If you love Debian, but miss GNOME 2; you should definitely try Point Linux. It comes with MATE desktop environment which is fork of GNOME2. The design goal of this distribution is to provide an easy to setup, user friendly, stable, fast and predictable operating system for the lovers of Linux desktop. This Linux distribution is targeted toward experienced users and IT sector. The latest version of this operating system Point Linux 3.0 is out now. Let’s see how we can install and get familiar with this distro. Read more at LinuxPitstop
Learn Linux Kernel Device Drivers With Linux Foundation Instructor Bill Kerr
Bill Kerr has taught Linux Foundation courses in Linux kernel internals, debugging, device drivers and application development for many years. He helped write the original Linux Foundation Training course materials and has been working with UNIX kernels for 35 years.
“I participated in two ports of Berkeley UNIX to new CPU architectures (National Semiconductor 32000 and Motorola 88000),” Kerr said. “I first tried Linux in 1996 and was pleasantly surprised to find it had a “look and feel” very similar to the Berkeley UNIX with which I was familiar.”
Here he tells us more about the courses he teaches, how his career developed, and spending his semi-retirement in the great outdoors of the Pacific Northwest.
What courses do you teach at The Linux Foundation?
Bill Kerr: LFD312 Developing Applications for Linux, LFD331 Developing Linux Device Drivers, and LFD320 Linux Kernel Internals and Debugging. I developed the original material for LFD411 Embedded Linux Development and have taught it several times. (I’m not currently active in embedded Linux development, so others, who are, have taken this class over.)
How long have you been teaching?
Kerr: I taught the C programming language over a dozen times in the 80’s and early 90’s. In 2000 I met (Linux Foundation Training Director) Jerry Cooperstein when we were both at another company. He was developing and teaching the ancestors of LFD331 and LFD320, and I taught both those early courses until around 2003 or 2004. I think I was the first instructor under Jerry when he joined the Linux Foundation, teaching LFD331, LFD320 and developing LFD411.
How did you get started with Linux?
Kerr: I’ve been working in the kernels of UNIX since 1980, and have worked with several UNIX “clones” as well. I participated in two ports of Berkeley UNIX to new CPU architectures (National Semiconductor 32000 and Motorola 88000). I first tried Linux in 1996 and was pleasantly surprised to find it had a “look and feel” very similar to the Berkeley UNIX with which I was familiar.
How did you learn?
Kerr: MSCS from Washington State, and several decades doing new-product engineering development, usually in the role of principal engineer and system architect. So, formal education and lots of on-the-job experience.
What is your area of expertise now?
Kerr: Kernel internals, device drivers, quite a bit about using UNIX/Linux as a productive work environment.
What projects are you involved in currently? What are you working on?
Kerr: I’m mostly retired, and enjoying myself playing in the outdoors around Portland, Oregon. I bike, hike, and kayak, though I’ve left mountaineering for the past few years.
Learn more about Linux Foundation Training courses and certification at http://training.linuxfoundation.org/.
Meet more Linux Foundation instructors:
Learn OpenStack with Linux Foundation Instructor Tim Serewicz
Learn Cloud Administration With Linux Foundation Instructor Michael Clarkson
Learn KVM and Linux App Development with Linux Foundation Instructor Mike Day
Learn Linux Performance and Scripting with Linux Foundation Instructor Frank Edwards
From Linux User, to Electrical Engineer, to Linux Foundation Instructor: Jan-Simon Möller
Open Sourcing the Census Project
The Census Project, developed by David Wheeler and Samir Khakimov of the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA), goes live today! CII co-funded the Census Project to automate analysis on a large number of open source projects to come up with a quick way to prioritize which projects to look at more closely. The Census Project calculates a “risk score” based on a number of metrics about the project, some of which are relatively static (language, website, network access) and some of which change over time (contributor count and popularity).
The results are fascinating.The Census Project is very, very good at identifying projects which are still widely popular, but which are hardly maintained. This is the sweet spot for the Core Infrastructure Initiative to look into to try to identify lurking issues and help find a way to fix them before they become problems for our core infrastructure.
Read more at Core Infrastructure Initiative Blog.
Canonical Closes HAProxy Issues in Ubuntu 15.04
Canonical published details a couple of days ago, in a security notice, about an HAProxy problem that was identified and fixed for its Ubuntu 15.04 and Ubuntu 14.10 operating systems.
According to Canonical, HAProxy could be made to expose sensitive information over the network. This is a load balancing reverse proxy, so it’s not really a major issue. Nonetheless, it would be a good idea to upgrade the system as soon as possible.
“It was discovered that HAProxy incorrect… (read more)
Ubuntu 15.10 Gets the Latest systemd 222
Ubuntu 15.10 is now in the middle of the development cycle, and developers are upgrading packages left and right. One of those packages is the systemd component, which has been recently made default in Ubuntu.
Ubuntu announced that it was adopting systemd shortly after the Debian project decided to make the switch, but the transition for Canonical’s OS has been much quieter and with a lot less drama. No one threatened to fork Ubuntu without systemd, and no one really cared,… (read more)
A New OpenSSL Vulnerability
The OpenSSL project has disclosed a new certificate validation vulnerability. “During certificate verification, OpenSSL (starting from version 1.0.1n and 1.0.2b) will attempt to find an alternative certificate chain if the first attempt to build such a chain fails. An error in the implementation of this logic can mean that an attacker could cause certain checks on untrusted certificates to be bypassed, such as the CA flag, enabling them to use a valid leaf certificate to act as a CA and ‘issue’ an invalid certificate.” This is thus a client-side, man-in-the-middle vulnerability.
The Critical Infrastructure Initiative Census Project
The Criticial Infrastructure Initiative (a Linux Foundation effort to direct resources to critical projects in need of help) has announced a census project to identify the development projects most in need of assistance. “Unlike the Fed’s stress tests, which are opaque, all of the census data and analysis is open source. We are eager for community involvement. We encourage developers to fork the project and experiment with different data sources, different parameters, and different algorithms to test out the concept of an automated risk assessment census. We are also eager for input to help sanitize and complete the data that was used in this first iteration of the census.“
Distribution Release: Point Linux 3.0
Peter Ryzhenkov has announced the release of Point Linux 3.0, a Debian-based distribution for the desktop with a choice of MATE and Xfce desktop environments. GNOME 3, used during the development and beta testing period, has been dropped and replaced with Xfce. From the release notes: “The Point….
Meizu MX4 Ubuntu Edition to Launch in India – Rumor
The Meizu MX4 Ubuntu Edition is available now in China and Europe (with restrictions), but it looks that it might launch in India as well, if we are to believe the rumors.
Canonical has an Ubuntu insiders program made out of people who get some of the devices ahead of time in order to test them, but the same people also get some interesting details about the future plans of the company. For example, one of the guys in this exclusive group shared some info about an upcoming … (read more)
IBM Puts NVIDIA Tesla K80 GPU on SoftLayer Cloud
IBM announced it is adding to the high-performance computing capabilities of the IBM Cloud by offering NVIDIA’s Tesla K80 GPU on SoftLayer.