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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Software Stack Still Under Wraps

There was a story recently that Red Hat would replace MySQL with MariaDB in the next version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Actually, Red Hat isn’t saying yet which DBMS, or any other specific program, will be shipping in RHEL 7.

Panzura: ‘Infrastructure is Slowly Getting Commoditized’

We talk shop with Ranajit Nevatia, vice president at the U.S. cloud storage company.

Adaptiva Serverless App-V Streaming and Virtual San

Application virtualization and streaming faces a challenging obstacle. Getting application components to a client quickly and efficiently without also requiring extensive updates to network, system and storage infrastructure. Adaptiva believes it has solved the problem with a combination of clever network virtualization and storage virtualization.

Monitoring OpenStack Swift With Opsview

Monitoring OpenStack Swift With Opsview

This is a quick how-to for Opsview users who need to monitor an OpenStack (Essex) Swift installation.

Read more at HowtoForge

Reality Check: Defining The True Success of Linux

Editor’s Note: This is the second article in a new series by SUSE community marketing manager Brian Proffitt for Linux.com called “Reality Check” that will take a look at Linux in the real world. The first, 5 Linux Features You Want in Your Company, was published in May.

Brian-ProffittLet’s talk about a touchy subject: the Linux desktop.

It’s touchy because, by any reasonable measure, Linux on the desktop has yet to capture a significant market share of the desktop and portable PC platform.

This has to be said, right up front. It does not make me particularly happy to point this out, given all the great work being done on the desktop by openSUSE, Fedora, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and all of the environment and application projects out there.

But the first step to fixing a problem is admitting you have a problem, so here we are.

It is a common mistake to hear or read such statements and claim that they are the final word for the topic at hand: Linux on the desktop is not working now, so therefore that will always be the case.

Given the way things change on a daily basis, and not just in technology, drawing that line in the sand seems very premature. Already there are signs of progressing success in the marketplace for Linux-based devices like the Chromebook. Consumers in the marketplace are realizing that they don’t need an over-powered PC device if all they want to do is consume content, thus the shift to tablet devices and systems like the Chromebook, which affords users some productivity tools that tablets can lack. Jim Zemlin himself blogged about this phenomenon, noting that the rise of Android and tablet computing has created the “Post-Desktop World,” after the release of Windows 8 last October.

In the face of this kind of user shift, there is clear evidence that the state of the Linux desktop is changing, adapting to use cases that don’t have the same requirements as the old Linux desktop had.

Ah, but that’s a cop-out, some would argue: Linux didn’t win on the desktop, so you’re changing the definition of what the desktop is. Putting aside for a moment that it’s the market that’s establishing the definition of the desktop, I can still admit that Linux has not established itself as a desktop contender… yet.

What is bothersome is that in light of this shortcoming, desktop Linux becomes the poster child for the overall failure of Linux everywhere in the marketplace.

This is, categorically, the dumbest assumption ever.

The success of Linux cannot be simply measured by its performance on the desktop. Linux is everywhere, running a majority of the servers on the Internet, powering integrated systems everywhere, being the platform for big data implementations, be it commodity Hadoop servers or in-memory databases like SAP HANA. Linux is, without hyperbole, one of the most successful software implementations in history.

So, if you want to label “desktop Linux” a “failure”–and we can argue about that narrow definition–then maybe we can live with that. Linux on the desktop has not succeeded–yet–but that in no way limits the overall success of Linux everywhere else.

Intel Haswell HD Graphics 4600 vs. AMD Radeon Graphics On Linux

Already published on Phoronix have been Intel HD Graphics 4600 benchmarks on Ubuntu Linux from the Intel Core i7 4770K “Haswell” processor and compared against previous generations of Intel HD Graphics. Being benchmarked today is the Intel HD Graphics 4600 on Linux compared against various AMD Radeon graphics cards using both the open and closed-source graphics drivers.

Read more at Phoronix

Samsung Mass Producing Speedier Solid-State Drives

The new solid-state drives use PCI-Express (PCIe) connections to deliver speeds more than 2.5 times faster than those of SATA-based SSDs. [Read more]

 

Read more at CNET News

Processor Whispers: Of Milky Ways and Milkmaids

AMD offers first x86 processors with 5GHz clock speed, but loses its top position among the supercomputers. Intel’s Xeon Phi takes over – though not in the USA, but in China

Read more at The H

Learning to Program, the Open Source Way

Tech Kaleidoscope

Kushal Das thinks he knows what you’re doing this summer: joining him and his team of volunteers in free, online programming classes, where you’ll learn more than just how to code. In Kushal’s hands, you’ll also receive a crash course in the open source way.

 

read more

Read more at OpenSource.com

Kogan Jumps On Board Rackspace Public Cloud

The electronics vendor has taken up the hosting provider’s new public cloud offering in Australia through a hybrid cloud model.