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Chromium for the Masses

Every time my paycheck is direct-deposited, I contemplate purchasing a Chromebook. Long gone are the days of the CR-48 laptops with the clunky interface and frustrating usability. Although I never quite seem to pull the trigger and buy a Chromebook, thanks to the developer Hexxeh, it's possible to run the Chromium OS on a wide variety of hardware combinations.

Qt Developer Days in Silicon Valley

  • KDE.news - Got the Dot? (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 13, 2012 6:33 AM EDT)
  • Groups: KDE; Story Type: News Story
Dot Categories: QtQt Developer Days 2012 are the premier Qt events of the year. The 2012 Conference started today in Berlin; there will be news and more information from the Conference over the next few days. Meanwhile, preparations are well underway for Qt Developer Days – North America in Silicon Valley, which will take place December 5 – 7. It is presented by ICS, KDAB and Digia and is being organized by ICS.

Sinclair BASIC comes to Raspberry Pi

  • The Register; By Simon Sharwood (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 13, 2012 5:35 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
The 80's are so now, as hot on the heels of the RISC OS' Raspberry Pi debut comes the equally retro-tastic news that the BASIC version used in the Sinclair ZX Spectrum can also run on the Pi.

Extreme Graphics with Extrema

High-energy physics experiments tend to generate huge amounts of data. While this data is passed through analysis software, very often the first thing you may want to do is to graph it and see what it actually looks like. To this end, a powerful graphing and plotting program is an absolute must.

Gather crowdsourced public input with Shareabouts app

  • opensource.com (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 13, 2012 3:28 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
As stressful as elections can be, they always bring a welcome surge of patriotism. United States citizens have a lot of opinions about their government, and election time is a good reminder that actually vollunteering time and resources is the best way to facilitate real change. Luckily we live in the 21st century, and collaborating to make change has never been easier. Apps like Shareabouts make it simple to get involved and do your part to make our cities great.

Oracle releases Git repository with RHEL changes

Oracle's RedPatch is a public Git repository that provides the source code to the individual patches Red Hat has included in its Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) distribution

VIA Kernel Mode-Setting Still Not Ready For Mainline

It's been several months since having anything to report on the state of VIA graphics under Linux. VIA hasn't been doing anything officially to better their Linux support and the "OpenChrome" development community is quite limited and small. While the long-in-development OpenChrome DRM driver for providing VIA kernel mode-setting support has yet to be merged into the mainline code-base, it's still being developed...

Distribution Release: SystemRescueCd 3.1.1

An updated build of SystemRescueCd, version 3.1.1, is out. What's new? "Standard kernels is long-term supported Linux 3.2.33 (rescuecd + rescue64); alternative kernels updated to latest stable 3.6.6...

Thoughts on the ext4 panic

In just a few days, a linux-kernel mailing list report of ext4 filesystem corruption turned into a widely-distributed news story; the quality of ext4 and its maintenance, it seemed, was in doubt. Once the dust settled, the situation turned out to be rather less grave than some had thought; the bug in question only threatened a very small group of ext4 users using non-default mount options. As this is being written, a fix is in testing and should be making its way toward the mainline and stable kernels shortly. The bug was obscure, but there is value in looking at how it came about and the ripples it caused.

This week at LWN: Fedora and LVM

Those following the progress of the Fedora 18 development cycle cannot have failed to notice that the rework of Anaconda, the distribution's installer, is not going as smoothly as one might have liked. Complaints are common, and there is a real risk that installer problems will end up being what users remember about this release. Given that, it may seem surprising that the Fedora developers intend to change one of the fundamental decisions made by the developers of the new installer.

Happy Second Anniversary Fuduntu!

Happy second anniversary, Fuduntu! Today we celebrate the second anniversary of the Fuduntu Linux distribution, and what a year it has been! In our second year Fuduntu has undergone many exciting changes in key areas designed to improve platform supportability and growth. Over the course of the year our user base has expanded to exceed 50,000 active users, and our team has groomed many new volunteers who are now working in our support, design, packaging, and development teams.

Introducing Mozilla Webmaker badges

A new way to teach, learn and get credentials for digital skills Today at the Mozilla Festival in London, we’re extremely proud to announce the launch of new Mozilla Webmaker badges. Webmaker badges are an exciting new way to teach, … Continue reading

Wayland 1.0 With Weston Has Been Branched

Kristian Høgsberg has now branched the Wayland and Weston code-bases for the 1.0 series...

Random Linux Commands to Make Google Talk, Fix Wifi, Find Duplicate Files, and More

  • Linux.com; By Carla Schroder (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 10, 2012 8:18 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
Did you know you can make Google Translate talk? Preview Unicode characters on the command line? Generate entropy with the ls command? Use md5sum hashes to find duplicate files, regardless of their names? Test speakers? Fix roaming wifi? If you didn't before, you will after you read this article.

Mozilla Firefox turns 8

  • InternetNews; By Sean Kerner (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 10, 2012 7:34 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups:
From the 'Open Source Goodness' files:

I remember well when I wrote about Firefox 1.0, which was officially released on November 9th, 2004. It was a very different time - and it was 8 years ago.

The People Who Support Linux: SysAdmin Tony Atkinson Admits to a Luddite Streak

Tony Atkinson’s technical expertise runs deep as a Linux systems administrator for a telecommunications company in Essex, England. He works with the Asterisk PBX (private branch exchange) and communications server and Nagios notification system, writing and maintaining bespoke PHP and shell scripts to control and coordinate phone and SMS services and other general operations in the U.K., U.S.A. and Australia.

Ext4 Data Corruption Bug and Solution

Ext4 (the fourth extended file system) has been the gold standard for the Linux kernel ever since it was declared "stable" in October 2008. It was the direct descendant of ext3 (released November 2001) which introduced journaling to the previously unjournaled ext2 file system that has been with us since 1993. Ever since its release into the wild, ext4 has proven to be fast and reliable. I've installed it onto more computers than I can count, and never had any reason to complain about it...until recently. But a serious bug has crept into the ext4 stable release, causing data corruption on some computers running Linux kernels 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6.

Tails and Claws

Over the past year I have looked at two distributions (Liberté and LPS) which have a strong focus on security. Staying secure and anonymous on-line is a popular topic these days as many people are concerned about freedom of speech and monitored communications. Many of us are concerned about our privacy and, with that in mind, I would like to introduce our readers to a Linux distribution called Tails.

The H Roundup - AMD fires developers, Android turns 5, E17 alpha arrives

In the week ending 10 November - AMD laid off Linux developers, Linus Torvalds talked about kernel development, Android turned 5 and an E17 alpha arrived. Also, detecting CSRF vulnerabilities and DIY biology

Testing Network And TCP Optimizations

  • Looking For The Source Code Of Life, LINUX and MORE...; By Aditya Patawari (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 10, 2012 10:22 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
This post is more like a "note to self" for certain TCP parameters which I usually modify (or plan to modify) on production servers.

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