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Win XP Usage Down But Not Out as Support Cutoff Deadline Looms

Flee! Flee from XP, or from WAN sectors at least! – so say industry advisors

Windows XP usage on the web is decreasing as the venerable operating system edges ever closer towards its “end of life” from Microsoft support next week.…

Read more at The Register

LinuxCon North America 2014 Comes to Chicago

sharing open ideas

More than 100 sessions ranging from simple tutorials and workshops to deep technical dives and everything in between.

More than 1000 attendees to collaborate with, an opportunity to network with thought leaders in the open source world, and a world class venue at an international city.

Welcome to LinuxCon 2014 North America, the largest conference featuring Linux, taking place in Chicago, August 20 – 22, 2014 at the Sheraton Chicago hotel.

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Read more at OpenSource.com

Nautilus Terminal: An Embedded Terminal for Nautilus File Browser in GNOME

Terminal is one of the most important application in Linux which makes it possible for the end user to communicate to the Linux shell and pass instructions. There are several Terminal-like Application, available either in repository or by third party for most of the Standard Linux Distribution. But…

 
Read more at TecMint

Linux 3.15 Random To Support Intel’s RDSEED

The Linux 3.15 kernel’s /dev/random implementation will feature a new instruction of Intel’s upcoming Broadwell processors…

Read more at Phoronix

Wayland Gains Fullscreen Shell, Screen Sharing Support

Wayland’s Weston compositor has picked up support for the much talked about full-screen shell protocol…

Read more at Phoronix

How to Keep the Rush to Cloud from Clouding Enterprise Judgement

Enterprises are becoming increasingly entangled in cloud services, and there’s never been a greater need for architecture to clear things up.

Along with Cloud, We’re Getting More DevOps and IT Self-Service

Survey of more than 1,000 enterprises finds widespread embrace of developer-operations team alliances, driven by cloud.

“Open Network Linux” Could Boost Viability of Bare Metal Switches

LAS VEGAS—The Facebook-led Open Compute Project has spent the past year building an â€œopen†switch that can boot nearly any type of networking software, giving customers more alternatives to proprietary switch vendors like Cisco.

Intel, Broadcom, Mellanox, and Cumulus Networks jumped on board last November, contributing specifications and software that will bring the project closer to a finished design. They weren’t alone, though: Software-defined networking vendor Big Switch Networks in January donated what it calls Open Network Linux (ONL) to the project.

In an interview with Ars at this week’s Interop conference in Las Vegas, newly appointed Big Switch CEO Douglas Murray explained the company’s reasons for getting involved. As Big Switch noted in its announcement, ONL is “the Linux distribution for bare metal switches that runs underneath our commercial Switch Light OS. ONL’s goal is to give people deploying OCP [Open Compute Project] switches a simplified experience with a standard Linux distribution that comes prepackaged with all of the relevant drivers, loaders, and platform-independent goodness. If ONL is successful and becomes a popular distribution for open network hardware, it will also mean less integration work for hardware and software vendors and thus fewer bugs and other surprises once ONL-based products get to end customers.â€

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Read more at Ars Technica

Calligra 2.8 Is Too Sweet for Words Alone

If you spend any amount of time creating documents, graphics or organizing data into reports or visual presentations, drop whatever collection of tools you use and put the Calligra Suite to the test. The Calligra Suite is a forked set of office tools for the KDE desktop that branched off the stalled KOffice suite. However, you do not have to run the KDE environment in your Linux distro to get this intriguing advanced office suite. It runs on any desktop flavor.

Read more at LinuxInsider

Microsoft Open Sources a Big Chunk of .NET

SAN FRANCISCO—At its Build developer conference today, Microsoft announced that it was open sourcing a wide array of its .NET libraries and related technologies and creating a group, the .NET Foundation, to oversee the development and stewardship of the open source components.

Perhaps the highlight of the announcement today was that the company will be releasing its Roslyn compiler stack as open source under the Apache 2.0 license. Roslyn includes a C# and Visual Basic.NET compiler, offering what Microsoft calls a “compiler as a service.”

Many—though not all—compilers operate essentially as black boxes. They slurp in source code at the front, and spew out executable code at the back. With Roslyn, Microsoft is taking a different approach. The Roslyn compiler can be used as a library. When it reads a piece of source code, it produces an internal representation that third-party code can then manipulate and examine.

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Read more at Ars Technica