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Distribution Release: Network Security Toolkit 18-4509

Ron Henderson has announced the availability of a major new release of Network Security Toolkit (NST), a specialist Fedora-based live DVD featuring a collection of open-source network security applications: “We are pleased to announce the latest NST release – ‘NST 18 SVN:4509’. This release is based on Fedora….

Read more at DistroWatch

Radeon HDMI Linux Audio Might Be Restored Soon

Support for HDMI audio output with the open-source Radeon Linux graphics driver might finally be in a state where it could be re-enabled by default…

Read more at Phoronix

Open Hardware Quad-Core ARM SBC Project Hits Kickstarter

A project to build a compact, low cost, open-hardware SBC (single board computer) has turned to Kickstarter for funding. The 110×85 mm UDOO board is based on an ARM i.MX6 Freescale processor, will run either Linux or Android, and has built-in Arduino-compatible functions, according to the project team. According to the UDOO project’s Kickstarter page, […]

Read more at LinuxGizmos

Wayland Bindings Come To JavaScript (Node.js)

JavaScript bindings for the Wayland client have come in the form of a Node.js implementation…

Read more at Phoronix

New Releases: Wine 1.5.28, VirtualBox 4.2.12, FileBot 3.6

A new development release of Wine v1.5.28is out.

Read more at Muktware

Tuning Btrfs vs. F2FS, EXT4, XFS File-Systems

When earlier this week delivering Btrfs benchmarks with various mount options for tuning the next-generation Linux file-system, some Linux users were hoping to see other file-systems tossed into the test mix too for reference. Here’s those numbers…

Read more at Phoronix

Red Hat’s John Mark Walker: The Open Cloud Needs Open Storage

Open source leads the data center, says John Mark Walker, Gluster Community leader at Red Hat. OK, what’s next? This is the question Walker plans to address in his keynote on Monday at Collaboration Summit in San Francisco, though he hints at the answer in this Q&A.

As you might have guessed, it has something to do with the open source hybrid cloud and Gluster, the open source distributed file system.  The worlds of data and compute are colliding in the cloud and developers can take advantage of this, he says. Also on his mind are the upcoming GlusterFS 3.4 release, the project’s shift to open source from an open core model, and what Linux pros need to know about enterprise storage right now. 

John Mark WalkerWatch his full remarks on open source data storage with our live video stream of the April 15 keynotes.

Q: What are some of the trends in enterprise storage that Linux pros should be paying attention to right now?

John Mark Walker: The funny thing is that storage, like many things, is morphing and merging with a host of other technologies. If you look at the industry trends that make up the open hybrid cloud, elastic, automated storage is quickly being recognized as an intrinsic part of any cloud architecture. The problem is, as with many technologies, those responsible for deploying these open hybrid clouds are discovering that the traditional, proprietary approaches don’t scale. That in order to have an open hybrid cloud, they need an open hybrid storage platform that’s agile enough to support their data center’s rapid growth.
 
Historically, compute was the sexy part of cloud computing, while storage was the backwater that nobody really cared about. And then storage requirements started to exceed the ability of operators to keep pace, and suddenly storage was recognized as something that needed to be just as elastic as everything else. The problem was, storage means data, and nobody can afford to lose data. If you lose compute resources, spinning those up is easy, and you can continue wherever you left off when the old compute node died. But that implies that there’s a storage layer underneath allowing you to preserve the state of all of your virtualized machines and apps. If that piece goes away, you better have some mechanisms in place that allow you to quickly recover. So, in our brave new, open hybrid cloud world, you must have an open hybrid storage counterpart that’s baked into your data center architecture. 

Q: How is the Gluster Community innovating in that space? 

Walker: The Gluster Community is all about creating software that allows you to achieve total data center victory. That is, invest in the architecture that gives you the open hybrid storage layer that we provide, and you’ll have be able to produce a system with extreme data portability and mobility. We’re producing a unified storage backend that gives admins maximum data flexibility – nobody else can say that right now. One of our central guiding principles is that your access shouldn’t be limited by the protocols that your app speaks. If you’re using NFS, you should be able to access the same data as if you’re using Swift, S3, or some other object storage protocol. Your data, your way – your vendor shouldn’t be able to dictate to operators how to access data.
 
