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Multi-Booting the Nexus 7 Tablet

Anyone who knows me well enough knows I love mobile devices. Phones, tablets and other shiny glowing gadgets are almost an addiction for me. I’ve talked about my addiction in other articles and columns, and Kyle Rankin even made fun of me once in a Point/Counterpoint column because my household has a bunch of iOS devices in it. more>>

 
Read more at Linux Journal

Stable Kernel Updates

Greg KH has released stable kernels 3.10.4, 3.4.55, and 3.0.88. All contain important fixes.

Read more at LWN

Raspberry Pi’s Eben Upton: Open Source Lessons from Wayland

In less than two years the Raspberry Pi has sold more than 1 million units and become widely used and adored among DIY hackers and embedded professionals alike. It began in 2006 as a modest idea to provide a low-cost educational computer for students to tinker with. Now the $25 Linux-based single-board computer is the basis for all kinds of gadgets from near-space cameras, to open source spy boxes, to the PiGate, a full-scale Stargate replica.

Eben Upton Raspberry PiDuring that time the board’s creators have also gotten a fast education on open source software development and the process of collaboration, said Raspberry Pi Foundation Executive Director Eben Upton. He’ll share some of those valuable lessons during his keynote talk at LinuxCon and CloudOpen North America in New Orleans, Sept. 16-18, where he’s also planning a new demonstration of the Pi’s prowess.

Here, Upton talks about some of the open source projects the Pi Foundation is involved in; their choice of the Wayland display manager; their focus on media performance; their efforts to expand computer science education and literacy; and his favorite Pi projects.

Can you give us a preview of your LinuxCon keynote?

I’m not a natural open source guy. No one would mistake me for being a classic open source fan. I find it interesting to the extent it’s useful to me. So I’ve come to RasperryPi as a bit of a novice, with not so much experience in running a project that’s deeply intertwined with the open source community. I’ve made a lot of mistakes so I’ll talk about what I’ve learned.

I thought we could ship a platform that basically works and the open source community will take care of the rest. There are some areas they’ll do a great job, particularly things that have a lot of eyes on a problem and are able to attract the attention of a particular expert. The other things aren’t so great, particularly around desktop acceleration. We’ve had to go out and pay contractors who are able to move that stuff forward for us. It’s been a learning process of finding what those categories are — the things for the community and those for the foundation.

How is the Pi Foundation involved in open source projects?

We’ve been supporting a number of open source projects. We make a little money every time we sell a Pi and have a little pot of money we spend on things deemed important to the mission of the foundation.

There are some bits of Linux infrastructure not well optimized for our platform so there’s been a low level of work paying people to write fast implementations of audio codings, for example.

Higher level stuff we’ve been doing are things like Wayland, accelerated web browsing. Things that are tying us into the way the desktop experience is evolving under Linux.

What are you working on right now?

We’re pushing on support for Wayland. It’s the future of Linux desktop graphics. It’s a clean-break architecture. It’s obviously somewhat controversial, there’s a feeling that there’s a risk people are throwing the baby out with the bathwater in moving on from X11.

One big challenge we’ve experienced often with a lot of open source projects like web browsers and X11 is that although the code is open, it’s hard for somebody to come from a standing start to make a good contribution. And for people with a particular functionality to add it themselves, there’s a steep learning curve.

One challenge we had repeatedly with trying to get X11 acceleration was we couldn’t even understand what we had to do. Wayland is a little easier and somewhat cleaner. Some people say it’s cleaner because it’s less functional, but it was more approachable for us. Even with Wayland we had some friends at Collabera, to work with them to educate us on what needed to be done and then to source the really talented guys who could make much faster programs than we would have made ourselves.

Why are you focusing on the media aspects of the Pi?

It’s both the place where our ARM core shows its limitations and the place of the functionality on the chip we have the most amount of accelerators to bring to bear on the problem. The ARM core we’re using shows its age, particularly when you’re dealing with very high screen resolutions.

It’s been about 7 years since you first conceived of the RPi as a low-cost board for educational purposes. How far has that movement come in broadening computer science education?

On the hobbyist and engineering side it’s come a very long way. We’ve gotten to the point where the Pi exists and it’s available and there’s a community you can go to and ask for help. You can rely on it being available this year and next and it’s something you can build off of and feel safe.

On the education side there’s an enormous amount that remains to be done and it’s a case of grinding on with that. Making sure there’s good support material, printed material that will allow a teacher who’s not perfectly confident about computer programming to deliver an enjoyable and exciting experience for the kids.

Is the Foundation also working on curriculum development?

Yes. The foundation does a vast amount of engineering, more than we were expecting, but the aim is to recycle that into accomplishing our educational goals. It’s necessary but not sufficient to supply the hardware.

