Home Blog Page 837

Kernel prepatch 4.6-rc2

Linus has released the second 4.6 prepatch. “You all know the drill by now – another week, another rc. I’d say that things look fairly normal at this point: it’s not a big rc2, but that’s been true lately (rc3 tends to be a bit bigger – probably just because it takes time for people to start noticing issues).

Zenwalk 8.0 Beta 3 Arrives for Slackware Fans with LibreOffice 5.1.1, FFmpeg 3.0

The development cycle of the Slackware-based Zenwalk 8.0 Linux kernel-based operating system continues, and its maintainers have announced the release of the third Beta build.

Zenwalk 8.0 entered development in mid-January 2016 with the first Beta release, and early adopters were able to get their hands on the second Beta build during the first week of February. Now, approximately eight weeks later, we can test the third Beta of the upcoming operating system.

According to the release notes, … (read more)

Latest Manjaro Linux 15.12 Update Brings Linux Kernel 4.5 and KDE Plasma 5.6.1

The Manjaro Linux development team announced the general availability of the fourteenth update pack for the Manjaro Linux 15.12 (Capella) operating system.

With this update, Manjaro Linux 15.12 users will receive the latest KDE Plasma 5.6.1 desktop environment, Calamares 2.2 graphical installer, Octopi 0.8.1 graphical package manager, Qt 5.6 GUI toolkit, Budgie Desktop 10.2.5 desktop environment, numerous Linux kernels updates, a BlueZ bug fix, and improvements to the Menda GTK3 theme.

As us… (read more)

Linux.com Login Temporarily Frozen for New Site Launch

new Linux.com previewA message for our registered users:  We have temporarily disabled user accounts on Linux.com while we migrate content to a new website. Next week a new Linux.com will launch with exciting new features and a cleaner design, at which time all registered users can resume posting new blogs, forum posts, questions or answers.  Thank you for your patience and stay tuned for the new, improved Linux.com!

Linux at 25: Q&A With Linus Torvalds

The creator of the Linux open-source operating system talks about its past, present, and future. 

Linus Torvalds created the original core of the Linux operating system in 1991 as a computer science student at the University of Helsinki in Finland. Linux rapidly grew into a full-featured operating system that can now be found running smartphones, servers, and all kinds of gadgets. In this e-mail interview, Torvalds reflects on the last quarter century and what the next 25 years might bring.

Stephen Cass: You’re a much more experienced programmer now versus 25 years ago. What’s one thing you know now that you wish your younger self knew?

Read more at IEEE Spectrum

Run your own cloud: Installing OwnCloud 9 on Debian 8

OwnCloud offers you the ability to run a cloud storage service that you administer and control yourself. The latest version, ownCloud 9.0, was released on March 8. Let’s look at the process of installing ownCloud 9.0 on a system running Debian Jessie.

Read more at HowtoForge

NetApp Updates its SANtricity OS, Targets Analytics Workloads

NetApp on Tuesday said it has released a new version of its SANtricity storage operating system with the aim of speeding up analytics workloads. The release of SANtricity, which powers the storage vendor’s EF Series all-flash and E-Series storage arrays, is designed to improve performance of Splunk, Hadoop and NoSQL workloads.

Storage vendors are increasingly pitching all-flash arrays with the aim of garnering big data workloads. NetApp’s move highlights how storage vendors are trying to ride the analytics wave be speeding up performance. NetApp said it is using proactive monitoring, automation and configurations for high-throughput apps to boost performance. 

Read more at ZDNet News

Hadoop Project ODP Regroups Under Linux Foundation’s Umbrella

The Open Data Platform’s reorg aims to assuage criticism about untoward vendor control over the initiative to create a consistent baseline Hadoop distribution.

After major criticism within the Hadoop community about its nature and aims, Open Data Platform — an initiative to create a reference-standard Hadoop distribution for others to build from — announced Monday it will now be hosted at the Linux Foundation as a Collaborative Project. The goal with this new organizational structure is to ameliorate the perception that the ODP Initiative is vendor-owned and -controlled, rather than just participated in by Hadoop vendors among many others.

Read more at InfoWorld

New DDoS Defense Turns Servers Into “Moving Targets”

The distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack is the classic cheap hack. It requires virtually nothing of those who wield it beyond the ability to download something from the internet, yet a DDoS offers unusually public consequences (most real security breaches happen in the dark). It is also difficult to defend against, in some part because it doesn’t involve actually breaching a network at all—just flooding it with more innocuous-seeming traffic than it can handle.

As described in the current issue of IEEE Computer, security researchers from George Mason University have developed a new defensive strategy that they claim can thwart DDoS attacks through a process of client-server connection “shuffling.”

Read more at Motherboard

Git 2.8 Officially Released

Git 2.8 has just been released today, March 28, 2016, and we have to admit that it comes as a huge surprise to us all here at Softpedia, especially because of the fact that the project’s website has not yet been updated to reflect this.

We’ve spotted the Git 2.8 release with the help of our friends from unixstickers, and we’ve decided to write an article and tell you all about the new features that have been implemented. But if you don’t have the time to read, you can download the Git 2.8 sources right now…