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OpenELEC 5.0.5 Embedded Linux Distro Now Ready for Download

Embedded operating system OpenELEC is an OS built specifically to run the Kodi (XBMC) media player hub. A new maintenance update has been released and is now available for download.

The previous release of OpenELEC was just a few days ago, but it looks like the developers have made some changes that warranted a new version. In fact, the number of changes is quite small and it’s unclear why they made this iteration available so quickly, but any update for this distro is good… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Intel Unveils Next-Generation Low-Power Atom SoCs

The lineup, which includes 14nm “Cherry Trail” chips and is aimed at smartphones, tablets, phablets and notebooks, will be introduced at the MWC show.

Read more at eWeek

Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge Already Up for Pre-Order in Europe

Samsung has just introduced the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge at MWC 2015, but the company didn’t make any official statements about the pricing of the devices.

However, luckily we still managed to find out the prices for the two handsets. The standard Samsung Galaxy S6 will be available in three v… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Google Confirms Android Pay: A Mobile Payments Layer ‘Anybody Can Build On’

Google has announced that it’s working on a new mobile payments framework named Android Pay. Speaking at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Google exec Sundar Pichai confirmed that this would not be a new product for users, but an “API layer” that allows other companies to support secure payments on Android in both physical stores and via apps.

“We are doing it in a way in which anybody else can build a payments service on top of Android,” said Pichai. “So, in places like China and Africa we hope that people will use Android Pay to build innovative services.”

Android Pay will support NFC and biometrics

Although Pichai did not explain the details of Android Pay to any great degree, he claimed it would “start with NFC” and eventually…

Continue reading…

Read more at The Verge

Blackphone Unveils a New Phone and Tablet Running Secure, Encrypted Android

Today at Mobile World Congress, the encrypted phone system Blackphone announced a new phone and tablet, along with a new business focus on enterprise. The phone is called the Blackphone 2, a successor to the first Blackphone shown at MWC last year, but adds a new processor, better screen, and a larger profile overall. The tablet, called the Blackphone+, is slated for release in the fall. Both run Blackphone’s secure OS, forked off of Android, which is designed to protect metadata and provide end-to-end encryption throughout.

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Read more at The Verge

How the Linux Kernel is Like an Open Source Turducken

Turducken photoI have a complicated relationship with portmanteaus.

On the one hand squashing two words together, to make a new mega-word, is profoundly handy and, in general, rather fun. Thanks to portmanteaus we have such life-changing, food-based, words as “spork”, “brunch” and “turducken”.

Of course, on the other hand, portmanteaus are responsible for unleashing such horrors as “Brangelina”, “Jazzercise” and “Clamato” on the world — crimes for which this linguistic bit of trickery should never be forgiven.

To say that portmanteaus are likely to be my “frenemy”, from here until the end of time, would be both accurate and prescient. Which, as it turns out, are two fun words to build portmanteaus out of.

Bear this in mind when I tell you that the first time I heard the word “coopetition” (“cooperation” and “competition” combined)… I wanted to kill it with fire.

But the idea… the idea is a glorious one. That two entities can simultaneously be fierce competitors and yet, at the same time, work together towards a common goal is just plain awesome. And it describes the Open Source world so perfectly.

Take OpenStack, for example. The top three engineers that contributecodetoOpenStack work (in order of reviewed code commits) for SUSE, HP and VMWare. SUSE, HP and VMWare each, as it happens, have built varied business models around OpenStack. Competitors? Sure. But, at the same time, companies (and people) working together for the benefit of all.

Ain’t Open Source grand?

When looking out at the Linux and greater Open Source world, examples of “coopetition” stretch out to the horizon. Ceph, Crowbar, Qt, GNOME and, heck, even the Linuxkernel itself are developed by individuals and companies (who would, often, be in competition) working together.

Live patching of the Linux kernel (being able to patch a running Linux kernel without needing to restart) being another great example. In April of 2014, the engineers at SUSE submitted the code for their solution (“kGraft”) to the kernel. Then, just one month later, the engineers at Red Hat submitted code for their solution (“kpatch”). Two different solutions created by software developers working at competing companies. In the months that followed, the engineers worked together to create a singlesolutionforlivepatching (based on the work already done) that would meet both of their needs.

That solution is now being released in the 4.0 version of the Linux kernel.

Two competitors working together (almost… cooperating, if you will) to the benefit of not only each other… but many, many others as well. This “coopetition” is at the core of how we, as an Open Source community, work together. Not just as companies and organizations — but on the individual level.

Recently I was down at the SouthernCaliforniaLinuxExpo (SCaLE) — spending several days giving (and watching) presentations, conversing and generally palling around with contributors to (and users of) just about every Open Source project under the sun. Even the (seemingly) fiercest of competitors band together — the KDE and GNOME teams, for example, joined forces to have a single, uber-booth (with the openSUSE crew). It was… awesome.

Not “turducken” awesome, mind you. But still darn great.

Bryan Lunduke is a Social Media Marketing Manager at SUSE. See some of his previous columns on Linux.com:

The 5 Biggest Linux Stories of 2014

Spooky Linux Urban Legends

23 Years of Terrible Linux Predictions

First Image of Meizu MX4 Ubuntu Edition at MWC 2015 Barcelona Revealed

Meizu is still not making a lot of noise with their Meizu MX4 Ubuntu Edition and they have posted a single image from Mobile World Congress 2015 in Barcelona.

The fact that Meizu is preparing to ship its MX4 with Ubuntu is no longer a secret, but with the exception of a few pieces of information put together by the press and various sources, very few things have actually transpired. Now Meizu has posted an image on various social media channels, and come to think of it, thi… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Semiconductor Firms NXP, Freescale Announce $40 Billion Merger

The companies are merging in a transaction which will create a new company worth just over $40 billion.

Read more at ZDNet News

Ubuntu MATE Donates Money to a Project That Helped Them with Features

Ubuntu MATE is not a small project anymore and it has a lot of fans. Many of these fans are donating money and the Ubuntu MATE devs are using some of those funds to sponsor other open source projects.

There was quite a furious debate in the Linux community about what the elementary OS devs said about financial contributions from the community. They didn’t say it exactly like this, but they felt that users should pay for projects they really like and use, like elementary OS … (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Thunderbird E-Mail Client Adoption Rises Despite Being Almost Dumped by Mozilla

Mozilla changed the development priority for Thunderbird a few years ago and said back then that it was no longer investing resources into an e-mail client, which they said would no longer be relevant. Now it looks that Thunderbird adoption is on the rise despite Mozilla’s predictions.

Mozilla Thunderbird is a very famous e-mail client, especially in the Linux world where there aren’t too many competitors for it. To be fair, Thunderbird is not the only application of its ki… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News