schuirink.net
main destinations: home | the web & the world | out of here
Google

news headlines

News headlines collected from 498 newsfeeds.

Linux Today

url: http://www.linuxtoday.com


eSecurityPlanet: The big problem Bromium is working on is called Byzantine Fault Tolerance. In computer science, this concept describes a system that is able to survive multiple and arbitrary forms of attack or failure of its component parts.

]]>


Toolbox.com: When it comes to computing, especially operating systems, the trend seems to reducing the amount of control the end users have over their operating system environments [stares hard at garden gnomes].

]]>


LinuxBSDos.com: One tool that has seen very little or no change over the past several releases in Ubuntu Desktop is the installation program. So it is somewhat surprising that some users are having problems dual-booting Windows 7 and Ubuntu 12.04 using a tutorial written for Ubuntu 11.04.

]]>


HowtoForge: In this guide I will use Subversion to manage all the Tasks. You can use any other SCM system as well, as long it supports something similar to Subversion's external directive. I'm using Ubuntu 12.04 but you can use other distributions as well.

]]>


InfoWorld: A number of software entrepreneurs chose to base their business models on this fear. They selected the GPL for their software projects, not to promote some vision of digital liberty, but rather to exploit the fears of corporate legal advisers about the GPL.

]]>


IT World: Just days after the Mandriva community started its own plans for the next release of the French Linux distribution, its commercial sponsor has formally announced that the community will take the lead on all Mandriva Linux development moving forward.

]]>


Really Linux: The desktop is not going to disappear suddenly because there is a movement to include mobile devices.

]]>


OpenSource.com: One of the most overlooked reasons to get involved with an open source project is career advancement

]]>


 ITWorld: Now that Apache OpenOffice 3.4 has been released, IBM has begun to take formal steps to re-integrate its Lotus Symphony fork of OpenOffice.org back into the OpenOffice mainline.

]]>