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Linux-Friendly i.MX6 Dev Board Gains 1080p Camera

E-con Systems has launched a 5-megapixel 1080p autofocus camera board, designed to integrate with a Linux- and Android-friendly $199 Boundary Devices development board for Freescale’s quad-core i.MX6 system-on-chip. E-con’s camera board connects to Boundary’s i.MX6 single-board computer via a CSI-2 MIPI interface, and is supplied with a V4L2-compliant Linux driver and source. E-con’s e-CAM50IMX6 camera […]

Read more at LinuxGizmos

Xen & KVM Come To 64-bit ARM On Linux

The Linux 3.11 kernel that’s officially just been under development since last night’s 3.10 release will feature support for KVM and Xen virtualization on 64-bit ARM (AArch64) hardware…

Read more at Phoronix

Ready to Run Desktop Linux PC: MintBox 2

Like Linux Mint? Want it in a plug and go PC? CompuLab may have the computer for you: the new MintBox 2.

A Look at 22 Linux Foundation Newbies

 Given the open-source community’s emphasis on being inclusive and welcoming to as many contributors as possible, it’s perhaps unsurprising that the Linux Foundation – an umbrella group working to promote and support the use of Linux – has already added no fewer than 22 new corporate members this year. Here’s a look at the companies that joined up.

Read more at NetworkWorld.

CERN and Rackspace to Collaborate on Hybrid Cloud Platform

As announced on the Rackspace blog, the company–focused on OpenStack-based cloud computing–is collaborating with the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)   on what’s described as “an amazing mission.” CERN operates the world’s largest particle physics laboratory and its research has uncovered some of the mysteries of the universe. CERN was already a member of the OpenStack community and It will now work with Rackspace to build out a hybrid cloud.

CERN openlab has launched a pilot hybrid cloud project with Rackspace as its researchers aim to enable the expansion of OpenStack-based private cloud infrastructure already in use. According to the Rackspace post:

 

 
Read more at Ostatic

Development Release: Frugalware Linux 1.9 Pre 2

James Buren has announced that the second pre-release of Frugalware Linux 1.9, a general-purpose distribution designed for intermediate Linux users, is ready for testing: “This is the second preview release of Frugalware 1.9. Starting with this release, netconfig has been replaced by our new nmconfig tool which uses….

Read more at DistroWatch

Android Hack-Tool targets Windows PCs

The USB Clever repurposes an Android device into a password stealing memory stick for Windows PCs, albeit with the ability to select payloads and view results. But if autorun is disabled, there it little to worry about

Read more at The H

DevOps Skills are Hot – and Highly Valued

Job listings mentioning “DevOps” have burgeoned over the past year or so, and people who include the term in their LinkedIn profiles and resumes are hotly pursued by tech recruiters.

For those of us who believe DevOps thinking and practices are the way to better IT and happier, more productive technology teams, this trend is both discouraging and encouraging. It’s discouraging because we don’t want to see “DevOps” become a mere buzzword, used to put a new shiny gloss on old, ineffective practices and assumptions. And it’s encouraging because it indicates a growing awareness that operations people and developers produce better software when they collaborate closely, using the tools and disciplines from both worlds.

Hiring for DevOps

In our 2013 State of DevOps survey , we asked a few questions about hiring and job titles. Half our 4,000-plus respondents said their teams consider DevOps skills when hiring. Yet just 18 percent of respondents said their organization had someone with the title “DevOps engineer.”

To us, this says that the skills someone brings to an organization are far more important than the actual title. The top three skills our DevOps skills chartrespondents said they were looking for: 

– Coding or scripting

– People skills

– Process re-engineering

Much lower down the list were experience with consulting or specific tools.

The most-desired skills point to what’s different about DevOps. The ability to code and script is essential for automating testing and deployment. Ditto for the ability to re-engineer processes as needed.

But without the ability to talk and work with people whose skills and experience are different from – but complementary to – yours, these technical skills mean little. DevOps is as much about collaboration and active dialogue as it is about tooling and scripting.

People with DevOps skills are highly valued, because they deliver value

One of our survey questions was about salary. The resulting data, analyzed in conjunction with data around DevOps adoption and hiring for these skills, told us that Operations people are paid more in organizations where DevOps is most mature and where these skills are considered in hiring.

That doesn’t mean people should start adding “DevOps” to their resumes and LinkedIn profiles. Without the skills – both technical and cultural – that give this word real meaning, no savvy organization will hire them, anyway. A pretender might get an interview, but any team looking to nurture its culture will interview deeply, and poseurs won’t make the cut. But people who truly can bring technical skills and cultural know-how to a team that’s striving to deliver better code, faster, through active collaboration, will be recognized.

It’s these people – and these teams – whose active collaboration and frequent use of automation deliver solid business results. Survey respondents working in high-performing teams reported deploying code up to 30 times more frequently than their peers. Their code is of higher quality: 50 percent fewer deployments fail for the best teams. Reliability is also much better — when failures do occur, service is restored in minutes, rather than hours, or even days.

Management teams are looking to deliver new services to customers, and to deliver them faster than competitors, for lower cost. Teams employing DevOps practices are doing that — and recruiters are calling the people on those teams.

James Turnbull puppet labs

James Turnbull is vice president of technical operations at Puppet Labs. He has published a number of technical books, including Pro Puppet, Pro Linux System Administration, Pro Nagios 2.0 and more. James speaks regularly at technical conferences, including OSCON,  Linux.conf.au,  FOSDEM,  OpenSourceBridge and DevOpsDays.

Intel 2.21.11 Driver Works On Fastboot, Bug Fixes

Chris Wilson has released yet another xf86-video-intel 2.21.x driver point release…

Read more at Phoronix

Nouveau Changes Pulled For Linux 3.11 Kernel

After talking about the big DRM changes heading for the Linux 3.11 kernel, the Nouveau DRM driver changes are finally known as they were pulled into the drm-next tree last night…

Read more at Phoronix