Given Ubuntu’s recent glitzy and fanfare-accompanied debut on the world’s mobile stage, it’s beginning to look like limelight and red carpets will increasingly be a part of FOSS’s future. You’ve come a long way, baby! And to think, we knew you back when! Now, what could be a more logical next step than an appearance on the silver screen? Enter “Software Wars,” a movie now seeking funding on Indiegogo that aims to show “how free software will save you thousands of dollars and lead to a better world,” in the words of its creators…Read more at LinuxInsider
Software Wars: FOSS’ Big Chance to Shine on the Silver Screen
More Fedora 19 Features Are Proposed
Just days after Fedora 19 saw a set of new features proposed, some additional proposed features for this major Fedora Linux release have been voiced…Read more at Phoronix
Set Up Rsnapshot, Archiving Of Snapshots And Backup Of MySQL Databases On Debian
Set Up Rsnapshot, Archiving Of Snapshots And Backup Of MySQL Databases On Debian
This howto will show you how to install and set up Rsnapshot, enable archiving of snapshots and how to back up MySQL databases on Debian.
Canonical Shakes Up Mobile with Ubuntu for Phones
Prior to the start of 2013, it seems fair to say that there hadn’t been too many major shakeups in the world of mobile operating systems.
Multiple players had come and gone, to be sure, but the marketplace as a whole had really undergone more of a continuous evolution in the 15 or so years it had been around. The entrance of Google’s Android, in fact, was surely the biggest disruptive splash in its recent history, resulting in what’s effectively been a two-horse race ever since.

Then 2013 arrived, and along with it Canonical’s Ubuntu for phones –not to mention the promise of Tizen phones from Samsung soon afterwards. Then, too, of course, there’s the prospect of devices running Firefox OS and Open webOS on the horizon as well.
“This is a very chaotic time in this industry,” wireless and telecom analyst Jeff Kagan told Linux.com.
Two Market Segments
Canonical’s proposition is essentially a single operating system for PC, phone and TV. Making use of all four edges of the screen, the new Ubuntu for phones is aimed at two distinct market segments, Canonical said: the high-end “superphone,” and the basic, entry-level smartphone.
Like the parallel Ubuntu for Android project–which will turn a standard Android phone into an Ubuntu PC when docked–Ubuntu phones will also be dockable, allowing them to deliver full PC capabilities.
Canonical has been on hand at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas this week to demonstrate the new technology, and a downloadable image of the upcoming system will reportedly be available in late February for the Galaxy Nexus device. True Ubuntu phones are not expected before the end of the year, however, and there’s no word yet as to which hardware makers or carriers will be involved.
“A Glimpse of the Future”
Much the way Android was greeted with considerable skepticism upon its arrival, so, too, have been Canonical’s Ubuntu plans.
“The Ubuntu phone doesn’t stand a chance,” proclaimed TechCrunch, for example.
“No, we don’t really need another smartphone OS,” asserted CNET.
“The Ubuntu phone has a speed problem, and I’m not talking about lag,” wrote The Verge.
“The Ubuntu smartphone (which no one will use) is a glimpse of the future,” opined CNN.
“We’ve known for some time that Canonical was working on a mobile version of its Ubuntu software; now that it is here, it marks some potential change and disruption in the mobile OS space,” Jay Lyman, a senior analyst with 451 Research, told Linux.com.
“Significant Competition”
In its favor, “Ubuntu is open source and flexible with other software, and it benefits from Ubuntu’s solid developer community and strength in cloud computing, which will help support mobile Ubuntu users in connectivity, storage and other capabilities,” Lyman explained.
In terms of challenges, however, “mobile Ubuntu’s success will hinge largely on hardware and carrier support,” he noted.
“The fact that Android was Linux-based may help any other Linux-based challenger in the mobile OS space, including Canonical with Ubuntu,” Lyman added. “Other challenges include monetization of the software and significant competition from the current heavyweights of the market–primarily Apple and Samsung, which is also ushering in some market disruption by working on Tizen-based smartphones.”
“We Are Just Starting the Journey”
Indeed, “as big an opportunity as Ubuntu is for Canonical, they will still be the salmon trying to swim upstream against the larger competitors,” Kagan warned. “They are in a very busy space with giants like Apple, Microsoft and Google up against them.”

