2x Type-C, microSD, and 26-pin GPIO. Earlier this month, we saw the first dual-Ethernet carrier boards for the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 in Seeed’s Dual Gigabit Ethernet Carrier Board (2x GbE) and Mcuzone […]

« Previous ( 1 ... 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 ... 1158 ) Next »