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Massimo Luciani

Debian 6.0 "Squeeze" released | NetMassimo Blog - 3 views

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    After about two years the Debian project has released version 6.0, code-named Squeeze, of its famous distribution. In addition to the classic Debian GNU/Linux there's the official release of Debian GNU/kFreeBSD, the Debian distribution based on the FreeBSD kernel though not all the advanced features for the desktop are supported.
bryan yu

A great news: Fedora 12 beta is now available! - 0 views

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    Fedora has just released a new beta version of Fedora 12. This also means the final official version will be released soon. So this information is very important for Linux user. Especially, so many operation systems will release final version such as Ubuntu, openSUSE, Windows 7...
Marco Castellani

KOffice 2.0 Beta1 Released - 0 views

  • The KOffice team is proud to announce the first beta of KOffice 2.0. The goal of this release is to gather feedback from both users and developers on the new UI and underlying infrastructure. This will allow us to release a usable 2.0 release, demonstrating our vision for the future of the digital office to a larger audience and attract new contributions both in terms of code and ideas for improvements.
Marco Castellani

Celebrating the release of GNOME 2.24! - 0 views

  • Today, the GNOME Project celebrates the release of GNOME 2.24, the latest version of the popular, multi-platform free desktop environment and of its developer platform. Released on schedule, to the day, GNOME 2.24 builds on top of a long series of successful six months releases to offer the best experience to users and developers.
Maluvia Haseltine

Scientific Linux release 4.8 released for 32bit and 64bit « Linux with examples - 0 views

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    Scientific Linux is a free Linux distribution which aims to be 100% compatible with and based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux.free & open source software made available by Red Hat, Inc., but is not produced,maintained or supported by Red Hat. Specifically, this product is built from the source code for Red Hat Enterprise Linux versions.
bryan yu

Using Stresslinux to test your computer - 2 views

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    Stresslinux 0.4.136 has been released recently. It's a openSUSE-based live CD for stress testing. This release (0.4.136) is the first one which is available as 32-bit and 64-bit build, contains all official updates from the base distribution and additionally updates the following packages to current versions: stress, nbench, nepim, netperf, lm_sensors, memtest86+ and busybox...
bryan yu

MOPSLinux 7.0 alpha 2.7 released - 0 views

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    Another distro MOPSLinux 7.0 alpha 2.7 has been released that is based on Slackware distribution. It's a Russian vendor so that you will see the russian language in their website. If you don't understand russian language, please see the following translated contents which translated by Google Translate...
yc c

BBC News - In graphics: Supercomputing superpowers - 2 views

  • The biannual Top 500 supercomputer list has been released. Use this graphic to explore the world's fastest number crunchers or find out more about alternative supercomputer powers .
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    The biannual Top 500 supercomputer list has been released. Use this graphic to explore the world's fastest number crunchers or find out more about alternative supercomputer powers .
Paul Sydney Orozco

What's new in Spring 3.0.5 which is now Released - 0 views

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    Spring 3.0.5 is now released and comes with the fixes of more than 80 minor issues and provided some enhancements and improvements to the Spring Expression Language (SpEL), annotation support, and embedded databases.
Marco Castellani

Red Hat Magazine | Fedora 9 and the road to KDE4 - 0 views

  • Fedora 9 will include KDE 4.0.3 by default, so this is a look at the progress of one of the major free desktop environments. KDE 4.0 was released January 11, 2008 after a couple of years of discussions and hype. The initial release was followed by a succession of minor releases that fixed many of the glaring bugs. The project that was initiated on October 14, 1996, so its developers have nearly a decade of experience now. While a lot of things have changed, there is still a familiar feel from its initial days. So what has changed?
  • The new Kickoff menu is a bit unusual and takes time to get used to.
  • The KDE project has taken a big risk, hoping to jump-start innovation. I hope they get it right. Along with the interesting acquisition of Trolltech by Nokia, the future is exciting and uncertain… and that’s just the way I like it.
Tim Mullins

Linux Mint 8 Helena x64 Edition RC - Review Screencast - 0 views

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    Review Screencast of Linux Mint 8 Helena x64 Edition Release Candidate, which is the same as Linux Mint 8 but is 64bit rather than 32bit. I spend most of the video showing you all the benefits and extra features of Linux Mint over standard Ubuntu Linux 9.10 Karmic Koala. 100% original video production
Marc Lijour

