Linux

PHP 5.3.1 released for 5 security flaws, 113 bugs

LXer - November 22, 2009 - 4:30am
The first update to PHP 5.3 is now available providing 5 security fixes in addition a long list of bug fixes to the popular open source dynamic language. PHP 5.3 was released at the end of June, so the 5.3.1 point update has been in the works for five months at this point.
Categories: Linux

Brazilian Breaks Secrecy of Brazil's E-Voting Machines With Van Eck Phreaking

Slashdot - November 22, 2009 - 3:11am
After the report last week that Brazil's e-voting machines had withstood the scrutiny of a team of invited hackers, reader ateu writes with news that a hacker has shown that the Linux-based voting machines aren't perfectly safe; he was able to eavesdrop on them (translated from Portuguese) by means of Van Eck phreaking.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Linux

LinuxCertified Announces its next Linux System and Network Administration BootCamp

Linux Today - November 22, 2009 - 2:03am
LinuxPR: This workshop is designed for busy information technology professionals and is designed to cover the most important Linux administration areas.


Categories: Linux

How Can Cool Penguins Have Such Hot Heads?

LXer - November 22, 2009 - 1:05am
I had a moment or two's identification with Caitlyn Martin, who blogged about fallout from a distro review. Yes, I, too, have noticed that there's a cult of sacred-cow-worshippers who take "Linux advocacy" to a dark extreme - believing that loving Linux means never admitting you're wrong. Hey, remember when I was down on Ubuntu? Things like that. I panned it at the time for exactly the same reasons that Caitlyn was down on Puppy - it wouldn't run on most of her machines.
Categories: Linux

The Problem With The Linux Community

Linux Today - November 22, 2009 - 12:03am
O'Reilly Broadcast: "There is too much fanaticism in the world, people getting all exited over nothing - over stuff which is meaningless. The really important and relevant stuff is ignored."


Categories: Linux

Ten Things Mobile Phones Will Make Obsolete

Slashdot - November 22, 2009 - 12:02am
An anonymous reader writes "recombu.com has an article examining ten things mobile phones will make obsolete, including phone booths, wristwatches and handheld games consoles. It's interesting to see how many devices have been absorbed into mobile phone technology, and it raises the question: are we better off having everything in one device? The author poignantly concludes that while it's great to have so much power at our fingertips, it does mean that some of us will rely on mobile phones for even basic mental tasks, which is great until the battery runs out." See also Isaac Asimov's The Feeling of Power.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Linux

Best Practices For Infrastructure Upgrade?

Slashdot - November 21, 2009 - 10:50pm
An anonymous reader writes "I was put in charge of an aging IT infrastructure that needs a serious overhaul. Current services include the usual suspects, i.e. www, ftp, email, dns, firewall, DHCP — and some more. In most cases, each service runs on its own hardware, some of them for the last seven years straight. The machines still can (mostly) handle the load that ~150 people in multiple offices put on them, but there's hardly any fallback if any of the services die or an office is disconnected. Now, as the hardware must be replaced, I'd like to buff things up a bit: distributed instances of services (at least one instance per office) and a fallback/load-balancing scheme (either to an instance in another office or a duplicated one within the same). Services running on virtualized servers hosted by a single reasonably-sized machine per office (plus one for testing and a spare) seem to recommend themselves. What's you experience with virtualization of services and implementing fallback/load-balancing schemes? What's Best Practice for an update like this? I'm interested in your success stories and anecdotes, but also pointers and (book) references. Thanks!"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Linux

Java Classic RPG Framework and Game SVN20091103 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Java Classic Role Playing Game Framework and Game

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Categories: Linux

Mechanical Tower 1.0.1 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Categories: Linux

Stellar Forces 0.3 (new)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Stellar Forces is a squad-level, turn based multi-player strategy game

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Categories: Linux

LTris 1.0.13 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Very polished tetris clone with CPU opponents.

