Openwashing

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Carahsoft Adds Liferay’s Open Source Portal to GSA Schedule, SEWP Contracts
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Hazelcast 3.6 Provides Open Source Support for In-Memory Computing
Hazelcast, a provider of in-memory data grids and large-scale enterprise caching, has released Hazelcast 3.6 - an operational in-memory computing solution - which offers a platform for serving mobile devices with server-side applications.
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Meet ‘Gizmo’–The New York Times’ Open Source Microservices Toolkit
I may be dating myself a bit, but to me Gizmo will always be the lovable little guy from the movie Gremlins. The New York Times recently released an open source microservices toolkit called “Gizmo” as well, though. The toolkit is built on the Go programming language and The New York Times hopes that making it open source will accelerate the pace of enhancing and expanding its capabilities.
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Walmart Launches OneOps, An Open-Source Cloud And Application Lifecycle Management Platform
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Walmart open-sources OneOps to free you from cloud lock-in
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Couchbase Supports @WalmartLab’s Release of OneOps Cloud Management to Open Source Community
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today's howtos
| Hackers getting married
We had several of our old-time friends from the GNU Project, and some guests with young children still unused to such an international context who soon enough learned to enjoy the sound of different languages and the happy chaos of people meeting for the first time, some more traditional if not formal, others fun and weird.
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Fedora Releases and Red Hat/IBM Puff Pieces
| These two Linux desktops are the simplest picks for new users
Let's face it, any time you come across articles that offer advice on choosing the right Linux distribution, they tend to get bogged down in a lot of technical advice that rarely (if ever) applies to those who've never experienced Linux. They'll speak of things like rolling releases, package managers, kernels, open-source licensing, and other features and ideologies that not only have little bearing on those new to Linux and open-source technology but mire the decision in unnecessary complications.
I want to take a very different approach, one that should make the process quite simple for anyone looking to dive into the world of desktop Linux for the first time. I'm going to shrug off the usual advice and aim straight for the heart of the matter. What exactly is that matter?
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