It seems the Pi came out of a trend toward abstraction, in which the computer user/ programmer is taken farther away from the hardware toward easier languages and programs. Do you wish we could go back to the days of the Commodore?

I don’t wish we could go back to the days of the Commodore. That’s futile, right? You have to remember it’s really fantastic that we’ve got computers that are a lot more user friendly that the Commodore. We shouldn’t throw out our usability babies with the bathwater. We have to try to strike a middle ground. That’s what we’re trying to do with the Pi, which is more useable as a general purpose computer.

What’s your favorite Pi project to recommend to someone with some already serious hacking skills?

I like the photography ones at the moment. You can get a 5 megapixel camera and a Linux box for $50 to do everything from wildlife phtogoraphy to high-altitude ballooning. I got an email from a kid the other day who set up the Pi to send an email every time someone rings his doorbell and now he’s adding a camera to it so it will snap a picture. People like the interactivity you get with the camera. In terms of what people do with the Pi on its own, the automation stuff is fun, or using the Pi as a Tor anonymizing router.

Anything else you’d like to share with the Linux community and LinuxCon attendees?

We are dependent on engineers to manufacture the demo I’m going to give and we’ve only got 7 weeks. (laughing) No seriously, I’m looking forward to meeting people. I’m a neophyte in this community.

The LinuxCon and CloudOpen North America conferences will be held Sept. 16-18, 2013, in New Orleans. Register now!

Duke Nukem 3D: Megaton Edition Now In Linux Beta

The Linux beta of the Duke Nukem 3D: Megaton Edition game is now available via Steam…

Read more at Phoronix

Hacker’s Tiny Spy Computers Aim To Track Targets Around Entire Neighborhoods And Cities

The National Security Agency, argues Brendan O’Connor, doesn’t have a monopoly on mass surveillance. In fact, he’s developed a cheap system of open-source spy boxes and mapping software that he says will let anyone “track everyone in a neighborhood, suburb, or city from the comfort of their sofa.”

At the Def Con hacker conference early next month, O’Connor, a security researcher who runs the consultancy Malice Afterthought, plans to unveil Creepy Distributed Object Locator or CreepyDOL, a system of Linux computers that cost less than $60 each and are designed to be hidden around an urban or suburban area. The little black boxes can wirelessly track the movements of cell phones or other mobile devices, feeding the information they collect into a database where an administrator can monitor targets on a map-based interface. A proof-of-concept version of the system that O’Connor has built includes ten of the spy nodes, each capable of reading the wireless signals of nearby devices and communicating back to a central server by piggybacking on any available Wifi network.

Read more at Forbes.

openSUSE Conference 2013: The Infomercial

Volunteers oSC13

 

Volunteers oSC13

 

One of the most exciting openSUSE Conferences is over. The community proved that everything can be done if people are anxiously engaged. Everyone had fun and was excited about these four days of conference. G(r)eekos had everything set up, from interesting presentations and workshops to night parties, lunch and dinner.

Read more at openSUSE News

Could OpenStack Benefit from the Power of One?

Is the market becoming flooded with too many OpenStack distributions and services? Is there a risk of too much fragmentation with such a new and important open platform? That’s a question I considered in a recent post called “In Five Years, Expect Far Fewer OpenStack Service Providers.” Citrix officials and others have repeatedly made the point that there is much more press and hubbub surround OpenStack than there are deployments. And several big companies have been departing from their original plans with OpenStack. Could it be that there are too many cooks in the kitchen with this platform?

Microsoft is the classic case of the company that didn’t always have the best-of-breed software platforms, but was able to become dominant and leverage its dominance to gain more influence. It’s possible that OpenStack would benefit from one dominant vendor emerging with the best distribution and top-notch support.

 
Read more at Ostatic

Microsoft Cozies Up to Linux Via Virtualization

As Linux becomes more firmly entrenched in businesses, and as cloud computing advancesl, Linux is becoming a significant factor in many cloud deployments.  As we noted here several times last year, Microsoft has steadily been reaching out to Linux with its Azure cloud platform. Months ago, the company announced plans to host Linux in virtual machines with Azure. Now, a new blog post confirms that with the release of Windows Server 2012 “Blue” (Windows Server 2012 R2), Microsoft will add features for users running Linux on Hyper-V in Windows Server.

 

 
Read more at Ostatic

Kernel Prepatch 3.11-rc3

The third 3.11 prepatch is out. “Anyway, remember how I asked people to test the backlight changes in rc2 because things like that have really bad track records? Yup. That all got reverted. It fixed things for some people, but regressed for others, and we don’t do that ‘one step forward, two steps back’ thing. But never fear, we have top people looking at it.

Read more at LWN

6 Key ‘Total Cost of Ownership’ Metrics for Cloud-Based Apps

Comparing the TCO of cloud versus on-premises systems and applications may be like comparing apples to oranges.