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Microsoft Appeals to Developers, Developers, Developers

Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer became infamous in 2006 after leading a Microsoft Windows meeting in a chant, “developers, developers, developers.” While the images of him clapping his hands and screaming became the target of the early social media and YouTube culture, he was right with his intention. Developers are the masters of the universe (at least in the world of software), and Microsoft gets it.

Today the company is making a rather big announcement: It is open sourcing the server side .NET stack and expanding it to run on Linux and Mac OS platforms. All developers will now be able to build .NET cloud applications on Linux and Mac. These are huge moves for the company and follow its recent acknowledgement that at least 20 percent of Azure VMs are running Linux. This struck a chord in the Twittersphere but wasn’t all that surprising when you consider how pervasive Linux is in the cloud.

These changes make us keenly aware of how much the software business has transformed over the last decade. Microsoft is redefining itself in response to a world driven by open source software and collaborative development and is demonstrating its commitment to the developer in a variety of ways that include today’s .NET news. A few years ago it was among the top 20 corporate contributors to the Linux kernel. It participates in the open SDN projectOpenDaylight, and the open IoT effort the AllSeen Alliance. And this year Microsoft joined the Core Infrastructure Initiative focused on funding critical open source projects running the world’s infrastructure. We do not agree with everything Microsoft does and certainly many open source projects compete directly with Microsoft products. However, the new Microsoft we are seeing today is certainly a different organizationwhen it comes to open source.

The company’s participation in these efforts underscores the fact that nothing has changed more in the last couple of decades than how software is fundamentally built. Today most software is built collaboratively. The very nature of open source development is to accelerate technology, which is why competition today is so fierce and things move faster than ever before.

I think we’re seeing the “Pareto principle” in software. In business there is a common rule that 80 percent of your sales come from 20 percent of your clients. Similarly in software we are seeing that 80 percent of a stack is comprised of open source software and 20 percent is being made up of custom or proprietary software. As a result, companies and individuals are hustling to understand how to harness collaborative development to advance new technologies and transform markets.

Microsoft understands that today’s computing markets have changed and companies cannot go it alone the way they once did. Open source has fundamentally altered the software industry and that puts developers, developers, developers in charge.

Microsoft to Open Source More of .NET, and Bring it to Linux, Mac OS X

Microsoft is porting its server-side .NET stack to Linux and Mac OS X, and is making more of that stack available as open source.

Why Samsung Should Dominate Home Automation

Samsung could be the Apple of home automation – if only the company decided to truly focus on this growing market.

Read more at Datamation

Mageia 5 Beta Released 1.5 Months Late

While Mageia 5 has been in an alpha state going back several months during the summer, the beta release of this Mandriva-derived distribution has finally materialized… one and a half months later than was originally anticipated…

Read more at Phoronix

A Proposed Policy to Remove Unfixable Packages from Ubuntu

In response to the recent ownCloud troubles, Martin Pitt has put together a proposal allowing for the removal of problematic packages from the Ubuntu repositories in the future. “In rare cases, an universe package becomes actively detrimental in stable releases: If it is unmaintained in Ubuntu and has unfixed security issues or got broken because of changing network protocols/APIs, it is better to stop offering it in Ubuntu altogether rather than continuing to encourage users to install it.” Comments are requested.

Read more at LWN

Shell Shock Vulnerability, Please Update Your Mandriva Products

 

ShellShockAt the end of september, the Shell Shock vulnerability was discovered and has raised a strong concern from all IT security services. Indeed, the flaw in the Unix bash shell exposes the majority of computers running Linux.

To protect your assets from this threat, Mandriva’s technical teams working on Pulse and MBS have published a patch.

We invite you to update your products, if you haven’t done it yet.

If you are not covered by a support contract which allows you to obtain the required update of your product, don’t worry, simply contact us by email :
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or by phone : +33 1 76 64 16 60.

 

Access all Open Hardware Summit 2014 Videos!

Just one month after the Open Hardware Summit in Rome, all the videos are now available for you to see. Our cherrypicks suggestions goes to: Welcome by Addie Wagenknecht and Opening Remarks by David Cuartielles Eric Pan – Design From Manufacture Adrian Bowyer – Giving Manufacturing a New Life All Open Hardware Summit 2014 videos […]

Read more at Open Electronics

Six Ways Android Still Beats the iPhone and iPad

The Android platform continues to enjoy significant advantages over that offered by Apple, and this is why it remains the platform of choice for business, BYOD, and power users.

Turn Your Raspberry PI into an Oscilloscope with BitScope

Let’s turn Raspberry Pi into an analogic/digital measurment tool with BitScope Micro, the most recent product of the BitScope tools generation. As hinted by the name, its calling is the measurement of digital signals. The software is available for the GNU/Linux, Windows and Mac/OS X platforms. 

 
Read more at Open Electronics

Recovering USB Key Data With Foremost

The other day I was asked to help someone with a failing USB key someone had important data on. In Windows the key prompted the person to format the key, which they didn’t want to do since they had lots of data on the key already. In Linux dmesg showed the correct size of the key, but didn’t show any partitions. Under both operating systems the key appeared to be write protected so even if the end user wanted to format the key it wouldn’t partition or format under either OS. In the end we managed to recover over 1,000 files stored on the key using foremost.

Read more at Charles McColm’s blog.