Oracle has put out their first (beta) development release of Oracle VM VirtualBox 4.2. The 4.2 release series brings several new features to this easy-to-use virtualization platform…
Oracle has put out their first (beta) development release of Oracle VM VirtualBox 4.2. The 4.2 release series brings several new features to this easy-to-use virtualization platform…
In case you didn’t already know, the location for this year’s LinuxCon – San Diego – is known for its skaters. That’s right, the skateboarding variety. What happens when you combine the Linux community with a skateboard mecca? You get ‘Skater Tux’:
So it’s only fitting that this year’s LinuxCon/CloudOpen speaker gift is {spoiler alert}, well, a skateboard.
Check it out:


We have a couple extra, so we thought we’d host a fun game in which two community members can be the proud owners of these wheels.
Skater Tux will be skating his way through our websites – LinuxFoundation.org, Linux.com,Linux Foundation Events, Linux Training – over the next 12 days (Aug 3-Aug15). Every few days we’ll post a hint on our social channels as to where you might find him. When you find him, share the link to his location on Twitter or Identi.ca using #linuxcon AND #cloudopen hashtags or email it to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
. Sorry, Facebook and Google+ have rules against asking community members to enter contests on our pages.
On August 15, Skater Tux will leave our websites (he’ll be on his way to LinuxCon after all) and we’ll conduct a random drawing of all the people who found him over those 12 days. If you find him in more than one location and share multiple links, you will be entered as many times as you find him. Since he will only move three times, the maximum amount of times you can be entered is three (in other words, please don’t share or send us the same link over and over, that won’t work). We’ll announce the winners shortly thereafter.
If you’re going to LinuxCon, bring your skateboard along, because there will be professional skateboarders in the outdoor lunch area from 12-1:30 on Friday, August 31. They will have equipment (including skateboards for those who don’t have their own) as well as gift packs for people who show some mad skills. They’ll be providing demos and lessons for free, so definitely check it out.
These are just some of the activities planned at LinuxCon/CloudOpen. Join us outside on the lawn each day for BBQ and food trucks. We’ll also have lawn games and a variety of cool stuff to do while you take a break from sessions.
THIS WEEK’S HINT:The Linux Foundation is advised by an esteemed advisory board of Linux kernel developers. Their pictures and bio’s are on our website where we detail this advisory board and their work.
For the past several months there’s been open-source driver development activities within the Linux kernel and Mesa library as it pertains to Haswell, the 2013 Intel micro-architecture to succeed this year’s successful Ivy Bridge platform. There’s xf86-video-intel DDX driver commits landing today pertaining to Haswell…
Linus has released 3.6-rc1 and closed the merge window for this development cycle. “I do have two more pull requests that are at least tentatively pending: there’s the uapi header file disintegration from David Howells and the tcm_vhost merge from Nicholas Bellinger, both of which came in in time. So I’ll take another look at those later. The pain of another header file revolution doesn’t excite me, but we’ll see.” (See this article for a description of the header file work). All told, nearly 8,600 changes were pulled into the mainline during this merge window.
A few days back I published benchmarks showing Intel’s Ivy Bridge hardware regressing with Mesa 8.1. While those problems are still outstanding, the good news is that Intel’s previous-generation Sandy Bridge hardware appears unaffected. Overall, Sandy Bridge is performing well with the soon-to-be-released Mesa 8.1 library for open-source Linux graphics drivers.
The chief security officer at Cisco, John Stewart, talks about the networking giant’s new security initiatives and building the trust of IT buyers.
The TRIM space-saving command will be in every SSD by mid-year, one analyst predicts.
Packages for the release of KDE’s Plasma and Applications 4.9 are available for Kubuntu 12.04. You can get it from the Kubuntu Backports PPA. They are also in our development release.
While disk management improvements might not be the first thing you think of when it comes to a desktop environment update, the disk utility (Disks) and udev within GNOME 3.6 will offer some new features…
With the arrival of RC1, all major changes have been integrated into Linux 3.6. Among the most important new features are hybrid standby, the VFIO userspace driver framework, quota support for Btrfs and TCP stack improvements.