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Powering the Open Data Center

In this video and guest blog, Mauri Whalen, vice president, Intel Corporation and director, Open Source Technology Center Core System Software, gives us a preview of her keynote, “The Power Behind the Open Data Center” at LinuxCon, CloudOpen, and ContainerCon North America in Seattle, Aug. 17-19, 2015. 

Mauri WhalenWherever you look in today’s business computing environment, amazing innovation is happening. If you’re not paying attention you risk missing out and falling behind. The challenge, of course, is deciding where you will focus. Right now I am spending a lot of time on cloud computing and the convergence of public and private clouds.

Perhaps no market segment embodies the rapid pace of change we’re seeing better than the data center. Enterprises are continually challenged to deliver more: more computing capacity, more storage, more data transfers, more bandwidth, and more data analytics. Businesses of all sizes are wrestling with questions related to scalability, reliability, and how to process and present vast amounts of information—both to customers and for internal use.

In my role, I see a lot of technology developments, and I am constantly amazed at the power of collaboration to bring about new ideas and innovations. I am so grateful I get to work with Linux and the open source culture every day because they have fueled a great deal of innovation at every layer of the stack, from open computing to virtualization to orchestration.

This incredible innovation is the direct result of a willingness to collaborate. We as an industry do best when we listen, learn, and work with one another. I’ve lost count of how many times I thought I had a technology figured out and then someone goes and puts a new twist on it. Advancements like our Intel® Clear Containers or graphics virtualization don’t happen in a vacuum. They are possible because we collaborate and challenge existing ideas of what’s possible, then innovate on top of those expectations. They continue to get better as we develop them with others in the open.

Open source leadership is a big responsibility for Intel. When we take leadership positions in the open source ecosystem, it pushes us to advance the entire industry along with our company. In that mindset, Intel is investing a tremendous amount to continue expanding the boundaries of what technology can do for the data center and to ensure there is an ecosystem that facilitates the innovation required to meet enterprise demands and spur adoption.

You can see that commitment through our investments in the OpenStack Foundation, our work with major open source projects, and through our partnerships as part of the recently announced Intel® Cloud for All initiative.

We recognize our success with customers and end users is directly related to providing leadership and influence to the open source projects we participate in. After all, you can’t just sign an agreement with Linux and expect to take a leadership position. It’s contributions that count.

I’m excited to see where we will take this industry, together.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t8p7XxqK4y0″ frameborder=”0

3 Twitter Clients For Linux That You Don’t Want To Miss


3 twitter clients for linux and more

Do you use Twitter? Ofcourse. Do you access twitter through web browser to get notifications? Yes. Then you are missing out some great apps that can provide you the same features as web twitter client. There are numerous of twitter clients for Linux that notify on the desktopwhenever something happens on twitter. I’m compiling a list of 3 twitter clients for Linux that you will find very useful. So let’s get started!

Read At LinuxAndUbuntu

GitHub Raises $250M Series B Round To Take Risks

GitHub, the software development collaboration and version control service based on the popular open source Git tool, today announced that it has raised a $250 million funding round led by Sequoia Capital. Andreessen Horowitz, Thrive Capital and Institutional Venture Partners also participated in this round.

The company, which was founded back in 2008, has now taken a total of $350 million in outside funding. While the company isn’t talking about its valuation, the WSJ reports that it’s currently hovering around $2 billion. GitHub’s 2012 Series A round was led by Andreessen Horowitz. At the time, the company’s valuation was said to be around $750 million.

Read more at TechCrunch.

Upgrading Fedora Easily To Mesa 10.7/Git

With all of the Mesa OpenGL 4 happenings — and most recently OpenGL 4.1 for RadeonSI — you may be wondering how to run this latest code prior to its official release in September…

Read more at Phoronix

Tizen 2.3.1 and Tizen 2.4 Beta SDK Mobile Preview announced at Tizen Developer Summit 2015 Bengaluru India

  At the Tizen Developer Summit 2015 (TDS) event in Bengaluru, India July 30-31, Samsung has announced new Tizen SDKs for their Smartphones, Smartwatches, and Smart TVs. The Summit is focused in helping to grow the Tizen ecosystem by educating developers to the Tizen Operating System. Samsung are still offering developers 100% revenue for their

The post Tizen 2.3.1 and Tizen 2.4 Beta SDK Mobile Preview announced at Tizen Developer Summit 2015 Bengaluru India appeared first on Tizen Experts.

Read more at Tizen Experts

LibreOffice 4.4.5 “Still” Arrives with Over 80 Fixes

The Document Foundation announced that LibreOffice 4.4.5 has been released and is now available for download. Until the launch of the new LibreOffice 5.0, in August, this is the most advanced version of the office suite you can find.

Despite the fact that a new major upgrade is planned for LibreOffice, the developers of the office suite have no intention of dropping this branch. In fact, a few other updates are planned for this branch and the Document Foundation will contin… (read more)

Development release: Elive 2.6.8 (Beta)

The developers of Elive, a commercial distribution based on Debian which features the Enlightenment desktop, have released a new test release. Elive 2.6.8 Beta offers better touchpad support, fixes large fonts when using some NVIDIA video cards and makes Zsh the default command line shell. The release announcement….

Read more at DistroWatch

What It Takes Porting Qt Applications To Wayland

KDE KWin maintainer Martin Gräßlin held a session at this week’s Akademy 2015 conference about porting applications to Wayland…

Read more at Phoronix

How To Install Ntopng on Ubuntu 14.04

ntop

This tutorial we will show you how to install Ntopng on Ubuntu 14.04. For those of you who didn’t know, Ntopng is a relatively useful tool if you are looking to monitor different network protocols on your servers. It provides a bunch of tools for monitoring various protocols, traffic variants, and yes, bandwidth across multiple time frames. ntopng is based on libpcap and it has been written in a portable way in order to virtually run on every Unix platform, MacOSX and on Win32 as well.

This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of linux, know how to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own VPS. The installation is quite simple. I will show you through the step by step installation Ntopng on Ubuntu 14.04 server.

Read more at idroot

Announcing the General Availability of Oracle Linux 6.7

We’re happy to announce the general availability of Oracle Linux 6 Update 7, the seventh update release for Oracle Linux 6. You can find the individual RPM packages on the Unbreakable Linux Network (ULN) and our public yum repository and ISO installation images are available for download from the Oracle Software Delivery Cloud.

Oracle Linux 6 Update 7 ships with the following kernel packages:

 

  • Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel (UEK) Release 3 (kernel-uek-3.8.13-68.3.4.el6uek) for x86-64
  • Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel (UEK) Release 2 (kernel-uek-2.6.39-400.250.7.el6uek) for i386 
  • Red Hat Compatible Kernel (kernel-2.6.32-573.el6) for i386 and x86-64

Read more at the Oracle Linux Blog.