Steam for Linux has been taking off at an incredible pace. With an astounding 900 % increase over the last 12 months, Linux gamers could not be happier.
Read more at Muktware
Steam for Linux has been taking off at an incredible pace. With an astounding 900 % increase over the last 12 months, Linux gamers could not be happier.
Read more at Muktware
Want a tech job? Then polish up your Linux skills and you will be handsomely rewarded.
Samsung’s Gear smartwatch is a fine test balloon for its Tizen operating system. Even if Tizen can’t replace Android it’ll be good enough for the really small screen.
A Martian packet is nothing but an IP packet which specifies a source or destination address that is reserved for special-use by Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). You can log packets with un-routable source addresses on Linux operating system. This tutorial explains how to log spoofed packets on Debian / Ubuntu / CentOS / RHEL / Linux based server.
Linux: Log Suspicious Martian Packets / Un-routable Source Addresses
Vendor patches firmware, API server, smartphone apps
Samsung has a commanding Android lead in the enterprise with Motorola a strong No. 2. Given Lenovo’s acquisition of Motorola there’s a good chance the Android race will become more interesting in the enterprise.
Google wants the enterprise. It’s hungry for it. Microsoft has one important defensive weapon to keep it at bay…
Wayland clients running on the Weston compositor now have support for the minimize button…
Linux professionals are well paid and highly sought after by job recruiters, but that’s not why they chose their careers. They are motivated by their love of Linux and working with the latest, cutting edge technology, according to the annual Dice.com and Linux Foundation Linux Jobs Report released today.
Fifty-one percent of the more than 4,000 Linux professionals surveyed for the report said they are motivated by their passion for Linux, while 64 percent said they chose Linux because it’s so pervasive. Only 17 percent listed money as the No. 1 reason they chose Linux careers.
In fact, the top three reasons to be a Linux professional, according to survey respondents were:
1. Interesting projects
2. Working on the most cutting-edge technology challenges
3. More job opportunities.
Still, job satisfaction is only one component of recruiting and keeping talented Linux system administrators, system architects and developers. High salaries, bonuses and other perks do help help sway talent to consider new positions in an increasingly competitive job market.
As more companies use Linux throughout the enterprise – and companies that already use Linux, grow – demand for top talent has surged, bringing with it competitive job offers for Linux professionals, according to the report.
Ninety-three percent of the more than 1,100 hiring managers surveyed plan to hire Linux talent in the next six months. While 46 percent of hiring managers plan to increase the number of Linux pros they hire this year, compared with 43 percent who reported increased hiring in last year’s jobs report.
“Enterprises are increasingly describing Linux as a core part of the business,” said Shravan Goli, President of Dice in a press release. “In turn, hiring managers are turning up the dial on the incentives offered to technology talent with Linux skills.”
Linux professionals saw a 5 percent raise in average salary to $95,379 from $90,853 in 2013, compared with a tech industry average of 3 percent, we reported here last week. Companies are also offering more job perks. Thirty-eight percent of the 1,100 hiring managers surveyed for the Linux Jobs Report said they accommodate flexible work schedules or telecommuting and 32 percent offered salary increases above the company norm.
It’s little wonder then that 86 percent of Linux professionals said that knowing Linux has advanced their careers. Job opportunities abound, as 75 percent of those surveyed had at least one call from a recruiter in the past six months.
Given the high demand for these skills, said Linux Foundation Executive Director Jim Zemlin, “there is unlimited career advancement for developers and systems administrators who contribute to and seek out learning opportunities for Linux.”
One for the “It’s Complicated†Facebook relationship status. Verizon is today announcing that CloudBees Platform as a Service will be available on the Verizon cloud. The Verizon Cloud, for those who don’t recall, was announced in October and is now in public beta. It includes an IaaS platform, Verizon Cloud Compute, and an object-based storage service, Verizon Cloud Storage, alongside a Cloud Foundry PaaS. But more on that later.
CloudBees, something of a secondary player against a backdrop of Cloud Foundry and OpenShift getting the bulk of the attention, is spinning this move as Verizon choosing them due to their openness (as opposed to other PaaS products from Heroku, OpenShift and EngineYard). So that makes sense I guess, where’s the complication?
Read more at Forbes.