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cputemp 1.0 Released For Linux Thermal Monitoring

Version 1.0 has been reached for the cputemp utility that uses ACPI for monitoring the CPU temperature and providing various statistics under Linux...

Xfce 4.10, the Sane Linux Desktop

  • Linux.com; By Carla Schroder (Posted by tuxchick on Sep 1, 2012 7:51 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
Workflow and efficiency are everything. I want my Linux graphical environment to be the way I like it, and not an obese system hog. I have a lot of favorite Linux desktop environments (Fluxbox, KDE4, Ratpoison, E17, Razor-qt) and Xfce is always near the top.

Linux's Brilliant New Gaming Career

The legendary Mark Twain is said to have once observed, "If you don't like the weather in New England, just wait a few minutes," and much the same sentiment could just as well be applied to life here in the Linux world. To wit: Not so very long ago, gaming was held up as one of the big obstacles keeping PC users off of Linux and on Windows instead.

RHEV 3.1 Beta offers Storage Live Migration

With the first beta of version 3.1, Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) is, for the first time, capable of migrating the virtual machine (VM) disk images between storage arrays while they are running

News: Linux Top 3: Linux 3.4 Goes Stable, Fedora Delayed and LinuxCon Opens the Cloud

It has been another busy week on the LinuxPlanet, with big kernel news last week as the momentum and excitement now builds in the lead up to this week's big LinuxCon event.

Call for Host for Akademy 2013 Still Open

Dot Categories: Community and EventsThe KDE Community are still looking for proposals to Host Akademy in 2013. Akademy 2012 The hosting proposal needs a strong team of local volunteers who have an eye for detail that is able to organize and host our annual community summit.

ownCloud: The cloud sharing service you control

  • IT World; By Carla Schroder (Posted by tuxchick on Aug 28, 2012 1:51 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
ownCloud is an open-source effort to put control back in our hands. It is still young and has rough edges, and has a way to go to achieve its ambitious goals, but it is already useful and exceptionally easy to use. You can easily set up and manage data storage and sharing, and shared calendars and contacts. The server runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows, and it has clients for desktop and mobile platforms. There is an active and growing developer and user community, and improvements are coming thick and fast. This is the #1 cloud project to watch, in my occasionally humble opinion.

Linux Kernel Proposal For Dropping Keyboard Support

It seems to be the season for trolling the Linux kernel mailing list with idiotic statements. After it was proposed a few days ago that the Linux kernel drop support for x86 32-bit, today's entertainment comes in the form of a Linux user seeking to have keyboard support as "obsolete input device support" from the Linux kernel tree...

Canonical Plans To Drop Alternate Ubuntu CDs

Steve Langasek has laid out plans to drop Ubuntu alternate CDs beginning already with the forthcoming Ubuntu 12.10 release...

Raspberry Pi: MPEG-2 and VC-1 licences available

With the licence keys now available, the mini-computer is no longer limited to decoding only H.264 in hardware. And in the process, the Pi developers have found they can enable H.264 encoding for all

More Of What's Landing For The GCC 4.8 Compiler

GCC 4.8 likely won't be released until H1'2013, but there's a number of changes building up for this next release of this leading open-source multi-language compiler...

The H Roundup - Cracking warnings, database secrecy and hardened bugs

In the week ending 25 August - Microsoft warned users about cracked VPN technology, Oracle are keeping MySQL bugs to themselves, the hard bugs in LibreOffice come under the hammer and sandboxes cause problems. Also, the latest on what's coming in the next Linux kernel

Best Linux Keyboard Shortcuts

Keyboard shortcuts on Linux are like a box of chocolates: you never know what you're going to get.

OpenStacker stuffs free Moxie on USB

Piston Cloud repackages OpenStack for devs The people who stuffed an enterprise-ready version of the OpenStack cloud onto a USB stick have devised a cut-down freebie edition to get you started.…

Kernel Log - Coming in 3.6 (Part 1): Filesystems and storage

Linux 3.6 introduces quota and backup functions for Btrfs as well as security enhancements for temp directories. New interfaces enable the kernel to be made aware of changes to the sizes of used partitions

Debian testing a systemd-to-sysvinit converter

A new tool converts systemd startup configuration into the older sysvinit files, which could help when Linux is not the only kernel that developers are packaging startup files for

Intel HD 2500 Ivy Bridge Graphics On Linux

Since the launch of Intel's Ivy Bridge processors earlier this year there have been many benchmarks of the Intel Core i7 3770K with its integrated HD 4000 graphics and then more recently have been Linux testing of the Intel Core i7 3517UE from the CompuLab Intense-PC and Intel Core i7-3615QM as found on the Apple Retina MacBook Pro. The newest Intel Ivy Bridge chip to play with at Phoronix is the Intel Core i5 3470, which bears an Intel HD 2500 graphics core. In this article are benchmarks of the Intel HD 2500 Ivy Bridge graphics with the open-source Intel Linux graphics driver stack.

KDE 4.9: As Pretty and Peppy as a Linux Desktop Can Be

The latest release earlier this month of the K Desktop Environment, or KDE, is a solid upgrade that could very well win back the hearts and fingers of Linux users who wandered off to other, less powerful desktop shells. I am particularly impressed with its smooth integration into the dedicated KDE distribution in Linux Mint 13.

Samsung's Wang was up 22 hours a day, had no time to copy Apple

  • The Register; By Brid-Aine Parnell (Posted by tuxchick on Aug 15, 2012 1:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Samsung fired its opening salvo against Apple's allegation that the South Korean giant ripped off the iPhone design, and claimed it worked its arse off to develop its own gadgets. At the two tech titans' ongoing patent trial in the US yesterday, Sammy also argued that Apple's iProducts are not unique. The South Korean firm wheeled out its designer Jeeyuen Wang, who created the icons for the Samsung Galaxy devices. She denied copying Apple's user interface when she worked on the Galaxy range, and claimed that hundreds of designers worked on the original Galaxy S I.

Follow-up to -Pricing Hardware that Runs GNU/Linux-

In Pricing Hardware that Runs GNU/Linux, I started what I hope will be a new practice at ZaReason -- giving rebates at the end of each accounting cycle, giving back any profits that occur during that time period.

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