Linux Is on the Rise For Business - PCWorld Business Center - 1 views

  • according to a report released Tuesday by the Linux Foundation in partnership with Yeoman Technology Group. With data from an invited pool of more than 1900 respondents, the survey found that 76 percent of the world's largest organizations plan to add more Linux servers over the next 12 months. By contrast, only 41 percent plan to add Windows servers, while 44 percent say they will be decreasing or maintaining the same number of Windows machines over the next year.
  • Large companies are planning to increase their reliance on Linux over the next five years
  • Looking out over five years, the difference is even more marked: A full 79 percent plan to add Linux servers over that time, while only 21 percent will add new Windows servers.
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • To understand Linux trends among the world's largest companies and government organizations, Yeoman and The Linux Foundation focused in particular on responses from a subset of close to 400 respondents representing organizations with annual revenues of $500 million or more or greater than 500 employees.
  • Sixty-six percent of the planned Linux deployments mentioned by respondents are for brand-new applications or services, while 37 percent are migrations from Windows, the survey found.
  • "We are seeing more migration at Microsoft's expense than the industry analysis might lead you to believe," McPherson noted.
  • Since Linux is free, sales-linked estimates tend to underestimate its adoption considerably.
  • this survey involves some sample bias
  • the data isn't tied to server sales the way so much industry data is
  • a full 60 percent of respondents said they're planning to use Linux for more mission-critical workloads than they have in the past
  • Lack of vendor lock-in and openness of the code were other frequently cited drivers
  • long-term viability of the platform
  • choice of software and hardware
  • n cloud contexts, meanwhile, Linux led far and away, with 70 percent naming it as their primary platform, compared with 18 percent citing Windows and 11 citing Unix
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    according to a report released Tuesday by the Linux Foundation in partnership with Yeoman Technology Group. With data from an invited pool of more than 1900 respondents, the survey found that 76 percent of the world's largest organizations plan to add more Linux servers over the next 12 months. By contrast, only 41 percent plan to add Windows servers, while 44 percent say they will be decreasing or maintaining the same number of Windows machines over the next year.
Tim Mullins

Linux Mint 8 Review Screencast Tutorial - 0 views

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    Review Screencast Tutorial of the 32bit final gold released version of Linux Mint 8 Helena, demo done with Sun VirtualBox Virtual Machine running Linux Mint 8 Live CD ISO Image then I show you how to install it and then show you the extra features.
James Cady

GetDeb.net V2 - Software for Ubuntu Linux - Welcome - 0 views

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    GetDeb is an unofficial project with the mission to provide the latest open source and freeware applications for the current Ubuntu Linux release, in an easy to install manner.
bryan yu

K3b 2.0.0 has been releasd! - 4 views

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    We both knew that K3b was a great CD/DVD creator for Linux. It has released new version 2.0.0 recently. This version has improved Blu-ray support that was really a big effort...
bryan yu

qBittorrent v1.5.2 has been released recently! - 0 views

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    Are you using Linux platform to download Bittorrent file? If the answer is "Yes", you shall try to use qBittorrent to be your Bittorrent client that is a lightweight Bittorrent client for Linux, and easy to use.
anonymous

How to Run Android Applications on Ubuntu - Step-by-step tutorial with screenshots - So... - 0 views

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    How to Run Android Applications on Ubuntu Adjust text size: June 25th, 2009, 18:04 GMT | By Marius Nestor When Google announced and released Android, back in October 2008, everyone knew that it would become the best operating system for mobile devices. Not only is Android open source, but it also comes with a Software Development Kit, which offers the necessary APIs and utilities for developers to easily build powerful applications for Android-powered mobile devices. The following tutorial was created especially for those of you who want to test the Android platform and install various applications, on the popular Ubuntu operating system. OK, so let's get started... shall we? Grab the Android SDK from Softpedia and save the file on your home folder.
Paul Sydney Orozco

http://www.adobocode.com/spring/marshallingunmarshalling-java-objects-into-xml-file-usi... - 0 views

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    The release 3.0 of Spring Framework added the Spring Module OXM which supports the marshalling and unmarshalling of Java objects and XML documents.In this post, we will be using Spring OXM to take a Java object, convert it to a XML-format and save it in the hard-disk as an XML file containing information of that Java object. We will also cover how to retrieve back the serialized state of that XML file and reconstruct it back to it's original state as a Java object.
Marco Castellani

Changes-x86 - SystemRescueCd - 0 views

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    Changes in the new release of System Rescue Cd
Djiezes Kraaijst

Is OpenOffice.org getting faster? - OpenOffice.org Ninja - 0 views

  • Is OpenOffice.org getting faster?
  • Some complain OpenOffice.org is slow and bloated. With each release there may be dozens of performance improvements, but there are also new features, some of which may slow things down. This the natural balance in software development, but in the end, what is the net effect on performance from one version to the next?
  • In conclusion, OpenOffice.org is generally getting slower with each release. However, startup performance has made great improvements, the performance losses are relatively small, advances in new computer hardware are more than making up the loses, and OpenOffice.org continues to mature with new features. OpenOffice.org doesn't compel users to upgrade, so you are welcome to continue using older versions.
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