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Linux is the Platform for Robotics

Robotics is a fascinating subject. It links computers to the physical world, allowing them to move around, sense their environment, and to interact with it. Building your own robot, however, has traditionally required that you spend a huge amount of time and energy to get even the most basic of robotic systems up and running. You need mechanical engineering skills to build the chassis or body, electronic engineering skills to wire up the motors and the sensors, and programming skills to animate the robot, to control its body to get it to do what you want. These barriers to entry mean that people entering into the field of robotics – either in search of a stimulating pastime, or perhaps as part of more formal research – can quickly be overwhelmed by the sheer amount of work required. The initial dreams of building a robot to fetch your beer or to walk your dog get pushed further and further back, as more and more time is sucked up just getting the basics working.

Read more at Linux User and Developer Magazine.

Going Indepth With Wayland Sub-Surfaces

A few days back I wrote about sub-surfaces coming to Wayland’s protocol after being a Weston-only feature for several months. For those curious about this Wayland feature, developer behind the code has written about this new feature at length…

Read more at Phoronix

PyPy 2.2 Released

Version 2.2 of the PyPy implementation of the Python 2 language is out. “Our Garbage Collector is now ‘incremental’. It should avoid almost all pauses due to a major collection taking place. Previously, it would pause the program (rarely) to walk all live objects, which could take arbitrarily long if your process is using a whole lot of RAM. Now the same work is done in steps.” There have also been improvements to the JIT compiler, the NumPy module has been split out, and various other changes have been made.

Read more at LWN

Ouya Goes White With New Limited Edition, More Expensive Microconsole

Underdog microconsole Ouya is facing increased competition with the release of the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 this month, but the company will have its own new hardware this holiday season with a limited edition white version of the tiny device. The new Ouya doubles the internal Flash storage of the base model to 16GB, otherwise the two machines appear to be identical. But that new color and extra storage come at a price: the white Ouya is $129.99, $30 more than the original. The limited edition is available for pre-order now for those in North America. However, it remains to be seen whether a new coat of paint will lure many consumers to the struggling console, especially with the added cost. While Ouya recently boasted that it now…

Continue reading…

Read more at The Verge

Raspberry Pi Carves Out 2 Million Sales

The $35 credit-card-sized computer reached its latest milestone the last week of October. [Read more]

 
Read more at CNET News

Qualcomm’s Toq Smartwatch Coming December 2nd for $349.99

Qualcomm’s upcoming Toq smartwatch will be available from December 2nd. The company, better known for its processors that power most smartphones, will sell Toq directly from its own website, and no retail partners have been announced. The watch will interface with Android smartphones via Bluetooth and an app that will be made available from Google Play.

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Read more at The Verge

We’re Ready For The Release, Are You?!

Release Geeko
Dear Geekos!

We’re sure you are all anxiously awaiting the release of openSUSE 13.1, coming in 24 hours. Yes, just around the corner! So we want to remind you that you can help us promote the release, plan release parties and of course read the many articles we’ve written! So much to do both before and after the release…

Before the release

There is still preparation to do: a lot to read about the release -so you can tell your friends about it- and some work in order to promote the release. You are very welcome in helping us to spread the word in your blog and other places!

 

Read more at openSUSE News

Canonical Criticizes Linux Mint’s Security, Called ‘A Vulnerable System’

Oliver Grawert points out that it is not necessary that security updates from Ubuntu get down to Linux Mint users.

The post Canonical criticizes Linux Mint’s security, called ‘a vulnerable system’ appeared first on Muktware.

Read more at Muktware

Google Drive for Linux? Patience, Patience…

A Linux version of the cloud-connected file system apparently is still on Google’s to-do list, but not a high enough priority for some people’s preferences. [Read more]

 
Read more at CNET News

ASUS to Launch First Chromebooks Early Next Year

These Chromebooks are likely to be powered by Intel Haswell’s microarchitecture.

The post ASUS to launch first Chromebooks early next year appeared first on Muktware.

Read more at Muktware