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Sobell Compiles Top-Notch Practical Linux Guide

Not everyone who dabbles in the realm of the Linux OS needs all the enterprise-specific tutelage this guidebook offers. However, it certainly has chapters to enlighten even casual readers interested in learning really useful stuff about using Linux in general. Sobell assembles in one spot his accumulated experience as a Linux expert and his keen insights about succeeding with two enterprise workhorse distributions in the workplace. He has a decided flare for explaining Linux.

Read more at LinuxInsider

BFS Scheduler 0.446 Supports The Linux 3.13 Kernel

For users of the BFS scheduler patches to the kernel, they have been updated this week for the Linux 3.13 kernel…

Read more at Phoronix

Distribution Release: Beyond Linux From Scratch 7.5

Bruce Dubbs has announced the release of Beyond Linux From Scratch (BLFS) 7.5, a book that builds on top of the Linux From Scratch (LFS) project by adding additional desktop and server software.

Read more at DistroWatch

Red Hat brings Microsoft .NET Apps to its OpenShift Cloud

In a surprising move, Red Hat will enable users to run .NET applications and SQL Server on its OpenShift Platform-as-a-Service cloud.

Red Hat Linux Now Available on Amazon’s Secure Federal Cloud

If you’re a government worker and have been wanting to run Red Hat Enterprise Linux securely on your Amazon cloud, it’s your lucky day. The popular open-source operating system is finally available on Amazon Web Services.

Critical Crypto Bug Leaves Linux, hundreds of Apps Open to Eavesdropping

Hundreds of open source packages, including the Red Hat, Ubuntu, and Debian distributions of Linux, are susceptible to attacks that circumvent the most widely used technology to prevent eavesdropping on the Internet, thanks to an extremely critical vulnerability in a widely used cryptographic code library.

The bug in the GnuTLS library makes it trivial for attackers to bypass secure sockets layer (SSL) and Transport Layer Security (TLS) protections available on websites that depend on the open source package. Initial estimates included in Internet discussions such as this one indicate that more than 200 different operating systems or applications rely on GnuTLS to implement crucial SSL and TLS operations, but it wouldn’t be surprising if the actual number is much higher. Web applications, e-mail programs, and other code that use the library are vulnerable to exploits that allow attackers monitoring connections to silently decode encrypted traffic passing between end users and servers.

Read more at ArsTechnica.

Sub-$400 CyanogenMod-Powered Smartphone Details Emerge

OnePlus’s forthcoming CyanogenMod smartphone will come in 16GB and 64GB versions, and looks like it won’t be a phablet.

Mesa 10.1 Released With Many Open-Source Driver Improvements

Mesa 10.1 was released this morning as the latest three-month update to this 3D library and graphics driver stack used throughout the Linux desktop ecosystem. With Mesa 10.1 there are tons of improvements, while one of the big highlights is OpenGL 3.3 support for the open-source Radeon and Nouveau drivers.

Read more at Phoronix

[$] A Longstanding GnuTLS Certificate Validation Botch

Something rather reminiscent of Apple’s “goto fail;” bug has been found, but this time it hits rather closer to home for the free software community since it lives in GnuTLS. Certificate validation for SSL/TLS has been under some scrutiny lately, evidently to good effect. But this bug is arguably much worse than Apple’s, as it has allowed crafted certificates to evade validation checks for all versions of GnuTLS ever released since that project got started in late 2000.

Read more at LWN

 

Humble Mobile Bundle 4 is Now Live!

The Humble Mobile Bundle is back and with it six awesome Android games.

Read more at Muktware