today's leftovers
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How DevOps fits into the modern network
DevOps is often touted as the next big thing in software development, and rightly so. DevOps encourages collaboration among different teams working on the product, aims to reduce products' time to market, and much more. But what if you are not developing software, per se? Do you have to miss this new wave of innovation? Of course not!
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Containers 101: 10 Terms To Know
Application containers have been around for a while in the Linux world, but now Microsoft is moving them into the mainstream. Here's what you need to know about this evolution of server virtualization.
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Libinput 1.0.1 Released With One Fix
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VMware Lands Its OpenGL 3.3 Support In Its Mesa Gallium3D Driver
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Nautilus 3.18 – Comunicating changes
So these 3 weeks has been crazy of work. Basically because we had a roadmap, and we wanted to complete all that was marked as a target. The UI freeze was the first deadline, and Georges (Gsoc student for Nautilus and Gtk+ that I was mentoring) and me managed to get merged the Other Locations view, as Georges did for Gtk+ previously. Was a overworked week and a half, but the result came in!
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GNOME 3.17.91 Officially Released
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India Is A Different Place For IT
Yes, Wintel barely has a chance in the current market of India. Yesterday, 43% of Internet-pageviews were from Android/Linux. Even GNU/Linux had > 1% share including mobile. Then there was “Unknown”, probably some Linux OS at 6.69%. M$’s most popular OS, “7” only had 19.68% share, according to StatCounter. If you restrict data to desktop only, GNU/Linux reaches 2% and “Unknown” is also 2%.
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New Distro Tailored For Romania Knocks At The Door
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openSUSE Leap Milestone 2 Has Package Updates, Sticks To GCC 4.8
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OpenSUSE Leap 42.1 Has Been Released, Using Kernel 4.1.6 As Default
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openSUSE releases Leap Milestone 2
The second milestone for openSUSE’s newest distribution Leap was released today and it’s filled with packages that will interest open-source users everywhere and Linux professionals looking for a long-term, stable Linux system.
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Media Alert: Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst to Keynote Global Technology Distribution Council Summit of North America
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Red Hat unleashes EL 7.2 beta on a waiting world
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.2 Beta brings improved container support
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I accidentally dak
You may remember the auto-decrufter, which I added to dak. As a safety measure, it bails out when in doubt about which removal breaks what package. Turns out it was often in doubt, because the code had a bug. Of course, nothing that could not be solved with a patch.
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Why we care about administrivia (some of it, anyway)
We have enough debate about are things required by policy in Debian that, in my opinion we sometimes lose track of why things are a good idea to begin with. I just had a conversation via GitHub with a potential upstream developer (I’m looking into packaging something he developed) that reminded me about some of the reasons some of the non-code we try to ship are a good idea.
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Debian work in August 2015
Debconf 15 was a great opportunity to meet some of the other LTS contributors in person and to work on some of my packages:
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Elive 2.6.10 Beta Linux Distro Adds Enlightenment and Power Management Improvements
In a brief announcement posted on September 3, the developers of the Debian- and Enlightenment-based Elive Linux distribution have announced the immediate availability for download and testing of a new Beta build.
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Jonathan Riddell (Kubuntu) demands your hugs
Riddell has had his fair share of run-ins with Canonical over the years, the most recent of which had him expelled from the Ubuntu Community Council. They also demanded he be removed as the Kubuntu community leader, something, by the way, they have no authority to require.
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Elive 2.6.10 Beta Screenshot Tour
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Happy birthday Chrome, a New Elementary & More…
Elementary OS steps up: Not quite four months after the release of version 0.3.0 Freya, the folks at elementary have announced the release of 0.3.1. Although this is officially a minor point release, it does come packed with changes that should make it a must-install for elementary users. Included in the update: Version 14.04.3 of Ubuntu’s Hardware Enablement stack, improvements to the interface in Files, and the latest and greatest version 0.5.11 of the Midori browser.
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Tizen 2.3.1 SDK released with support for the Samsung Gear S2
Samsung Electronics Co have released the Tizen Software Development Kit (SDK) for the recently unveiled Samsung Gear S2 wearable device. Thanks to the early access program, over a thousand applications for the Samsung Gear S2 are expected to be available to users at launch. This is in addition to the five thousand apps already available to Samsung Gear users. Samsung has also opened the Gear S2 seller site on August 18th so developers and partners to start registering their Gear S2 applications.
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digiKam 7.7.0 is releasedAfter three months of active maintenance and another bug triage, the digiKam team is proud to present version 7.7.0 of its open source digital photo manager. See below the list of most important features coming with this release. |
Dilution and Misuse of the "Linux" Brand
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