Q: What project are you working on that you’re most excited about?
 
Walker: We are currently in the process of transforming the Gluster Community into a vibrant open source ecosystem. I’m afraid I can’t share more than that at the moment, but expect some big changes coming up very soon. This is, by far, the most exciting.

Q: What’s new with GlusterFS since you held the community workshop at LinuxCon Europe?

Walker: Lots 🙂 There are some substantial changes coming up in GlusterFS 3.4. Up until now, we have been almost exclusively focused on scale-out NAS: files and folders distributed over a wide network. One of the hottest areas of growth right now, thanks to cloud proliferation, is the ability to manage virtual machines running applications in the cloud. The ability to replicate these machines for failover in the cloud has been something that we weren’t able to do at scale. However, with GlusterFS 3.4, thanks to some major contributions from our friends at IBM’s Linux Technology Center, we have built tight integration with QEMU/KVM, allowing operators to deploy VMs on GlusterFS at a large scale and with better performance. We are very excited about this – both because it’s a great feature to have, but also because it marks a very important milestone for us: This is the first major feature contributed from a non-core GlusterFS engineer – ever. This shows how much we’ve grown from your typical open core model to a real open source model.

Q: Can you give us a preview of your talk at Collaboration Summit? What can attendees expect to hear?

Walker: You’ll be hearing about Total Data Center Victory, obviously 😉  Really, this talk is about two primary themes, the first being how much of our data center world has been led by open source developers. I’ll give you a hint: pretty much all of it. We have arrived at the point where industry innovation is not led by proprietary software companies,  but by open source communities featuring informal, de facto partnerships between innovative software vendors, like Red Hat, and innovative operators and service providers, like Netflix, Twitter, Facebook, etc. This is the way forward – we have seen the last proprietary innovator in the data center.
 
We always wondered what total victory for open source would look like – we see that right now. Now the question becomes, what now? Where will open source lead us? When you look at the pace of innovation in ecosystems like those centered around OpenStack and Gluster, we’re heading towards a landscape of total open hybrid automation – the open hybrid cloud converging with open hybrid storage. When I say “Total Data Center Victory” it’s a double entendre – Open Source developers have achieved Total Data Center Victory by following their muse. And today’s Linux pro can achieve Total Data Center Victory by using these trends to their advantage. Take advantage of the converging worlds of data and compute. Take advantage of open hybrid automation and be a part of the communities that are driving innovation.

Beautiful User Interfaces of the Future, According to Science Fiction

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User interfaces remain one of the most fascinating elements of visual science fiction. They need to tell us something about what characters are doing (whether it’s aiming a weapon or tracking a criminal, apparently the two most common activities in the future) and something about what the world finds aesthetically appealing, all in a way that’s immediately understandable to people in the present. While most stay firmly in the future past, others have had a massive — some would say pernicious — impact on how we use technology in the real world. Even so, the designs often appear for only a few seconds onscreen, but the VisualPunke tumblr has collected them in an ongoing series of beautiful, often frenetic images from anime, video…

Continue reading…

Read more at The Verge

You Use Open Source Tools? The Robot Recruiters Know It — and Like It

As we’ve reported, the risee of the cloud and Big Data tools is also giving rise to a need for expertise in using these tools. Jobs for people with Linux and Big Data skills are readily available around the world.

In an interesting spin on this trend, though, there are also some signs emerging that Big Data analysis tools could even match skilled workers up with their ideal jobs in ways that human recruiters can’t. And, these tools may put special emphasis on how savvy job seekers are with open source technology and general computing knowledge.

The Economist provides an interesting report on “Robot Recruiters,” and it even suggests that companies that remotely detect or ask about whether you’re using the open source browser of your choice instead of the browser that came with your computer could do better at hiring the right employees:

 

 
Read more at Ostatic

QXL KMS Driver To Be Merged For Linux 3.10 Kernel

David Airlie of Red Hat has pulled in his own QXL KMS/DRM driver into his drm-next Git tree, which means this para-virtual graphics hardware with TTM/GEM support will premiere in the Linux 3.10 kernel…

Read more at Phoronix