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How to Install SteamOS in VirtualBox

As you already know, the SteamOS Linux has been officially released on December 13 and is based on Debian GNU/Linux operating system, using GNOME as its (optional) desktop environment.

SteamOS is very easy to install if you have the right hardware components, which involves a UEFI-capable computer with a powerful video card for playing games. However, as Valve did not publish an ISO image of SteamOS, many have encountered difficulties in installing the system.

Read more at Softpedia.

The People Who Support Linux: Snowden Revelations Spur Engineer’s Open Source Donation

Shocked and chastened by Edward Snowden’s revelation this year of a vast NSA surveillance program, Antonius Kies resolved to better support free and open source software development. Thus Kies, a Linux desktop user and an engineer at Graz University of Technology in Austria, recently became a Linux Foundation individual supporter.

Antonius Kies Linux foundation member

“I want to support the technical development of secure open source OSes (operating systems),” he said.

By reading the ongoing media coverage of the Snowden leaks, Kies learned for the first time about zero-day exploits, backdoors and state-approved trojan viruses. He objects to corporations and governments spying on private citizens and cites articles on ZDNetArsTechnica and InformationWeek as being pivotal in changing his perceptions on this topic. 

“I worry that this can become a real problem, when it gets more out of control than it already is,” Kies said via email. 

Though Kies passed the Linux Essentials exam this spring at the Linuxtage in Graz and maintains a Debian/MATE system at home, he’s not a programmer and leaves the rest to Linux professionals he says.

“I once downloaded the Linux Kernel for fun… and was not able to understand one single line of code,” he said. “This serious work should be done by professionals, not by hobbyists.”

The Linux kernel, which is built and maintained by a community of nearly 10,000 developers from more than 1,000 companies, forms the basis of the Linux operating system and an open source alternative to proprietary operating systems. By supporting The Linux Foundation, Kies is helping to support the kernel community’s work. 

“The public needs fully open source OSes, where experts can review the whole code, to minimize the risk of hidden backdoors,” said Kies.

“For sure there are unknown weaknesses in the code, and there are 0-day-exploits also for Linux,” he said, “But I guess that the number is smaller than in Windows, and the chance to find them is better due to the open source development model.”

Welcome Anton! 

IBM Unveils 5 Smart Technology Trends For The Next 5 Years

When technology pioneer Alan Kay said “the best way to predict the future is to invent it,†he might as well have been talking about IBM, whose innovations include Silicon Germanium chipsrelational databases and most recently, Linux-based Watson.

That’s why, when the company comes out each year with its 5 in 5—five predictions for the next five years—people take notice.  This year, perhaps not surprisingly given IBM’s commitment to cognitive computing, the company is focusing on smart technologies.

Read more at Forbes

Or see the original post from IBM.

Android Makes Walt Mossberg’s Top Products of Past Two Decades

 In his last column for the Wall Street Journal’s AllThingsD blog, tech journalist Walt Mossberg has listed the most influential consumer products of the past two decades. He chose the top 12 products that “changed the course of digital history,” made technology easier to use, and added value for consumers over the 22 years he’s been writing for the Wall Street Journal. Coming in at No. 10 is the Linux-based Android mobile OS. Mossberg writes:

“Google quickly jumped into the mobile world the iPhone created with this operating system that has spread to hundreds of devices using the same type of multi-touch interface. Android is now the dominant smartphone platform, with its own huge selection of apps.

“While iPhones have remained relatively pricey, Android is powering much less costly phones.”

Read the full post at AllThingsD.

 

 

A Note for Those Upgrading to Fedora 20

Discussions on the Fedora mailing lists have made it clear that attempting to upgrade a machine to Fedora 20 with fedup 0.7 will end badly. The solution is simple enough: update fedup to version 0.8 before doing the upgrade; those upgrading from Fedora 18 should also pass the --nogpgcheckflag to fedup.

Read more at LWN

Take the 2013 Puppet Labs DevOps Survey and Win Cool Prizes

Last year we partnered with Gene Kim and Jez Humble to survey over 4,000 technical professionals across a wide range of businesses to better understand how the collection of practices we call DevOps had evolved since the label was first coined by Patrick Debois in 2009.

This year, we’re pleased to bring the survey back with help from Gene, Jez and many other practitioners, researchers and thought leaders in the DevOps community. We hope you’ll take the survey and help add to our growing understanding of how DevOps is changing the way we work.

We learned quite a few things from our last survey, but for me the most interesting results were the undeniable facts that actual adoption of DevOps practices had accelerated significantly, that this acceleration was no longer primarily restricted to web operations, and that these practices were enabling companies of all sizes to ship code faster and with fewer failures.

Given all this, it’s a no-brainer to run the survey again this year. In order to measure trends, we’ll keep collecting data around many of the same points as in previous years, but we’ll also be investigating a few new areas to mirror the changes we’ve seen in the past year:

  • Have DevOps culture and practices moved to more mainstream enterprise environments?
  • What organizational behaviors correlate with high performance?
  • Are DevOps practices breaking down traditional silos of network and storage management?
  • Are the highest performing organizations still accelerating away from the pack?

In order to get robust answers to these questions, we need a great sample of respondents across the community. Because your time is valuable, we’re offering a great incentive:

Completing the survey will enter you in a drawing to win a ticket to PuppetConf 2014, a PS4 console, or an XBox One (you get to pick). Twenty randomly-chosen winners will each receive a prize pack, including a Puppet Labs t-shirt and a bundle of technical books worth $150:

Simply fill out the survey, check out the rest of our DevOps December content, and we’ll announce winners on January 20. And please be sure to share the survey with your friends and colleagues: The more people we hear from, the better the data.

Looking forward to another great set of data around DevOps practices.

– See more at: http://puppetlabs.com/blog/take-2013-devops-survey-win-cool-prizes#sthash.Ezp5NzJD.dpuf

Editor’s note: This article is re-published with permission from Puppet Labs.

Distribution Release: openSUSE 13.1 “Education Li-f-e”

Lars Vogdt has announced the release of openSUSE 13.1 “Education Li-f-e” edition, an openSUSE flavour designed specifically for schools and other educational institutions: “openSUSE Education community is proud to bring you openSUSE Education Li-f-e. It is based on the recently released openSUSE 13.1 with all the official online…

Read more at DistroWatch

Valve Adds Steamworks API For Their New Controller

Valve added the Steamworks API support yesterday for handling their new Steam Machines controller inside new games…

Read more at Phoronix

Humble Bundle PC & Android 8 Launches

The latest Humble Indie Bundle is now available, this time known as Humble Bundle PC and Android 8…

Read more at Phoronix

OpenShot Video Editor Will Be Big in 2014

open video editor

I’ve been following the progress of OpenShot, an open source video editor, for the past few years. I think it achieves just the right balance between ease-of-use and a rich feature set. When I heard about the OpenShot Kickstarter campaign earlier this year, I was one of the first to contribute. By the deadline, their intended fund raising goal was more than doubled at $45,000+. This success also meant that OpenShot 2.0 will become available on Windows and Macintosh. 

read more

Read more at OpenSource.com