The Fedora Project has decided to implement support for UEFI Secure Boot in Fedora 18 using an approach proposed by Matthew Garrett
Dell Offers New Laptops with Red Hat Enterprise Linux Loaded
Dell Computer is continuing to exapnd its support for Linux and open source platforms. We’ve reported on the company’s work with Canonical to bring Ubuntu-based systems to both India and China, including an expansion of this effort. And, Dell just announced that it is delivering an Ubuntu laptop, part of its “Project Sputnik” effort, targeted at developers. Now, Dell is offering new laptops with Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6 pre-loaded.
As PC World notes:
“The company announced two models, the Precision M4700, which has a 15.6-inch screen, and the Precision M6700, which has a 17.3-inch screen. Dell will offer Windows 7, but is also offering Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 for specific regions. Dell did not provide information on the countries in which RHEL would be available…The new Precision laptops run on Intel’s latest third-generation Core i5 and i7 processors code-named Ivy Bridge.”
You can find a complete breakdown of the specs on these systems at AnandTech. They are clearly powerful systems, not low-end offerings.
Arduino Leonardo Released
Microcontroller board Leonardo is cheaper than the Uno board and offers greater USB flexibility
Apple Wants $2.5 Billion in Damages from Samsung
Battling with Samsung in the U.S. over patent issues, Apple has calculated the amount of damages at a cool $2.5 billion. [Read more]
Analyst: iPhone 5, iPad Mini Coming In September

Apple’s next-gen iPhone — and the much-talked about (but yet unseen) iPad mini — are some of the most hotly anticipated gadgets of the year. And according to a report by relatively on-point KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the new iPhone and iPad mini will launch in September.
Thus far, we’ve heard that the iPhone 5 will have a larger 4.08-inch display maintaining the same width as current models, at 640 pixels. TechCrunch has also confirmed — along with Reuters more recently — that the new iPhone will replace its original 30-pin connector dock with a 19-pin mini port.
The iPad mini, on the other hand, is said to be the same thickness as the iPod touch 4G, with a screen measuring 7.85-inches. He expects that iPad mini sales should hit 1.8 million units during the time its available (1-2 weeks) in Q3.
Of course, Kuo (and the rest of the world) expects Q4 numbers for both products to be ridiculously high, with iPhone projections at 55 million units and iPad estimates hitting 24 million (including both iPad mini, new iPad, and iPad 2).
Here’s Kuo’s official word:
Though shipments of iPad mini’s components will start in August, the new iPad line will end production, ready for transition to a modified New iPad line. As such, component shipments will drop in August as iPad mini’s components shipments growth will be offset. On a side note, the modified New iPad shares the same exterior as the original model, but contains modifications to correct its thermal dissipation problem and lower-cost components.
The September timeline is just a prediction made by this analyst, but it makes sense considering we’ve already heard that the iPhone is in production.
TI Releases Linux Kernel Support For “Keystone”
Texas Instruments has published their initial Linux kernel patches for providing support for their forthcoming Keystone platform, which is an interesting ARM-based platform dealing with many-core SoCs using Cortex-A15s…
OpenStack Developers Move From Rackspace to Nebula
According to a report, seven OpenStack developers have left Rackspace to move to Nebula, a much smaller company which develops the OpenStack-based OpenNebula cloud platform
How Google Compute Engine Hopes to Sidestep AWS Failures
Google is calling on some of its most sensitive technologies in an attempt to give its cloud greater redundancy and reliability than Amazon Web Services’s cloud, though it plans to keep them proprietary
China Takeover as Tech Innovation Center Inevitable
Asian giant will eventually dominate in many areas of innovation partly due to market opportunities, and government support, but will still not entirely replicate Silicon Valley, industry watchers say.