Home Blog Page 2188

Preparing For The Release of Wayland 1.0

Listen to Kristian Høgsberg talk about the imminent Wayland 1.0 release, multimedia integration for Wayland/Weston, and other recent Wayland developments…

 

Read more at Phoronix

Microsoft: Malware Preloaded on PC Production Lines in China

The company finds cybercriminals had infiltrated unsecure supply chains to hijack brand new computers, prompting an operation that disrupted the emerging Nitol botnet, and over 500 other strains of malware.

Read more at ZDNet News

Why Mono Is Desirable For Linux

On this Friday we have a freelance open-source opinion article that was written by Ciprian Khlud. This developer, who uses C# among other languages at his place of employment along with a combination of Windows and Linux, argues why the Mono open-source ECMA CLI/C#/.NET implementation is actually desirable for Linux.

 

Read more at Phoronix

AMD Catalyst 12.9 For Linux Brings Few Good Changes

The AMD Catalyst 12.9 graphics driver for Linux was released on Thursday…

 

Read more at Phoronix

Planning For The LLVM 3.2 Release This Year

It looks like LLVM 3.2, along with adjoining updates to Clang and related components, will be released this calendar year…

 

Read more at Phoronix

Learn To Code, Get A Job: Treehouse Offers Free Courses To 2,500 College Students

Screen shot 2012-09-13 at 4.15.44 PM

Treehouse launched last November with an admirable (or terrifying) goal: To teach the world how to design and develop for the Web, iOS and now Android. Essentially the lovechild of Lynda.com and Codeacademy, Treehouse is building an educational platform that employs video, quizzes and a little gamification to help aspiring programmers and app developers learn the trade — whether or not they have any prior experience.

To date, over 12K people (from ages 7 to 50) are paying for access to the startup’s platform, and Treehouse has been quick to generate revenue as a result. So, now the Portland-based company is looking to give back to its community of learners — and help inspire the next generation of web and mobile developers — announcing today that it’s giving $3 million-worth of free tech education to 2,500 college students.

What does that mean? Treehouse wants to be an affordable destination to learn how to build websites and mobile apps — from the very noobiest of noobs to veterans looking to brush up. Like Lynda.com, it offers expert-created-and-curated videos and content on a variety of topics, like HTML, CSS Foundations, Introduction to Programming, to name a few. Yet, unlike Lynda, Treehouse is project-based. Users learn to code by building a simplified version of Facebook, for example, and by practicing what they learn in realtime in their browser.

Read more at TechCrunch

Zentyal 3.0 Integrates Samba 4

The major update to the Linux-based small business server upgrades its underlying OS to Ubuntu 12.04 Server and integrates version 4 of Samba

Read more at The H

Office-Proof Collaboration from Zarafa, Powered by Mandriva

Mandriva announces the immediate availability of its integrated offering in partnership with Zarafa.

Zarafa is the Microsoft Exchange replacement for Linux servers, which allows users to share e-mails, calendars and contacts using Outlook or a web access. The integration includes a specific installation and configuration wizard as well as the possibility to manage Zarafa users in the Mandriva Directory Server (MDS) of MES5.
Combining Mandriva Enterprise Server and Zarafa Professional Edition, Mandriva and Zarafa are building on the partnership they had entered in 2011 to deliver a fully integrated solution that offers a cost effective, ready to use and enterprise-class groupware platform to businesses and administrations.

Mandriva offers Zarafa dedicated packages including support for Mandriva Enterprise Server 5 (MES 5), a server for mid-sized enterprise customers. Zarafa also ships the Zarafa web access, a web-based groupware interface with a look-and-feel like Microsoft® Outlook™, allowing users to become accustomed quickly. Moreover, with the Active Directory™ plug-in, Zarafa can be easily integrated in an existing Windows network. 

Bodhi Linux 2.1.0 Arrives With New File Manager

The newest version of the Enlightenment-based distribution introduces a new file manager, four new desktop themes and updates several software packages. The login manager now supports user lists.

Read more at The H

openSUSE Edu Li-f-e 12.2 Out Now

openSUSE-Education li-f-e logoopenSUSE Education team once again presents Li-f-e (Linux for Education) built on hot new openSUSE 12.2 including all the post release updates. As always this edition of Li-f-e comes bundled with a lot of softwares useful for students, teachers, as well as IT admins of educational institutions. Apart from stable versions of KDE and Gnome, Cinnamon is also available. Sugar desktop suite makes a comeback thanks to the work of Xim Wang packaging it. Li-f-e also give full multimedia experience right out of the box without having to install anything extra. The live installable DVD iso stands at 3.3G as an incredible array of softwares from open source world are available on it, we have not just bundled them in, but have tried to integrate it with the distribution to give everything a seamless feel.

KIWI-LTSP brings Li-f-e a very easy to setup LTSP server for PXE booting thin-clients/PC/laptop over the network with many new features and improvements. It can be deployed at schools, homes or even offices. Epoptes lab administration tool makes its debut replacing italc, epoptes allows control of every aspect of the clients, such as: lock/unlock screen, full remote control, messaging, broadcasting display, reboot/shutdown etc.

 

 

Read more at openSUSE News