Apr 8 2009

Researcher’s Death Hampers TCP Flaw Fix

linuxwrangler writes “Security researcher Jack Louis, who had discovered several serious security flaws in TCP software was killed in a fire on the ides of March, dealing a blow to efforts to repair the problem. Although he kept good notes and had communicated with a number of vendors, he died before fixes could be created and prior to completing research on a number of additional vulnerabilities. Much of the work has been taken over by Louis’ friend and long-time colleague Robert E. Lee. The flaws have been around for a long time and would allow a low-bandwidth ‘sockstress’ attack to knock large machines off the net.”

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Apr 6 2009

Microsoft Boasts 96% Netbook Penetration

An anonymous reader writes “Citing figures from market research firm NPD, Microsoft says Windows’ share of the US netbook market has ballooned from less than 10% in the first half of 2008 to 96% as of February. ‘The growth of Windows on netbook PCs over the last year has been phenomenal,’ wrote Brandon LeBlanc, Microsoft’s in-house Windows blogger, in a post Friday. Information Week author Paul McDougall notes Microsoft’s 8% decline in Windows sales is due to netbooks sporting Linux. How does Redmond make an 80% gain in netbook market share without the sales numbers reflecting that gain?”

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Apr 6 2009

Google Chrome on Linux is Coming! (Screenshots!)

Screenshots of the pre-alpha builds of Google Chrome

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Apr 6 2009

Linux : Basics, Finding The Right Applications.

Now that you’ve decided to try Linux, you might be wondering what applications are available to perform all the tasks that you used to do on a Windows or Mac system. We’ve compiled quite a few of them at TechRepublic, so I rounded up some of the best lists to share with beginners:

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Apr 5 2009

Google and Nokia Catch Netbook Mania

Unlike most netbooks which run Windows or Linux, these netbooks will be running Symbian

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Apr 5 2009

Linux : Linux GUI diff utilities a visual tour.

If you edit a lot of configuration files, and are confronted a lot with the configuration files edited by others, you probably spend a lot of time looking at the changes made to the file since the last time it was edited or installed. The standard command line utility diff does a reasonable job when it comes to finding small differences.

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Apr 5 2009

Debian Gets FreeBSD Kernel Support

mu22le writes “Today Debian gets one step closer to really becoming ‘the universal operating system’ by adding two architectures based on the FreeBSD kernel to the unstable archive. This does not mean that the Debian project is ditching the Linux kernel; Debian users will be able to choose which kernel they want to install (at least on on the i386 and amd64 architectures) and get more or less the same Debian operating system they are used to. This makes Debian the first distribution, and probably the first large OS, to support two completely different kernels at the same time.”

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Apr 5 2009

First Look at SUSE Studio

Real life application of this service has so much potential that its amazing, not because it is unique (which its not), but how simple and fast it is to build your own custom Linux distribution.

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Apr 5 2009

Linux Foundation To Host Intel’s Moblin Project

gustavopuy writes with news that Intel will be transferring control of Moblin, its Linux-based OS for mobile devices, to the Linux Foundation. Quoting Ars Technica: “We spoke with Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin, who told us that the Linux Foundation offers a vendor-neutral setting for advancing the Moblin project. He believes that such an environment will help stimulate third-party involvement in the process of building the platform and could also encourage broader adoption. … Zemlin explained that the Linux Foundation’s stewardship of the project will empower third-party contributors to expand the platform beyond its Intel-specific roots. He assures me that Intel sees value in making Moblin open to everyone — including companies that are leveraging Linux on competing processors, such as those based on the ARM architecture.”

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Apr 4 2009

ARM — Heretic In the Church of Intel, Moore’s Law

ericatcw writes “For 30+ years, the PC industry has been as obsessed with under-the-hood performance: MIPs, MHz, transistors per chip. Blame Moore’s Law, which effectively laid down the Gospel of marketing PCs like sports cars. But with mobile PCs and green computing coming to the fore, enter ARM, which is challenging the Gospel according to Moore with chips that are low-powered in both senses of the word. Some of its most popular CPUs have 100,000 transistors, fewer than a 12 MHz Intel 286 CPU from 1982 (download PDF). But they also consume as little as a quarter of a watt, which is why netbook makers are embracing them. It’s “megahertz per milli-watt,”that counts, according to ARM exec Ian Drew, who predicts that 6-10 ARM-based netbooks running Linux and costing just around 0 should arrive this year starting in July.”

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