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Chef Engineer Leaves the Company After Receiving Death Threats From Its Open Source Community

 A release engineer from Chef, the company providing commercial support for the open-source Chef configuration management tool, said in a blog post Wednesday that he is leaving the company after being harassed by members of the Chef community for his contributions to the open source project.

IBM Doubles Down on Linux

IBM rolls out Power Systems Linux support and training across its customer-facing technology centers.

Device Tree Overlay Support Lands Upstream

Pantelis Antoniou originated device tree overlay support for the purpose of enabling dynamic hardware configuration under Linux on devices like BeagleBone that use device tree for hardware configuration. Device tree was introduced to Linux for the purpose of putting the description of hardware into data structures, rather than building it up programmatically, greatly reducing the amount of code required to be maintained within the Linux kernel sources.Until now, the device tree data structure was only processed at boot time and that simply can’t work for devices that might change hardware configurations after boot. While many BeagleBone capes can be probed by the bootloader, a common use-case is hardware that is reconfigurable. The most obvious example is a cape with an FPGA on it.

Pantelis’ early code was used in the kernel provided with the launch of BeagleBone Black. This became the standard for how BeagleBone cape hardware is supported with numerous tutorials showing up and probing of the on-board cape EEPROMs by Capemgr. This was all done specifically for BeagleBone kernels and was not part of mainline Linux until today whenLinus’ accepted Pantelis’ patch for device tree transactional supportwhich introduces changesets to device tree support.

Read more at Beagleboard.org. 

Git 2.1 Released: What’s New

Two-and-a-half months after Git 2.0, a new version of Git has been released. Though a minor update, the list of new features and improvements is large.

The complete release notes can be found on git repository and provide full details about what can be found in Git 2.1. What follows provides a minimal selection of new features in Git 2.1.

Read more at InfoQ.

The Most Energy Efficient Radeon GPU For AMD Linux Gaming

In continuation of yesterday’s 20-Way Radeon Comparison With Open-Source Graphics For Steam On Linux Gaming, here’s a look at the most (and least) energy efficient Radeon GPUs when running Steam games on Linux along with other OpenGL tests while using the very latest open-source graphics drivers.

Read more at Phoronix

IBM Watson Delves Even Deeper Into Data

IBM beefed up its Watson cognitive computing system to show formerly unseen connections in data that can lead to breakthrough discoveries.

Read more at eWeek

2014 Kernel OPW Internship Report

The main goal of the OPW internship program is to create a long-term relationship between the mentee, the mentor, and their open source community, in order encourage minorities to continue to contribute to open source. How are we progressing towards the goal of creating more women kernel developers? Are the women who complete OPW kernel internships continuing to work on open source projects after their internship ends? Do they find jobs where they can be paid to work on open source?

In order to measure this, I created a longitudinal study to measure open source contributions of OPW alumni. I’ll send out the survey every 6 to 12 months, and compare the results of the program over time. The most recent survey results from our eleven Linux Kernel OPW alumni shows the program is successful at encouraging women to continue to participate in open source.

LibreOffice 4.3.1 Released

LibreOffice 4.3.1 (codenamed “Fresh”) has been released ahead of the LibreOffice Conference next week in Bern, Switzerland…

Read more at Phoronix

Samsung Announces the Gear S While LG Officially Unveils the G Watch R

We know that September is going to be busy, but this week is turning out to be active too with two new smartwatches announced by Samsung and LG ahead of the IFA event.

Supercomputing Hummingbirds and How they Hover

hummingbird

“For a hummingbird with only a 10 centimeter wingspan, the unsteady aerodynamics is complex enough to require millions of mesh points to resolve the many, many small vortices stirred up by the wings — the bird essentially is flying in an ‘ocean of vortices.’ Therefore, efficient algorithms and high-performance computing are necessary for this work.”

The post Supercomputing Hummingbirds and How they Hover appeared first on insideHPC.

 
Read more at insideHPC