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Samsung Sponsors The Development Of Enlightenment

November 19, 2009 - 3:30am
Back in June Enlightenment E16 reached version 1.0.0 and then a few weeks later there was an E17 development snapshot released, but there hasn't been a whole lot of news out of the Enlightenment camp over the past year. In fact, most new Linux users have likely never even heard of the Enlightenment. For the uninformed, Enlightenment is a window manager that has been around since 1997 but doesn't receive too much mainstream love. Fortunately though it now has the backing of a major electronics manufacturer who is also sponsoring its development.
Categories: Linux

Fedora 12 Installation and Post-Installation Guide

November 19, 2009 - 2:45am
Fedora 12 Constantine Installation and Post Installation guide. A detailed tutorial with screenshots to configure Fedora 12 (repositories, video and audio codecs, plymouth, flash etc.).
Categories: Linux

Fedora 12 Screen Shots

November 19, 2009 - 2:05am
Fedora 12 includes a robust feature set for desktop users, administrators, developers and open source enthusiasts alike. New enhancements available in Fedora 12 include next-generation Ogg Theora video, virtualization improvements and advancements to NetworkManager, among numerous others. Screenshots at SEO Expert Consultants
Categories: Linux

Upgrade from Fedora11 to Fedora12 Constantine

November 19, 2009 - 1:30am
As everybody knows ,Fedora 12 is out, If maybe you still running the old version like Fedora 11 or 10 and you need to upgrade to fedora12, then you have to know that upgarding to this release is only possible from Fedora 11, if you are using an older version, you will need first to upgrade to Fedora11 before to go to 12.
Categories: Linux

Lack of Innovation a Commonality for Microsoft, Apple

November 19, 2009 - 12:45am
Red faces all around at Redmond last week when Microsoft got caught distributing a utility to create bootable USB drives and DVD backup media from downloaded Windows 7 ISOs. There's nothing wrong with the company's USB/DVD Download Tool in and of itself, apart from the awkward fact (discovered by Rafael Rivera) that it contained code borrowed from an open source project originally made available under the GPLv2. As such, Microsoft should have made the source code for its tool available, and most certainly shouldn't have offered it under the license terms it did.
Categories: Linux

Open Web Foundation releases open specification agreement

November 19, 2009 - 12:05am
The Open Web Foundation (OWF), launched in July 2008 at OSCON, has announced that it has released its Open Web Foundation Agreement (OWFa) and the first ten specifications that are under this new agreement. The OWFa is akin to a open source licence for specifications, allowing companies to place specifications under a common recognised license. Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo and SafeMashUps are the first organisations to make use of the agreement.
Categories: Linux

Why 'Free as in Freedom' is More Important Than Ever for Linux Users

November 18, 2009 - 10:45pm
Bruce Byfield wonders why isn't "free as in freedom" more important to more Linux users? Is it all about free as in free of cost, or "free as in freeloader"?
Categories: Linux

This week at LWN: Gerrit: Google-style code review meets git

November 18, 2009 - 10:05pm
errit, a Git-based system for managing code review, is helping to spread the popular distributed revision control system into Android-using companies, many of which have heavy quality assurance, management, and legal processes around software. HTC, Qualcomm, TI, Sony Ericsson, and Android originator Google are all running Gerrit, project leader Shawn Pearce said in a talk at the October 2009 GitTogether event, hosted at Google in Mountain View.
Categories: Linux

Dell Shows Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx Some Love

November 18, 2009 - 9:30pm
As Canonical prepares to launch Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx) in April 2010, there are signs Dell will show considerable love to the Long Term Support (LTS) release. Here are some preliminary details about Dell’s look at Ubuntu 10.04.
Categories: Linux

Going Beyond Just Measuring Frame Rates

November 18, 2009 - 8:05pm
Yesterday marked the release of Phoronix Test Suite 2.2 and it was the best version yet with the addition of many new exciting and useful features. While this release was gratifying, there are much greater plans for the Phoronix Test Suite going into the next decade. It has already been shared that Windows support is coming, but there are other huge features coming too as soon as Q1'2010. Up to this point, most of the tests and the design of pts-core (the Phoronix Test Suite engine) have been focused on quantitative benchmarks with many of the tests spitting out a frame-rate, time, or some other measurement. However, now being supported in the Phoronix Test Suite is the ability to produce abstract results, such as screenshots used for image quality comparisons. The Phoronix Test Suite can now track the image quality of various test profiles (such as OpenGL games) across hardware configurations, drivers, and more.
Categories: Linux