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Categories: Linux

violetland 0.2.2 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Opensource crossplatform game similar to crimsonland

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Categories: Linux

Stendhal 0.79 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Stendhal is a fully fledged multiplayer online adventure game like Ultima Online

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Categories: Linux

BattleDuel 1.7.110a (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Java port of ArtilleryDuel clone

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Categories: Linux

BrisKola 1.0 (new)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
BrisKola is a clone of the Italian card game Briscola.

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Categories: Linux

Privateer: Ascii Sector 0.6.2 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
Roguelike variant of Wing Commander: Privateer

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Categories: Linux

HoldingNuts 0.0.5 (updated)

The Linux Game Tome - November 21, 2009 - 10:15pm
An open source poker client and server

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Categories: Linux

Microsoft, Other Rivals Slam Google Chrome OS

Slashdot - November 21, 2009 - 9:43pm
CWmike writes "Microsoft is, predictably, not all that impressed by Google Inc.'s demonstration of its upcoming Chrome OS. 'From what was shared, it appears to be in the early stages of development,' a Microsoft spokeswoman said. 'From our perspective, however, our customers are already voicing their approval of the way Windows 7 just works — across the Web and on the desktop, and on all sizes and types of PCs — purchasing twice as many units of Windows 7 as we've sold of any other operating system over a comparable time.' But neither were potential rivals who make Linux and instant-on operating systems. Chrome OS claimed 7-second boot times and the ability to run Web apps within another 3 seconds, which failed to impress Woody Hobbs, president and CEO of Phoenix Technologies, a long-time BIOS software maker that has re-invented itself with a Linux-based instant-on OS called HyperSpace. 'Instant-on is about being able to access your Internet applications in one second. Seven seconds is too long,' Hobbs said. 'There is no such thing as "cold boot" for today's mobile PCs such as netbooks and smartbooks. You should be able to use your netbook like you use your smartphone — a press of a button and you are "on."' Mark Lee, CEO of DeviceVM Inc., said Google's favoritism towards its own browser and Web apps could rub some users the wrong way, especially those outside of the US. 'In China, users prefer Baidu, not Google,' Lee said. DeviceVM's Splashtop platform boots into Firefox within seconds and uses Yahoo or Baidu as default search engines instead of Google."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Linux

First Malicious iPhone Worm In the Wild

Slashdot - November 21, 2009 - 8:37pm
An anonymous reader writes "After the ikee worm that displayed a picture of Rick Astley on jailbroken iPhones, the first malicious iPhone worm (Google translation; original, in Dutch) has now been discovered in the wild. Internet provider XS4ALL in the Netherlands encountered several of such devices (link in Dutch) on the wireless networks of their customers and put out a warning. After obtaining a copy of the malware it was discovered that the jailbroken phones, which are exploited through openSSH with a default password, scan IP ranges of mobile internet providers for other vulnerable iPhones, phone home to a C&C botnet server, are able to update themselves with additional malware and have the ability to dump the SMS database as well. Owners of a jailbroken iPhone with a default root password are advised to flash to the latest Apple firmware in order to ensure no malware is present."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Linux

Intel Linux Graphics Shine With Fedora 12

LXer - November 21, 2009 - 8:30pm
Intel's Linux graphics driver stack is often at the forefront of X.Org / Mesa innovations, from Intel being the first driver having in-kernel video memory management to being the first driver with mainline kernel mode-setting support to even being the driver that often first receives support for new OpenGL extensions in Mesa. The Intel Linux driver stack can be attributed with many firsts, but continually pushing this driver while putting out quarterly timed releases has led to some pains. Earlier this year in fact the driver stack was rather buggy -- especially in Ubuntu 9.04 -- that impaired many users with stability issues, performance problems, and other headaches. Most of the regressions from overhauling the Linux driver stack have been resolved, but where is the driver stack at now? The Intel stack in Ubuntu 9.10 is performing rather well, but where it's more important is its status within Fedora as more of the bleeding-edge graphics packages are pulled into this release that often don't make it into other distributions until months later when they roll out their next releases. To see where the Intel Linux graphics are at in Fedora 12, we ran the same set of benchmarks in the Fedora 10, 11, and 12 releases with an Intel G43 IGP.
Categories: Linux
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