At the same time, Canonical’s approach may well reflect a larger shift.
“Think about the way we use operating systems on separate devices like laptops, tablets and smartphones–they are all different,” Kagan explained. “As an industry we are just starting the journey to unite these different operating systems into one.”
The result will be a computing landscape in which “everything will work the same and store your information on the cloud,” he noted. “So even though these things may come from different segments, the operating system ties them all together. That’s the world that Canonical’s new Ubuntu plays in.”
Bottom line? “The computer and mobile world of tomorrow looks very different from the world we know today,” Kagan predicted. “What it will look like depends on who wins this new war.”
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.9 introduced

Customers with a Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) support contract are now able to download version 5.9 of the company’s Linux distribution. The new release updates RHEL 5 to include Microsoft’s Hyper V driver, OpenJDK 7 and Samba 3.6. This minor version update of RHEL 5 also marks the completion of the first support phase of the revised Red Hat support life cycle; it has taken five years to get to this point – RHEL 5 was introduced in 2007.
The integrated Hyper V driver is designed to make the Linux distribution work better under Microsoft’s hypervisor – for example in clouds with Windows hosts…Read more at The H
Two critical Ruby on Rails vulnerabilities
Two new vulnerabilities (CVE-2013-0156, CVE-2013-0155) have been reported in the Ruby on Rails web framework. CVE-2013-056 is considered a critical vulnerability that should be patched or worked around immediately (“allows attackers to bypass authentication systems, inject arbitrary SQL, inject and execute arbitrary code, or perform a DoS attack on a Rails application“), while CVE-2013-055 can alter some SQL queries when JSON parameter parsing is used. They are different than the SQL injection we reported on January 3. More information on -056 can be found in this analysis.
Linux Mint 14 Is a Breath of Fresh Air
Linux Mint 14, released in December and dubbed the “Nadia” version, is loaded with a horde of improvements to all four of its desktop environments. It is not usually necessary to grab every new release to a distro, but Nadia is a significant upgrade to an evolving Linux OS. This one is a keeper. The Linux Mint distro became popular very quickly, It was introduced in 2006 and is now pegged as one of the more widely used Linux operating systems. Some download and usage reports place it ahead of Canonical’s Ubuntu distro…Read more at LinuxInsider
Distribution Release: OS4 13.2 “OpenDesktop”
Roberto Dohnert has announced the release of OS4 13.2 “OpenDesktop” edition, an Ubuntu-based Linux distribution with a customised Xfce desktop: “Today we are pleased to announce the release of OS4 OpenDesktop 13.2. This release brings a long-awaited update to our next-generation desktop operating system platform. With this release we have also refreshed our pre-installed hardware line…Read more at DistroWatch
Want to understand open source? Live with its developers

Let’s say you want to understand what makes free and open source software (FOSS) so vital today—and what makes those who write it so committed to their difficult work. How would you do this? You might crack a few books on the cultural history of coding, like Levy’s Hackers or Markoff’s What the Dormouse Said, both pivotal explorations of the values that seem to guide open source programming (what we might call “the hacker ethic“). You might pore over the seminal tracts that give voice to these values—Raymond’s The Cathedral and the Bazaar or Stallman’s GNU Manifesto, perhaps. You might even peruse key documents from the projects themselves—maybe the Debian Social Contract or the Fedora Licensing Guidelines.
But do all this and you still won’t have a sense of how FOSS is lived—how these software projects sustain themselves every day as dynamic and lively communities guided by a complex and nuanced ethic…Read more at OpenSource.com
Mageia Looks Back at 2012 and Ahead to 2013
Magiea has enjoyed what some may consider phenomenal success their founding and today Trish Fraser spoke of what 2012 meant for the Mageia project. She wrote, “To all Mageia people around the world, wherever you are, we hope 2013 is a great year for you – and we plan to make it a great year for Mageia!”
Mageia in 2012
Fraser today listed several positive reviews of Mageia 2 that were published last year, although not an exhaustive list. In addition, Mageia has been honored by being listed as a Top 10, Top 5, or Best Distro by respected outlets…Read more at Ostatic