Linus Torvalds says: To be fair, people just like hating on Canonical. The FSF and Apache Foundation CLA’s are pretty much equally broken.
The post Linus Torvalds: Any CLA is fundamentally broken appeared first on Muktware.
Linus Torvalds says: To be fair, people just like hating on Canonical. The FSF and Apache Foundation CLA’s are pretty much equally broken.
The post Linus Torvalds: Any CLA is fundamentally broken appeared first on Muktware.
After years of complaining about my Android devices not getting the latest updates, I realize I no longer care. I don’t think that’s what the Android folks intended.
Kexec will be supported on EFI-based systems with the Linux 3.14 kernel that just officially entered development this morning…
As 2014 gets underway, one of the biggest stories in all of open source has to be the transformation going on at Red Hat as it moves from being squarely Linux-focused to becoming a big player in the cloud computing space. As The Register notes, the company has “scraped up its Linux, virtualization, OpenStack and cloud management businesses into a new infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) unit.”
The company has also created an applications platform group responsible for JBoss and OpenShift. But the real ace-in-the-hole is that Red Hat has a far reaching deal with Dell in which Dell will effectively become an OEM for Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform, by selling systems that run it.
Chris Granger is a computer programmer who thinks programming kinda sucks. It’s too complicated and too esoteric and too sprawling. But he hopes that his latest invention can change all that.
Built alongside friend and colleague Robert Attorri, his creation is called Light Table, and he believes it can not only improve programming for seasoned engineers like himself, but put the power of coding into the hands of so many others. “We consider programming a modern-day superpower. You can create something out of nothing, cure cancer, build billion-dollar companies,” he says. “We’re looking at how we can give that super power to everyone else.”
The problem with coding, he says, is that you can’t see the results of your work until after you’re done. In that sense, programming is unlike almost every other craft. “When a chef adds an ingredient, he can smell it, he can taste it,” Granger says. “When an artist makes a stroke on a canvas, he can see it. But programming isn’t that way.”
Read more at Wired.
Much of Android’s development is done out in the open, which is how several Android developers noticed that a recent commit to the Android Open Source Project master tree would break many of your favorite root apps. This is the result of a newly implemented security feature, rather than an active effort to lock things down on Google’s part. Nevertheless, it could result in some inconvenience, so developer Chainfire has taken to his Google+ page to detail what will happen if the change is not reverted before the release of a future version of Android.
Linus has released the 3.13 kernel. “The release got delayed by a week due to travels, but I suspect that’s just as well. We had a few fixes come in, and while it wasn’t a lot, I think we’re better off for it.” Some of the headline features in 3.13 include the nftables packet filtering engine, a number of NUMA scheduling improvements, the multiqueue block layer work, ARM big.LITTLE switcher support, and more; see the KernelNewbies 3.13 page for lots of details.
Back in November I published my review of the AMD Radeon R9 290 on Linux. This high-end AMD Radeon “Hawaii” graphics card ended up being a wreck on Linux: its performance was devastating. Radeon R9 290X owners have also reported their Linux performance with the Catalyst driver has been less than stellar. In new tests conducted last week with the latest AMD and NVIDIA binary graphics drivers, the high-end AMD GPUs still really aren’t proving much competition to NVIDIA’s Kepler graphics cards. Here’s a new 12 graphics card comparison on Ubuntu.
A mysterious Bitcoin-powered white knight is reported to have come to the rescue of the struggling OpenBSD Foundation.…
This week Fujitsu Laboratories announced that it has successfully simulated the electrical properties of a 3,000-atom nano device.