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Samsung Begins Construction on New Silicon Valley R&D Facility

The Korean electronics giant said the new research and development labs will focus on advanced software, content and services and user experience for consumer products.

Training Scholarship Winner Nam Pho Uses Linux for Science

As a first-generation Vietnamese-American, Nam Pho says he learned to make the most of limited resources and opportunities in many facets of his life. When it came to computing, this meant dealing with secondhand hardware. He built his Linux skills through frustrating, but educational, attempts to get old computers up and working again.

Nam Pho Linux scholarship winner“With a bit of hacking I was ecstatic to see that Linux would give the machine second life in my hands,” said Pho, who was one of five Linux Foundation Training scholarship winners announced at LinuxCon in New Orleans. “Linux would continue to be a part of my life to varying degrees until today.”

Today Pho is a research computing scientist on the Linux High Performance Computing team at a large, nonprofit medical research university in the Boston area.  Inspired by the Human Genome Project in the late 1990’s, he chose to study genomics in college and combined it with his interest in computers.

“At the time before big data tools existed, mountains of genetics data from the automated processing of samples and other improvements in technology led to a sudden and large need in compute to process it,” Pho said. “The explosion of HPC running Linux applied to genetics (i.e. bioinformatics) was where I found a niche.”

He works with system administrators to help biologists and physicians from hundreds of labs across the university’s campus and affiliate hospitals to develop and run open source code on their HPC Linux machines.  But because he’s learned about Linux and computing mostly through experience and not study, he felt there were gaps in his knowledge that prevent him from using Linux to its full potential or contributing to the community.

He applied for the training scholarship to help him fill in those gaps and, he hopes, improve the quality and stability of the research tools he’s building. Such software has a meaningful effect on the lives of the patients who depend on new discoveries for treatment

“With funding for training provided by the Linux Foundation I could have an immediate impact on the quality and stability of many innovative and cutting-edge scientific tools for Linux, further increasing its attractiveness as a platform for research and enterprise in clinical medicine,” Pho said.

Pho was chosen for a training scholarship in the “Developer Do-Gooder” category. Congratulations Nam Pho! For a full list of Linux training courses available, visit http://training.linuxfoundation.org.

Where are you from?

I’m from Ellicott City, Maryland, but recently I work/live in the Boston, Massachusetts area.

Tell us something few people know about you.

I was a volunteer firefighter and EMT back in Maryland for several years. 

What inspires you about Linux?

I’ve been using Linux for a long time and I’m both inspired and amazed at how much it has grown and matured over the years. It’s incredible that a completely open sourced project has become a viable alternative to commercially developed rivals.

Broadcom, ARM Team Up On Open Network Infrastructure Chip

Broadcom and ARM are collaborating on a processor architecture optimized for Network Function Virtualization practices.

LinuxCon Europe Next Week Hosts 14 Co-located Events with First-Ever CloudOpen Europe

 

The Linux Foundation is preparing to host its third LinuxCon Europe and this year for the first time will also host CloudOpen in Europe. The combination of the two events along with a variety of other co-located events taking place next week represents the largest gathering of Linux and open cloud professionals in Europe. From KVM Forum & oVirt Workshop to Xen Project Developer Summit and Yocto Developer Day to the Open Compute Engineering Workshop, there is something for everyone.

CloudOpen was originally organized in North America in 2012 and focuses on the open cloud and the projects that comprise it – from Ceph to CloudStack, Chef, Gluster, OpenStack, SaltStack and more. Open source software and collaborative development are advancing technologies for cloud computing and there are many, many projects emerging to support this work. CloudOpen brings all of these projects together in one place where developers, users and vendors can learn more about them and understand how best to collaborate. These projects represent some of the most cutting-edge work in IT, and we’re really excited to offer this forum in Europe for the first time.

To learn more about the other co-located events taking place next week, please visit the following links.

Enlightenment Developer Day
OpenDaylight Mini-Summit
Tizen Developer Lab and Mini-Summit
GStreamer Conference
Tracing Summit
Gluster Workshop
U-Boot Mini-Summit
Automotive Linux Summit
Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Lastly, I’d like to invite all attendees to join The Linux Foundation and evening event sponsorOpen@Citrix Wednesdaynight for a James Bond-inspired ‘Casino Royale’ party at the National Museum of Scotland. Dinner, drinks, casino games, and entertainment will be provided. We know the Linux community can put ‘007′ to shame when it comes to a good party. 

james-bond-films

OpenStack Havana Release to Arrive Thursday

This is a big week for the ever popular OpenStack cloud computing platform. This Thursday, the next major release of the platform, dubbed Havana, is due to arrive. You can get a snapshot of all the incremental work that has gone into this release here.  There are many updates to load balancing services in Havana, and the platform’s security has been radically overhauled. Newer OpenStack Foundation partners, including VMware, have also made meaningful contributions to this release. Here is some of what you can expect.

As noted by Enterprise Networking Planet, VMware has made contributions to the networking features in Havana:

OpenStack has always included networking capabilities, though initially those capabilities were somewhat limited and only available inside of the Nova Compute project. The OpenStack Quantum project got started in 2011 and was recently renamed Neutron.”

Read more at Ostatic

Android KitKat Will Bring Major Changes to SMS Handling

Google is making a big change to the way its devices handle SMS reception and delivery.

The post Android KitKat will bring major changes to SMS handling appeared first on Muktware.

Read more at Muktware

VirtualBox 4.3 Supports Multi-Touch, New OSes

Oracle announced this morning the release of their VirtualBox 4.3 cross-platform virtualization software…

Read more at Phoronix

Google Reportedly Set to Unveil Its Own Smartwatch

Codenamed Gem, the watch is almost completed, according to 9to5Google. [Read more]

 
Read more at CNET News

Distribution Release: Rebellin Linux 2.0

Utkarsh Sevekar has announced the release of Rebellin Linux 2.0, a Debian-based commercial distribution showcasing a highly customised GNOME 3 desktop: “It gives us immense pleasure to announce the latest Rebellin Linux release – Synergy v2.0. Rebellin is a modern, efficient, stable, general-purpose Linux distribution. Our goal is….

Read more at DistroWatch

A GSM/GPRS & GPS Expansion Shield for Raspberry Pi

FT10751

Today we present an expansion shield for Raspberry Pi to control the very effective GSM/GPRS SIM900 and SIM908 (with GPS) modules: in this way it is possible to extend the functionality of Raspberry Pi for mobile applications (eg: remote control) and, by employing the SIM908 module, even the GPS functionality. Even if we will describe the procedure to connect a Raspberry Pi, the same goes for all GNU / Linux equipped with a serial port.

We already created very similar expansion shields for Arduino that you can see here and buy on our store.

 

Read more at Open Electronics