SugarCRM Leaps Into Windows Azure Cloud

November 18, 2009 - 8:05pm
SugarCRM is the latest open source application provider to jump into Microsoft’s Windows Azure cloud. SugarCRM’s move reinforce’s Microsoft’s commitment to make Azure a widely supported cloud -- including both open and closed source application partners. Here's the scoop.
Categories: Linux

Mint 8 achieves RC1, and Fedora 12 goes final

November 18, 2009 - 6:45pm
The Linux Mint team has announced the first (RC1) release candidate of the Ubuntu 9.10-based Linux Mint 8. Meanwhile, the Fedora community has released the final version of Fedora 12, and an eWEEK review praises the release for its improved system privilege management and virtualization features.
Categories: Linux

Fedora 12 Takes Aim at Linux Networking

November 18, 2009 - 6:05pm
While the latest installment of the Red Hat-sponsored community Linux distribution offers many new features, at the top of the list for users including Fedora's project leader, Paul Frields, are improved networking capabilities that raise the bar for mobile connectivity on Linux. "The features that I feel closest to this time, and that have affected me, are the network manager improvements in mobile broadband, which are pretty extensive," Frields told InternetNews.com. "Not only do we have a provider database that makes it easy to tether your phone to your laptop and get online, but also we've got functions to allow use of newer EVDO cards and mobile USB interfaces that are out there."
Categories: Linux

AIX tips for Red Hat Enterprise Linux Admins

November 18, 2009 - 4:45pm
Sometimes, performing systems administration is comparable to learning similar languages. For example, if you have studied one of the Romance languages like French or Italian, you tend to recognize words in Spanish or Romanian with a fair degree of accuracy. The same is true for UNIX and Linux. There are enough commonalities between these various operating systems that major concepts traverse them but enough dissimilarity to make systems administration a challenge if all you have is the root password.
Categories: Linux

10 of the Best Free Linux CRM Software

November 18, 2009 - 4:45pm
In simple terms, Customer Relationship Management (CRM) represents the way an organisation keeps track with its existing and potential future customers. CRM software offers the means to support these processes. This type of software stores information about customers. But its functionality far extends that of say a traditional database. It also allows companies to measure and control contacts with customers, to provide the flexibility to get the right information to the right individual at the right time.
Categories: Linux

ZevenOS 2.0 Screen Shots

November 18, 2009 - 2:45pm
The typical BeOS like look has been improved with changes to Deskbar, icon theme and GTK+ theme. Disk Manager now supports auto-detection of BFS (BeOS) partitions and allows to mount them. ZevenOS 2.0 brings big changes like a completely new audio subsystem (PulseAudio), switch from HAL to DeviceKit, MagiKit - a standard application management layer, Remaster-Kit for easy ISO re-mastering, Encode and Super Encode - an all-in-one multimedia converting application, MAGI 2 - an application launcher, installer and configuration center. Screenshots at SEO Expert Consultants
Categories: Linux

Linux-based NAS device starts at $70

November 18, 2009 - 2:05pm
Addonics announced a low-cost, six-ounce network-attached storage (NAS) device for the SOHO market. The Linux-based Addonics Mini NAS offers a single 2.5-inch storage bay, an Ethernet port, a USB port, and multiple servers, including UPnP, and supports both SMB and open source Samba network protocols, says the company.
Categories: Linux

Linux Bug #1: Bad Documentation

November 18, 2009 - 1:30pm
The Internet and Google have made FOSS developers lazy because they have made it too easy to abdicate the job of proper documentation to "The community." Telling users and potential contributors to use Google, mailing lists, and forums is not documentation. It's a way to guarantee having fewer users, unhappy users, and fewer contributors.
Categories: Linux

Windows Mobile Possible 28% Loss of Market Share

November 18, 2009 - 12:45pm
According to a current Gartner study, Windows Mobile has lost 28% of the mobile market share over the last year. Winners at first are Apple and Blackberry, but open source systems are gaining over the long run.
Categories: Linux

Top 3 Sites To Help You Become A Linux Command Line Master

November 18, 2009 - 12:05pm
The truth about Linux today is that one may never have to actually touch a terminal or issue a single Linux command in order to run some versions of this flexible alternative operating system. While there are times when using the Linux command line could be expeditious and the benefits of possessing the ability to use it are numerous, many users can be intimidated by the prospect. They may think it’s too difficult or too much to remember. But once a user becomes accustomed to using the command line interface, it soon becomes the preferred method in many tasks. Not only is it much quicker to accomplish just about any given task at the command line, it opens a whole new world of possibilities. It allows the user to begin to understand how an operating system is structured and functions. It gives the user very powerful tools to do the things graphical interfaces will never be able to reproduce. And best of all, it’s just fun.
Categories: Linux