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Distribution Release: MakuluLinux 5.0

Jacque Raymer has announced the release of MakuluLinux 5.0, a major new release of the Debian-based desktop distribution featuring the Xfce desktop environment: “MakuluLinux Xfce 5.0, built on a strong Debian base, offers users not only stability and speed, but now also provides a much more effective modern….

Read more at DistroWatch

Linux Pros Saw Larger Bonuses, Higher Salaries in 2013

IT careers site Dice reported recently that the “more Linux, more money” trend continued strong throughout 2013, with both higher salaries and larger bonuses for Linux pros.

In fact, while the average technology professional garnered a salary increase of just under three percent last year — growing from $85,619 to $87,811 — Linux pros enjoyed a full five percent increase from $90,853 to $95,379, according to the 2014-2013 Dice Tech Salary Survey. Not only that, but Linux professionals also took Linux salaries charthome an average bonus of $10,300 last year, compared with $9,300 for tech professionals in general.

‘Part and Parcel of Growth Plans’

“Linux professionals are benefiting from a world that demands fast innovation,” Shravan Goli, president of Dice.com, told Linux.com. “When speed is the name of the game, open source operating systems will play a critical role for companies and consumers.”

Further, as more and more companies realize that their innovations are driven by technology, “Linux talent will have more opportunities to get engaged in mission-critical projects,” Goli predicted. Linux professionals’ larger bonuses, in particular, “underscore the feeling of employers that Linux skills are part and parcel of growth plans.”

Linux skills are also readily transferable to other areas, he noted, such as mobile OS development and cloud computing. Meanwhile, Big Data and product development are two other hot skill areas that were highlighted by the survey. “With that in mind, Hadoop and Puppet were two open source skills that helped professionals earn more than $100,000,” Goli said.

‘The Outlook Is Great’

Technology professionals as a whole were slightly less satisfied with their salaries this year — salary satisfaction was 54 percent in the survey, down from 57 percent last year — but at the same time, roughly two-thirds of respondents said they were confident in their ability to find a new, better position.

“Linux professionals feel the same way that many technology professionals feel: confident and valuable,” Goli said. “Top Linux talent know that they are in demand and that their career ambitions are within reach. It’s an experienced candidate market.”

In general, the future continues to look bright for Linux pros, Goli said.

“For those Linux professionals who hold a career map, the outlook is great,” he concluded. “Linux professionals should create a map of related skills they can learn and apply to current hot tech categories. These talented professionals can build a set of skills that command good compensation and set them on a career path that feels more controlled.”

Keep an eye out for the upcoming Linux Foundation jobs report, which will be published later this month. In the meantime, you can start building up your own Linux skills with the Linux Foundation’s Linux training program and 100 Linux Tutorials library.

Aptik – A Tool to Backup/Restore Your Favourite PPAs and Apps in Ubuntu

As we all know that Ubuntu has a six month release cycle for new version. All the PPAs and Packages of your choice also needs to be re-added, to avoid doing those stuffs and save your time, here we bringing a fantastic tool called ‘Aptik‘. Aptik (Automated Package Backup and Restore) is…

Read more at TecMint

Fake Debian Developers Try To Get Free Linux Games

With Valve giving away their games free to Debian developers and now Valve’s games are free to Ubuntu developers too, sadly it’s no surprise there’s some individuals trying to be impostors and get these games for free by posing as the developers…

Read more at Phoronix

LibreOffice Plans For C++11 / C++14 Development

LibreOffice has been pushing forward in its development recently with supporting OpenCL in its spreadsheet, gaining an OpenGL rendering back-end, and supporting other modern features and system capabilities for the open-source office suite. LibreOffice is also planning for its adoption of the C++11 programming language and even C++14 language features…

Read more at Phoronix

Forward Momentum in the Ubuntu App Developer Platform

Last week I was in Orlando sprinting with my team as well as the platform, SDK, and security teams and some desktop and design folks. As usual after a sprint, I have been slammed catching up with email, but I wanted to provide a summary of some work going that you can expect to see soon in the Ubuntu app developer platform.

HTML5

In the last few months we have been working to refine our HTML5 support in the Ubuntu SDK.

Today we have full HTML5 support in the SDK but we are working to make HTML5 apps more integrated than ever. This work will land in the next week and will include the following improvements:

  • Consolidating everything into a single template and container. This means that when you create a new app in the SDK you have a single template to get started with that runs in a single container.                  

Read more at jonobacon@home

Intel Sees Strong Growth in its NUC Mini-Desktop Business

While desktop sales are declining overall, the company says tiny PCs have been responsible for over a million sales in the last year.

Google Taps VMware to Bring Windows Access to Chromebooks

The Google Chrome team trumps the value of Desktop-as-a-Service “as the countdown to Windows XP end of life continues.”

IBM PartnerWorld: A Conversation about IBM Storage

Even if a product is technically superior, it is hard to get IT decision makers thinking about the right things.

5 Ways To Burn Out Programming

I’ve only recently come out of my burnout, despite it happening years ago. It sucks. It sucks bad. But looking back, I can see many of the causes crystal clearly, that weren’t so apparent at the time. Here’s a list:

1. Think about your project and only the project

Let’s face it. Business wants you to make the best product you can “for our customers”. You put off fun features for the sake of hitting a deadline. You plan and analyze and break a project into sets of deliverables that then must be coded by a monkey (you). You demo it, gather feedback, iterate. All without thinking anything for yourself.

Read more at Josh Braegger’s blog.