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Why Thin Disks Don’t Matter

Thinner disk drives – such as Seagate’s new 5mm drive – are the last gasp of an old strategy: making drives smaller. It won’t work. The future is elsewhere.

OpenSUSE Looks To Switch To Btrfs For Next Release

With today’s release of openSUSE 13.1 Beta has come some more interesting news about the future of the German-founded Linux distribution: they’re hoping to switch to the next-generation Btrfs Linux file-system as their future default file-system…

Read more at Phoronix

OpenSUSE 13.1 Goes Into Beta With Linux 3.11

The first beta release of openSUSE 13.1 is now available and making the cut before the feature freeze was the Linux 3.11 kernel and Mesa 9.2.0…

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Yes, Agile Works in Larger Enterprise Projects, Too

‘Agile principles can be applied to large, even very large, groups of people, allowing them to be more connected to their work and its impact, despite being part of a huge system.’

A Guide to Kill, Pkill and Killall Commands to Terminate a Process in Linux

Linux Operating System comes with Kill command to terminate a process, which is no longer needed, or needs to be killed after a major change/update, without the need of restarting the server. Linux Operating System lets you start/stop a service without the need of restarting the machine, here comes…

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Linus Torvalds Doesn’t Want to be Microsoft’s CEO and other LinuxCon Ramblings

In a free-wheeling Q&A session Linus Torvalds and other top Linux programmers, talked about Linux, scuba-diving, and other odds and ends of the developer life.

Intel Iris Pro Linux Graphics Yield Some Wins Against Windows

For the past few days at Phoronix we have begun looking extensively at the Intel Iris Pro 5200 graphics under Linux, since receiving the System76 Galago UltraPro. The Iris Pro 5200 are the new high-end Intel Haswell graphics that have 128MB of embedded video RAM on the die, which should yield a nice performance boost when properly implemented within the Intel Linux driver. Already our testing has found the Iris Pro performance on Linux has doubled with open-source driver improvements since Haswell’s launch. Now we’re out today with our first Intel Iris Pro OpenGL gaming benchmarks between Ubuntu Linux and Microsoft Windows 8 for this Intel Core i7 Ultrabook.

Read more at Phoronix

Samsung Tizen and LG Firefox OS Phones Coming Soon?

Following the appearance of leaked photos showing Tizen 3.0 running on Samsung’s Galaxy S 4 phone, new rumors say the upcoming Galaxy S 5 smartphone will be available in both Android and Tizen versions. Meanwhile, an LG D300g phone uncovered in the FCC database suggest the first LG Firefox OS phone is nearing release. Against […]

Read more at LinuxGizmos

Intel: The Year of the Linux Desktop Is Here

Intel CTO Dirk Hohndel sees Linux as the leading end-user operating systems – thanks to smartphones, tablets, as well as the rise of Chromebooks.

Kernel Developers, Linus Torvalds Emphasize Diversity for Innovation

Linus Torvalds and the Linux kernel maintainers on stage today at LinuxCon and CloudOpen covered a range of topics, from personal hobbies to advice for getting patches upstream. But one consistent theme emerged in the discussion: Growing the size and diversity of the Linux kernel developer community — on the kernel side as well as in user space — will help push continued innovation even as technology changes.

Kernel panelMore than 10,000 developers from more than 1,000 companies have contributed to the Linux kernel since tracking began in 2005, according to the Linux Foundation’s annual development report released this week. The sheer size of the project may be intimidating for newcomers, but the number of developers involved also shows just how many people have found ways to contribute, Torvalds said.

“The kernel can be hard to get involved with because it’s big and complicated,” Torvalds said during the keynote panel. “But it can be easier than other open source projects because we have so many things you can do.”

Unlike proprietary projects overseen and built within a single corporation, the Linux kernel will take contributions from anyone who submits good code. Before Tejun Heo, became a kernel developer, he was passionate about operating systems. But he lived in Korea and wasn’t sure how he’d get a job at one of the companies building them. There was no Microsoft or Sun in Korea and he didn’t speak enough English to qualify, he said.

“But with Linux it didn’t matter where I came from or what degree I had. If you can do it, you can do it. It doesn’t matter who you are are where you came from,” said Heo, who now works for Red Hat.

Heo says he’s seen an increasing interest and level of contribution from developers and China, which he predicts will be the next hot country from which Linux developers are recruited.

The kernel community this year has also ramped up its recruiting efforts among women. Kernel developer Sarah Sharp, who works on the USB subsystem for Intel, oversaw the first Outreach Program for Women Linux kernel internships this summer. Women accepted into the program were paired with mentors in the kernel development community to learn more about the Linux development process and gain direct experience writing and submitting patches.

Linux stable kernel maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman, who was a mentor in the Outreach Program for Women, said the intern working with him submitted more than 60 patches this summer and many will be merged.

“My goal is to see Linux continue to succeed. We need to keep changing along with the rest of the world and make sure that more people are contributing,” Kroah-Hartman said.

Recruiting efforts to increase kernel contributions extends beyond individuals to companies as well. For companies that base their products and processes on Linux, getting involved in the kernel community by submitting their own patches upstream is one way to help increase the quality of their own offerings as well as the kernel as a whole.

Kroah-Hartman urged companies to get involved with the kernel community really early in the design and integration cycle to ensure the patches they need to get upstream for their hardware have time for review.

“Intel really understands this, we ripped code out of the kernel for an Intel chip that never shipped,” Kroah-Hartman said.

Torvalds agreed that being early was helpful, but just as important was being really involved in the community in the first place. Instead of building patches within the walls of your company, work with the kernel community to find common problems and solve them together.

“In order to get things merged you need to solve not just your problem,” Torvalds said. “Realize the kernel is bigger than your company.”