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● 04.03.14

●● Latest News About GNU/Linux in Servers and Networks

Posted in News Roundup at 6:46 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Servers

April 2014 Issue of Linux Journal: High Performance ComputingReuven M. Lerner starts us out this month, this time with information on how to leverage geolocation information in your Web application. Whether you want to give your Web visitors a local weather forecast or just want to present them with location-appropriate options from your Web applications, geolocation is a powerful tool. Since the Internet is global, it’s important to know where users are located. Reuven shows how to integrate geolocation awareness into your Web applications. Dave Taylor follows with the next in his series on Zombie Dice. It may feel like you’re just making a cool game, but it’s really just a ruse to help you learn something. (Well, it’s a cool game too, but you really are learning!) Google’s shiny new toys for nerds only: DNS, Linux/Windows support, & virtual machinesAt a cloud event today, Google announced it was cutting its cloud-services prices by huge margins — up to 85 percent in some cases. But that’s not all the good news.Google also announced general availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Linux SUSE on the Google Cloud PlatformAMPPS now available for Linux distrosSoftaculous Ltd., the developer of AMPPS Installer that simplifies Application deployment on various Desktop and Servers, today announced the launch of AMPPS 2.3 for Linux distros. Ampps Linux will work with most of the desktop / GUI distros of linux like Fedora, CentOS, Redhat, Ubuntu, etc.Rackspace Launches Linux for Ladies Training ProgramAt the Women in Tech Networking event at South by Southwest Interactive last week, Rackspace Hosting launched its new training program, Linux for Ladies, aimed at helping women get top jobs in the IT industry.

Cumulus Linux

IXLeeds Selects Cumulus® Linux® Operating System to Power Upgraded Internet Exchange PointMidokura Announces Partnership With Cumulus NetworksMidokura, a global company focused on network virtualization, today announced its partnership with Cumulus Networks, the company bringing the power of Linux to networking. The companies plan to offer a joint technology solution that will enable customers to manage workloads on virtual and non-virtualized infrastructure with a technology preview by May 2014 and a GA offering by Q3 2014. This partnership further extends the new networking open ecosystem where businesses can have the flexibility to choose between various industry standard networking hardware, network operating systems and applications.IXLeeds Selects Cumulus Networks Linux Operating System for Internet Exchange PointCumulus Networks has announced that IXLeeds has chosen the Cumulus Linux operating system for the company’s upgraded Internet Exchange Point. IXLeeds is a not-for-profit Internet Exchange Point (IXP) based in Leeds, UK. A bid process that included Extreme Networks and Juniper Networks preceded the deployment of Cumulus.

SDN

Interop 2014 Preview: Networking is About More Than Just the NetworkThat said, Jessup stressed that there is still a core networking track that is still at the foundation of Interop. Software Defined Networking (SDN) is once again a popular track for discussion as networking professional seek to learn how to benefit from the new networking paradigm.Cumulus Linux leaders: OpenFlow SDNs already outmodedThe first wave of SDNs broke data centers free from single-vendor “blobs,” concede the architects of MidoNet, but they left a new problem in their wake.Dell goes big into SDNWhy Facebook Does SDNIn a Cumulus Networks-sponsored webcast SDN panel on March 21, Najam Ahmad, Facebook’s director of technical operations, explained why the social networking website has embraced the open SDN model.Ahmad said that when it comes to the reasons SDN makes sense for Facebook, it boils down to two key things: scale and agility. He noted that there is a lot of traffic going between machines today that runs over network infrastructure. In order to scale the network to meet the needs for increasing machine-to-machine traffic, the traditional hierarchy-based network structure isn’t a good fit.Reflections on a Year Inside the OpenDaylight ProjectEnterprises Prefer Open Source SDN Technology from Commercial VendorsOpenDaylight Project: Enterprises Demand Open Source SDN Networking Professionals Want Open Source SDNOpenDaylight Project finds industry wants open-source SDNThe Linux Foundation’s OpenDaylight Project conducted a third-party survey that found 95 percent of networking pros want open-source software-defined networking technologies.Linux Video of the Week: Why Open Source Will Change Networking

Forgetting to Change Default Password or Apply Patches

Cyber criminals capture 25,000 Unix serversSecurity boffins at ESET, in collaboration with CERT-Bund, the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing as well as other agencies, have found a cybercriminal campaign that has taken control of over 25,000 Unix servers worldwide.Dubbed “Operation Windigo” it has resulted in infected servers sending out millions of spam emails which are designed to hijack servers, infect the computers that visit them, and steal information. Hackers hit Unix servers to send 35 million spam messages a dayESET: Hackers Hijack 25,000 UNIX Servers to Build a Malware Army

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