Home Blog Page 1241

Linus Torvalds on Why He Isn’t Nice

On Friday in Australia—meaning Thursday in the United States, because, well, time zones—Linux kernel creator Linus Torvalds ended a keynote presentation at a New Zealand open source conference by offering flip responses to questions about diversity, future projects, and his gruff attitude toward Linux developers.

Following his keynote speech at the Linux.conf.au Conference in Auckland, New Zealand, Torvalds opened a Q&A session by fielding a question from Nebula One developer Matthew Garrett that accused Torvalds of having an abrasive tone in the Linux kernel mailing list. “Some people think I’m nice and are shocked when they find out different,” Torvalds said in response (quoted via multipleTwitteraccounts of the event). “I’m not a nice person, and I don’t care about you. I care about the technology and the kernel—that’s what’s important to me.”

 

Read more at Ars Technica

GNOME Puts Out A Laptop Battery Testing Program

The newest GNOME application is for testing your laptop’s battery power use under various scenarios…

Read more at Phoronix

Google Opens Up Cloud Monitoring Service to Developers

Featuring full integration of the technology from Google’s acquisition of Stackdriver last year, Google Cloud Monitoring has arrived. It’s a tool that developers can leverage to monitor the performance of application components. If you’re a Google Cloud Platform customer you can try it out for free beginning immediately. Here are more details.

Eight months ago, Google brought Stackdriver to its bag of technology tols. The company announced Stackdriver’s initial Google Cloud Platform integration at Google I/O in June 2014 and made the service available to a limited set of alpha users. Since then, the team has been working to make operations easier for Google Cloud Platform and Amazon Web Services customers, and hundreds of companies are now using the service for that purpose. 

 

Read more at Ostatic

NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 Specs Finally Confirmed

After months of waiting and combing through contradictory reports, the GeForce GTX 960 graphics card has finally been detailed properly, even if NVIDIA hasn’t actually launched the product.

As far as anyone knows, the official release date continues to be January 22, 2015, exactly one week from now (January 15, 2015).

Nevertheless, thanks to some leaked slides, we now have an idea of what we will have on our hands once the day finally comes. And the answer is actually quite encouraging.

It’… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Gunslugs 2 Is a Contra 2-like Action Game for Linux

Gunslugs 2, a new 2D side scrolling arcade shooter that draws its inspiration from games like Contra, has been published on Steam and is also available for Linux users.

Gunslugs 2 is developed and published by a studio called Orangepixel. The makers of the game did a simultaneous release for all the platforms, including the Linux one, although it’s not really a surprise given the fact that it’s not using a terrible complicated graphics engine.

“The Black Duck Army is back with new domination… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

Professional Software for Digital Painting Krita Receives Numerous Fixes

Krita, an application that is used to make digital painting files from scratch, has been updated to version 2.9 Beta 2 and it comes with a large number of improvements and various fixes.

Professional applications that can be used for design are not usually free, but this is Linux and things are quite different. Krita is actually a great application that comes with zero costs and numerous features. Even if you don’t find some features right from the start, you can submit a fix and the develope… (read more)

Read more at Softpedia News

OIC Releases Software Framework for IoT Standard

The group, which unveiled a preview release of IoTivity, is one of several developing open-source code to enable IoT products to interoperate.

Read more at eWeek

Distribution Release: Tails 1.2.3

Tails 1.2.3, the latest update of the distribution designed to preserve privacy and anonymity while browsing the Internet, has been released: “Tails, The Amnesic Incognito Live System, version 1.2.3, is out. This release fixes numerous security issues and all users must upgrade as soon as possible. On January….

Read more at DistroWatch

​Why MariaDB Says MaxScale Will Make Life Easier for Developers and Admins

With the availability of open-source MaxScale, database firm MariaDB thinks the middleware will have a big impact on developers and database admins.

Read more at ZDNet News

Should You Use Linux for A Start Up?

Let me tell you a story: You’ve drafted your business plan and you’ve got funding. You are a tech business and you’ve got to decide a few things. You’ve got 20-50 employees who are going to be working around the clock on the next big thing and you need to determine your OS. Are you going to go with something stable, compatible, but vulnerable like a Windows version? Are you sucked into some Mac OS because of some proprietary hardware of software? Honestly, the best bet for your is (surprise surprise) a version of Linux. As you can get some stable builds for free, what’s your overhead going to be? If you are really concerned, why not dual boot  windows and ubuntu?

 

Well, once you’ve got your system up and running and your employees in the office you need to consider a few other things from a tech perspective. Security is first and foremost. While we all know how the NSA uses (or used, who knows now) SELinux and that the Linux kernel is very security focused, there are a few other ways you can boost it. If you are still looking at the zero cost avenue and you have some pretty major security concerns you can run Fedora on all your computers like Linus Torvalds does. There are other security concerns however. Like, since not everyone knows how to rebuild a kernel when you get some critical error, you’ll need someone to recover your data. Since that is really your only overhead, other than an IT guy who is familiar with Linux, it’s well worth the risk.

 

So, is Linux really worth it for your startup? Yes, but you have to know what you are looking to do. Since there are so many distributions, you are going to need to research which ones you are going to use and which one is the best fit for your needs. I talked about Fedora as a security conscious one, Ubuntu/Debian (with unity) for a more user friendly approach, or even something like Kali Linux for pen testing.

 

My personal experiences with Linux in the workplace actually started shortly after I adopted Linux on my home PC (well I was am still am dual booting Windows). I was at a startup who had installed Ubuntu on all the desktops, other than a few, and had no idea what they were doing. Luckily the IT guy and myself both were familiar enough with it to work through some of the early problems (mostly on the fly problem solving). Once we got past the growing pains that all start ups go though, we were in the clear. It saved the company a lot of money and, even though the new people we eventually hired did grumble about having to learn a new OS, it eventually worked out for the best.