Apr 1 2009

CloudLeft Public License Closes User Data Loophole

FreedomFighter writes “In a Cloud Standards breakthrough, the FSF is teaming up with major cloud computing vendors to form the Free and Open Cloud Alliance (FOCA), a trade marketing association supporting Free(TM) and Open Cloud Computing (FOCC). The new CloudLeft Public License (CPL) is based on the ideas that data wants to be Free(TM) and all your Cloud(TM) are belong to us. It closes the ‘user data loophole’ by requiring the release of not only the source code for a CloudLeft platform but also the data passing through it. This renders most security issues void while appropriately setting the users’ expectation of privacy. ‘In the past, I’ve said that “cloud” is complete gibberish, but while discussing fashion during my weekly squash game with Stallman he convinced me that this was a great opportunity.’ said Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle. RMS, who previously said that ‘cloud’ is worse than stupidity was also pleased about the return of the advertising clause, requiring the use of the ‘GNU/Cloud’ name, as he is ‘tired of haranguing the GNU/Linux community about this.’ Full details will be available next Monday, including the first marketing and outreach program — ‘FOCC: IT in 2009.'”

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Apr 1 2009

One giant step closer to the Google Linux desktop

According to the Wall Street Journal, HP and other major PC builders are considering building netbooks using the Google Linux-based Android operating system.

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Apr 1 2009

How-To: Install Ubuntu and Linux Apps on Your PlayStation 3

If you’re only using your 0 PlayStation 3 for console gaming, you’re missing out on half of its hidden versatility: the ability to upgrade into a fully functional PC!

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Apr 1 2009

Interview With the Author of "Mastering Cat"

Shlomi Fish writes “O’Reilly is publishing a new book titled ‘Mastering cat,’ about the UNIX ‘cat’ command. Here is an interview O’Reilly-Net conducted with the author about it. Read it to see if this book should be part of your bookshelf of technical books.”

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Mar 31 2009

8 Rocking Linux Distros

Defining the best Linux distros is like defining the best car–one does not exist; instead, the best cars are the ones that meet your needs, and your needs may vary wildly from the needs of another person. Just as an F150 might be the best vehicle for you and a Civic for me, Ubuntu might be what you need from Linux while I’ll be fine with DSL.

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Mar 31 2009

Shouldn’t Every Developer Understand English?

Pickens writes “Jeff Atwood has an interesting post that begins by noting that with the Internet, whatever country you live in or language you speak, a growing percentage of the accumulated knowledge of the world can and should be available in your native language; but that the rules are different for programmers. ‘So much so that I’m going to ask the unthinkable: shouldn’t every software developer understand English?’ Atwood argues that ‘It’s nothing more than great hackers collectively realizing that sticking to English for technical discussion makes it easier to get stuff done. It’s a meritocracy of code, not language, and nobody (or at least nobody who is sane, anyway) localizes programming languages.’ Eric Raymond in his essay ‘How to be a Hacker’ says that functional English is required for true hackers and notes that ‘Linus Torvalds, a Finn, comments his code in English (it apparently never occurred to him to do otherwise). His fluency in English has been an important factor in his ability to recruit a worldwide community of developers for Linux. It’s an example worth following.’ Although it may sound like The Ugly American and be taken as a sort of cultural imperialism, ‘advocating the adoption of English as the de-facto standard language of software development is simple pragmatism, the most virtuous of all hacker traits,’ writes Atwood. ‘If that makes me an ugly American programmer, so be it.'”

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Mar 30 2009

Wistron Firstbook Snapdragon-based 3G netbook

The Wistron Firstbook will have the ARM Snapdragon processor running within, and also holds the distinction of being the first Linux-based netbook. …

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Mar 30 2009

Is Linux ready for the "average" user?

The other day I realized that it had been a long time since I’d talked about Linux as a whole as opposed to looking at specific distros. Also, over the past few weeks I’ve spent quite a lot of time discussing Windows, in particular Windows 7, and Apple’s Mac OS X.

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Mar 30 2009

Attempting To Reframe "KDE Vs. GNOME"

jammag writes “Setting aside the now tired debate about whether KDE or GNOME is the ‘better’ Linux desktop, Bruce Byfield compares their disparate development approaches and asks, not which desktop is subjectively better, but which developmental approach is likely to be most successful in the next few years. ‘In the short term, GNOME’s gradualism seems sensible. But, in the long-term, it could very well mean continuing to be dragged down by support for legacy sub-systems. It means being reduced to an imitator rather than innovator.’ In contrast, ‘you could say that KDE has done what’s necessary and ripped the bandage off the scab. In the short term, the result has been a lot of screaming, but, in the long term, it has done what was necessary to thrive.'”

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Mar 28 2009

Citi Fuels Red Hat Takeover Talk

The better Red Hat performs, the more likely larger technology firms are going to come knocking.On Thursday, a day after the Linux software maker reported better than expected fourth-quarter results, Citigroup said that Red Hat is a “tempting acquisition target.”

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