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How To Make Open Source More Secure: A Tale Of Supply Chain
Open source software is often considered safer and more secure than proprietary software because users can, if they want, compile the software from the source code
Microphone support finally comes to Linux on Chromebooks
It takes a couple command lines in both the Chrome OS shell and the Linux Terminal, but it is quite simple to get up and running.
VMware Wraps Up 2019 With Pivotal Acquisition
VMware has wrapped 2019 with the addition of Pivotal to its ever growing family.
How to install GIMP on Linux Mint 19.3 Tricia
Check out this tutorial and learn how easy it is to install GIMP on a new Linux Mint 19.3 installation.
Linux and open-source rules: 2019’s five biggest stories show why
From those very early days when Richard M. Stallman created the GNU GPL, one of the main narratives was small plucky us--open-source and Linux supporters--versus the enormous, proprietary corporate them--with The Evil Empire Microsoft as enemy number one.
36C3: Open Source Is Insufficient To Solve Trust Problems In Hardware
When it comes to open source hardware, the number of steps and parties involved that are out of our control until we have a final product.
Ubuntu-based Peppermint 10 Respin Linux distribution available for download
Based on the 18.04 LTS code base, Peppermint 10 Respin still comes in both 64-bit and 32-bit flavors to provide support for older hardware.
Google Bans Avast Extensions for Google Chrome Due to User Data Collection
Google pulls Avast and AVG extensions for Google Chrome from the Chrome Web Store.
Twitter wants to fund an open source social media standard
Twitter reportedly backs an open-source, decentralized internet standard on which it eventually hopes to operate.
AWS Announces Graviton2-Powered General Purpose, Compute-Optimized, & Memory-Optimized EC2 Instances
AWS has provided a sneak peek at the next generation of Arm-based EC2 instances. These instances are built on AWS Nitro System and will be powered by the new Graviton2 processor. This is a custom AWS design that is built using a 7 nm (nanometer) manufacturing process. It is based on 64-bit Arm Neoverse cores, and can deliver up to 7x the performance of the A1 instances, including twice the floating point performance. Additional memory channels and double-sized per-core caches speed memory access by up to 5x.


