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“The Code Warrior” Confirmed to Discuss NSA and PRISM at LinuxCon Europe

mikko jpgDubbed “The Code Warrior” byVanity Fair, Mikko Hypponen has been involved in addressing some of the most high-profile computer viruses in history. He has assisted law enforcement in the United States, Europe and Asia on cybercrime cases and has written computer security expose’s for Scientific American, Wired, Foreign Policy and The New York Times.

Today he is Chief Research Officer at F-Secure in Finland and a just-confirmed keynote speaker for LinuxCon/CloudOpen Europe taking place October 21-23, 2013 in Edinburgh. Hypponen will be talking about the biggest computer security story of the year, that of the NSA and PRISM, in a talk titled “Living in a Surveillance State.” He is also expected to talk about the role the Linux community can play in ensuring the security and privacy of the Internet and mobile devices.

To get more detailed than that, you’ll have to register to attend the event or tune in via live stream Wednesday, October 23 at 10:15 a.m. BST. It’s worth noting that Hyponnen speaks directly after Linux creator Linus Torvalds takes the stage. If you can’t join us in person, just tune into both talks via the live video stream.

For more information about LinuxCon Europe, including co-located events and a James Bond-style evening event with casino games all taking place in a castle, please visit the Linux Foundation LinuxCon/CloudOpen Europe site.

Amazon Wins Case for $600 Million CIA Contract

A new ruling today clears the path for Amazon’s planned $600 million cloud storage contract with the CIA. Experts say the cloud storage will be used for the agency’s least sensitive and most commonly accessed information, with a higher tier of security protecting more classified data. Amazon had been named for the contract earlier this year, but a series of lawsuits with IBM threatened to reopen bidding. Today’s ruling from the US Court of Federal Claims heads off that process, securing Amazon’s claim, although an IBM spokesperson says the company plans to appeal the ruling.

It’s one of Amazon’s highest profile contracts since they opened up a dedicated government sales division several years ago, and has required hiring over 100 IT…

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Read more at The Verge

Interest is Gathering in Apache’s New Version of CloudStack

Last week, I reported that the Apache Software Foundation has delivered its CloudStack 4.2 open source cloud computing platform.  The foundation announced the arrival of version 4.2 online, and has been steadily updating CloudStack ever since Citrix contributed  it to Apache and the open source community. CloudStack doesn’t get as much attention as OpenStack does, but a number of organizations use it and like it, and now some positive notices about the new version and its growing usage are arriving.

Version 4.2 of CloudStack is the second release of the platform since Apache started overseeing it. If you’ve followed the history of the Apache Software Foundation, you know that it has done a good job as a steward of numerous open source projects. CloudStack is classified as a top-level project at Apache.

 



 
Read more at Ostatic

 

Terascala Eases Lustre Management with Intelligent Storage Bridge

The ISB is described as the first workflow manager that is purpose-built for application users working in HPC environments that use the Lustre parallel file system and need direct access to project data at any point in the application workflow.

 
Read more at insideHPC

Raspberry Pi Slices Off Sales of 1.75 Million

The $35 credit card-sized computer is now on its way to 2 million devices sold. [Read more]

Read more at CNET News

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.5 Preps New Capabilities

While we’re on the lookout for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, Red Hat has announced today the latest beta of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.5…

Read more at Phoronix

Free eBook: Programming on Parallel Machines; GPU, Multicore, Clusters and More

Matloff’s parallel programming book is suitable for either students or professionals, as there is very little theoretical analysis of parallel algorithms, such as O() analysis, maximum theoretical speedup, acyclic graphs and so on. Instead he has provided extensive coverage of what he calls “wizardry” aspects–material known to experienced practitioners but generally not in books, such as coverage of loop iteration scheduling and memory effects of storing large arrays.

 
Read more at insideHPC

AMD Intentionally Crippled Their HDMI Adapters

For some AMD Radeon graphics cards when using the Catalyst driver, the HDMI audio support isn’t enabled unless using the simple DVI to HDMI adapter included with the graphics card itself… If you use another DVI-to-HDMI adapter, it won’t work with Catalyst. AMD intentionally implemented checks within their closed-source driver to prevent other adapters from being used, even though they will work just fine…

Read more at Phoronix

Google’s New ‘Chromebook for Everyone’ is a Sleek 11-Inch HP Laptop

At an event in New York City this morning, Google announced the new HP Chromebook 11. The Chromebook 11 is a low-cost Chrome OS laptop, with an 11-inch, 1366 x 768 pixel IPS display and Chromebook Pixel inspired design. The new laptop, which Google is selling for $279, is available to order from Google Play, Best Buy, Amazon, and direct from HP today. A 4G LTE equipped version is planned, but pricing and availability have yet to be announced.

The design of the Chromebook 11 is quite reminiscent of the now-retired plastic MacBook. It has sleek lines and ports on only the left hand side. Google has also hidden all of speaker grills and screws, giving the design a cleaner appearance. Google is offering the laptop in black or white with…

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Read more at The Verge

Intel Ships Open-Source OpenMP Runtime For LLVM

While LLVM’s Clang C/C++ compiler has made amazing progress in recent times, one of the features it’s sorely been missing has been OpenMP support to allow it to better compete with GCC in many multi-threaded workloads. There’s been numerous projects to work on OpenMP support in LLVM/Clang and most recently Intel has been taking up the work. Intel’s latest announcement in the area is that they have decided to open-source their own OpenMP Runtime as a new LLVM sub-project…

Read more at Phoronix