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Freedreno: Complex Fragment Shaders, VBOs

Freedreno, the reverse-engineered open-source Linux graphics driver for Qualcomm’s Adreno graphics hardware, continues hitting new milestones…

 

Read more at Phoronix

Bits Blog: Boundary: Keeping Cloud Software in Shape

Boundary, a start-up, monitors the performance of applications in the cloud, which can show where slowdowns might be occurring, or where operational savings might be found.

Read more at New York Times

GNOME’s Ambitious OS Adventure

With all the ongoing debate over desktop environments here in the Linux blogosphere, there’s never any shortage of discussion of the GNOME project, even on an ordinary day. Last Tuesday, however, was no ordinary day — at least, if a certain blog post was anything to go by. “The idea of GNOME OS has been around for a couple of years,” wrote GNOME UX designer Allan Day in said post. “The aspirations that are driving this process include things like providing a better experience for application developers, …” Erm, what was that, you say? A GNOME OS?

 

Read more at LinuxInsider

GNOME Ubuntu Community Derivative Name Proposed

An Ubuntu developer is seeking feedback from the GNOME community about a proposed name for a variant of Ubuntu that will use GNOME as its default desktop. Also, the GNOME project has published a new site to celebrate its 15th birthday.

Read more at The H

Cray to Plug Kepler GPUs into Future Cascade Supers

By Timothy Prickett MorganGet more from this author

Cray’s next-generation “Cascade” supercomputer is based on a future Intel “Ivy Bridge” Xeon processors, and the company has just taken $140m from Chipzilla in exchange for the intellectual property and people associated with its “Gemini” and “Aries” supercomputer interconnects. So it was no surprise that Cray talked about using Intel’s Xeon Phi x86 coprocessors in the future Cascade machines, which lash tens of thousands of those future Xeons together using the Aries interconnect.

Now Nvidia is finally getting a little love for its “Kepler” GPU coprocessors inside the future Cascade machines. So if you have written code that runs in hybrid mode on AMD’s Opteron processors and Nvidia’s Tesla GPU coprocessors, as many supercomputing shops have begun doing, you can breathe a sigh of relief. You won’t be forced to port your code to Xeon Phi coprocessors, formerly known as “Knights Corner.”

The current Cray XK6 hybrid CPU-GPU supercomputers are what you get when you rip out half of the eight Opteron 6200 processors on a system blade, replace them with Tesla X2090 GPU coprocessors, and then link them to the remaining four Opterons.

Given that two of the largest supercomputers in the world – the 20 petaflops “Titan” super going into Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the similarly-sized “Blue Waters” super going into the University of Illinois – are using Nvidia’s future “Kepler” GPUs in their coprocessors (and specifically, the Tesla K20 coprocessors aimed at jobs that need lots of double-precision floating point math), it was a pretty good bet that Cray was going to support Nvidia GPU coprocessors in Cascades. The US government labs paying for Cascade systems would not have it any other way.

This article originally appeared in The Register

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Read more at insideHPC

Debian Celebrates its 19th Birthday

Today, Debian celebrates its 19th birthday. To commemorate the occasion, parties have been organised all around the globe and users traditionally bake cakes to bring to these events

Read more at The H

Development Release: Slackware Linux 14.0 RC2

The second release candidate for the upcoming Slackware Linux 14.0 is ready for testing. Patrick Vokerding in today’s changelog: “Getting close! Hopefully we’ve cleared out most of the remaining issues and are nearly ready here. We’ll call this release candidate 2. Unless there’s a very good rationale, versions….

 

Read more at DistroWatch

HP Launches Three Network and Storage Virtualization Products

It is clear from this product launch that HP is one of a very small list of suppliers that fully understands and has the ability to address the use of all forms of virtualization technology.

Security Mindset Must Change With Cloud

Companies need to grasp implications of moving to cloud and develop a roadmap to holistically secure IT systems instead of deploying security products for individual stacks.

Read more at ZDNet News

SanDisk FlashSoft Expands from Windows, Linux Servers to VMware vSphere

SanDisk boasts that FlashSoft for VMware vSphere accelerates application performance by three to five times over.