Home Blog Page 1715

How Munich Rejected Steve Ballmer and Kicked Microsoft out of the City

Breaking up with Microsoft is hard to do. Just ask Peter Hofmann, the man leading the City of Munich’s project to ditch Windows and Office in favour of open source alternatives.

The project took close to a decade to complete, has seen the city wrestle with legal uncertainties and earned Munich a visit from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, whose pleas to the mayor of Germany’s third largest city not to switch fell on deaf ears.

Munich says the move to open source has saved it more than €10m, a claimcontested by Microsoft, yet Hofmann says the point of making the switch was never about money, but about freedom.

Read more at Tech Republic.

OpenDaylight Developer Spotlight: Christopher Price

Christopher Price

OpenDaylight is an open source project and open to all. Developers can contribute at the individual level just like any other open source project. This blog series highlights the people who are collaborating to create the future of SDN and NFV.

Christopher Price heads the network architecture and standardization team for Ericsson’s IP and Broadband division where he focuses on the development of technology and innovation. Across his career he has worked as an integrator, verification engineer, developer and technical leader for products ranging from switched voice to Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) based solutions, Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) and Network Management Systems (NMS) technologies.Read more at OpenDaylight Blog

3 Tips to Get Your Linux Project Funded With Kickstarter

kickstarter linuxTech businesses, including Linux-based operations and developers, have a chance to get a piece of this still-young goldmine. With the right idea, a catchy preview and some savvy marketing, your big tech idea can come to fruition in a matter of months.

Tap Your User Base

Successful Kickstarter campaigns present ideas that are appealing enough for a wide group of people to support, or for a small group of people to support well. Linux users are a devoted fanbase, eager to advance open-source technology so that best ideas will receive backing. One recent example is LinuxonAndroid, a software campaign that aimed to bring a range of Linux distros to Android devices. This UK-based campaign raised nearly $1,700, well over its goal of around $1,000. LinuxonAndroid already had a 40,000+ person user base, but it needed funding to address Ubuntu updates and add new features.

Mobile Linux is a hot topic for open-source fanatics. LinuxonAndroid found an in-demand niche and presented a clear pitch of what it would do with the money.

Offer Incentives

The idea itself is the most important part of your Kickstarter campaign, but corresponding incentives can bump up the amount of money you raise. Openshot, a video editor for Windows, Mac and Linux, offered donors perks based on the amount of money they gave. Fifty dollars got you early access to beta and final releases. Two-hundred fifty got you a place in the credits on the official website and an OpenShot T-Shirt, along with the early access. If anyone was willing to donate $10,000, OpenShot was prepared to dedicate three weeks of developer time toward any feature the donor desired.

You’ll need to be creative with your incentives in order to end up with a successful campaign. T-shirts are an appealing perk, but they cut into your net gain from donations. A salary calculator can help you plan your revenue and expenses in order to get the most out of a Kickstarter project.

Follow Up

Don’t rest on your laurels if you’re able to successfully fund a Kickstarter project. The work is just beginning. The Oculus Rift, an open-source gaming Annie Delgadoheadset that raised more than $2.4 million, almost ten times more than its goal, is one of many projects that missed its target delivery date. CNNmoney.com found that of the top 50 most-funded projects in 2012, 84 percent missed their target delivery dates. The frequent lag time is beginning to affect Kickstarter’s reputation. When companies take too long to deliver products, not only do they lose momentum from the buzz their campaigns created, they also sacrifice their chances to ask for more money down the road. When you launch your campaign, set a realistic timeline so you don’t keep your donors waiting. When it’s time to ask for more money, they’ll be eager and willing to contribute to what’s next.

Annie Delgado is an app aficionado and expert in tech crowdfunding. She lives in New York where she writes for a number of business and mobile blogs. 

Ubuntu 14.04 LTS Won’t Be Powered By Mir

A virtual Ubuntu Developer Summit is taking place this week. The event was kicked off again by Jono Bacon and Mark Shuttleworth. During the event a few interesting tidbits of information were learned about Ubuntu Touch and Mir…

Read more at Phoronix

The “Jailhouse” Hypervisor

The Jailhouse project has announced its existence. Jailhouse is a Linux-native hypervisor like KVM, but with a focus on minimalism and isolation of virtual machines on dedicated CPUs. “Jailhouse is a partitioning hypervisor that can create asymmetric multiprocessing (AMP) setups on Linux-based systems. That means it runs bare-metal applications or non-Linux OSes aside a standard Linux kernel on one multicore hardware platform. Jailhouse ensures isolation between these ‘cells’, as we call them, via hardware-assisted virtualization. The typical workloads we expect to see in non-Linux cells are applications with highly demanding real-time, safety or security requirements.” The project is in an early stage and looking for interested developers.

Read more at LWN

Mir Now Supports Four Android GPUs/Drivers

Mir has reached “a pretty big milestone” according to one of the Canonical developers…

Read more at Phoronix

Distribution Release: openSUSE 13.1

The openSUSE project has announced the release of openSUSE 13.1, a major new version of one of the oldest and most popular Linux distributions available today: “Dear contributors, friends and fans: the release is here! Eight months of planning, packaging, adding features, fixing issues, testing and fixing more….

Read more at DistroWatch

Linux to Surpass Microsoft, BlackBerry in Car Industry

Proprietary OS platforms don’t allow the auto industry to control and set its own system architecture.

The post Linux to surpass Microsoft, BlackBerry in car industry appeared first on Muktware.

Read more at Muktware

Valve to Reveal Virtual Reality Prototype, Big Plans for Steam Support

If the Steam Controller and Steam Machine don’t have you convinced that Valve’s serious about getting into the gaming hardware business, how about throwing in a virtual reality headset as well? The company’s Steam Dev Days event, scheduled for mid-January in Seattle, includes the tantalizing promise of debuting “a prototype which demonstrates … what affordable Virtual Reality (VR) hardware will be capable of within a couple of years.” A dedicated session about VR in general, and the kind of experiences this new hardware will make possible, will be hosted by Mike Abrash — who is already deeply involved with Valve’s wearable computing efforts.

Abrash will be immediately followed by Joe Ludwig heading up a “Virtual Reality and…

Continue reading…

Read more at The Verge

SC13: Top500 Lists the World’s Fastest Computers

Supercomputing 13, which takes place in Denver this week, began with the announcement of the latest Top500 list of the world’s fastest computers and Nvidia’s release of the Tesla K40 accelerator.