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● 01.20.15
● Links 20/1/2015: Linux 3.19 RC5, 30 Years of FSF
Posted in News Roundup at 6:25 am by Dr. Roy SchestowitzContentsGNU/LinuxGNU/Linux
=> ↺ Microsoft Can’t Sell Laptops or Phones
- To make matters worse, Microsoft finds itself competing in mobile with companies it thought it had eliminated from the market — like Nokia for instance.
- Microsoft may have bought the Finnish company’s mobile division back in 2011, but that hasn’t kept the “old” Nokia from keeping a hand in the mobile game, where it had once excelled.
Desktop
=> ↺ ALBERT
: A FAST, LIGHTWEIGHT QUICK LAUNCHER FOR LINUX
Albert
is a relatively new quick launcher for Linux, which might remind you of Alfred (Mac) or Synapse (Linux). Using it, you can quickly launch applications, open files or perform web searches.
Kernel Space
=> ↺ Watch Videos From Linux.Conf.Au 2015 (LCA2015 Auckland)
- For those interested in the annual Linux.Conf.Au conference that’s filled with tons of Linux/open-source technical talks but weren’t down in New Zealand last week for the event, the videos are available.
=> ↺ Buggy? Angry? LET IT ALL OUT says Linus Torvalds
=> ↺ Fake Linux fork pokes fun at feminism and diversity
- Open source has come under fire by some recently for lacking enough diversity. Now some jokesters have responded by creating a fake Linux fork that pokes fun at feminism and diversity in software development.
=> ↺ On Linus Torvalds and communities
- Not being a jerk doesn’t just mean tolerating noobs, though. Communities should have an established code of conduct which addresses both annoying and mean actors. When the code of contact is being repeatedly breached, the violator needs to be nudged in the right direction. When a community is welcoming and actively works to remain that way, it thrives. That’s how it can get the diversity of ideas and grow the technical competency that Linus Torvalds so desires.
=> ↺ Linux 3.19-rc5 Kernel Released
=> ↺ Linux 3.19-rc5
- Another week, another -rc.
- Fairly normal release, although I’d wish that by rc5 we’d have calmed down even further. But no, with some of the driver tree merges in particular, this is actually larger than rc4 was.
=> ↺ Audio in Linux becomes annoying again (continued)
- Despite sounding fine when played by SMPlayer, the audio clips that sounded distorted/scratchy and too loud when played by Thunderbird also sounded that way when played by VLC. Then I discovered several other .wav files on various Web sites that sounded distorted when played by the browser’s Windows Media Player plug-in (Gecko Media Player). So the problem clearly was not caused by Thunderbird itself. I began to wonder if PulseAudio was the cause. So I adjusted PulseAudio’s sampling frequency, number of fragments and fragment size, and all the clips that previously sounded distorted and too loud now play fine. Here is what I did to fix the problem…
=> ↺ What you missed in tech last week: BlackBerry blunder, Linux bug terror
- The Paris Observatory has confirmed that, on the appointed day, atomic clocks will be programmed to add in 11:59:60 to compensate for the idiosyncratic nature of the Earth’s orbit. Linux- and Unix-based systems are expected to go tits up.
=> ↺ Security problems need to be made public: Linus Torvalds
- People are less willing sometimes to brush the problem under the mat, and leave it up to vendors that have disclosures, like infinity long disclosure times,” he said. “I’m a huge believer in just disclosing, still somewhat responsibly, but security problems need to be made public — and there are people who argue, and have argued for decades, that you never want to talk about security problems because that only helps the black hats — and the fact is that I think you absolutely need to report them, and you need to report them in a reasonable time frame.
=> ↺ Linus Torvalds Releases Linux Kernel 3.19 RC5, Says Go Forth and Test
- Linus Torvalds has released yet another update for the Linux kernel 3.19 branch and this is the fifth Release Candidate in the series. The development cycle is getting closer to its end and that can be observed from the changelog.
Graphics Stack
=> ↺ NVIDIA Releases Massive Stable Driver, Brings Support for Latest Kernels and X.org
- A new stable NVIDIA driver has been released and the developers have made a series of very important improvements, implementing support for new video cards and Linux kernels.
Benchmarks
=> ↺ Many Linux Desktop 2D Benchmarks Of NVIDIA vs. AMD Drivers
- Like the reasoning for the mass OpenCL Linux comparison, the 2D benchmarks were done since having all of these graphics cards out and testing them on the latest proprietary drivers for the Unreal Engine 4 / Metro Redux game comparison. With not having done any big 2D performance comparison in a while, I ran these few extra tests to look at the 2D performance with the NVIDIA 346.22 driver compared to Catalyst 14.12 for the many different graphics cards.
Applications
=> ↺ Backup files on Linux with FreeFileSync
- As a Linux user, you always want to keep your files and folders up to date, and this is especially true in those situations where you can create a backup. This is why you have to use a tool that automatically syncs the content of two folders in order to keep them up to date. FreeFileSync is a utility that fits the bill quite nicely, since it automates the aforementioned process and makes it easy for you to compare as well as synchronize the content of any two different or similar files that are located on your computer or network.
=> ↺ Keep your Diary on Linux with RedNoteBook
- Documenting processes and systems or just keeping a diary of the daily happenings are things that many computer users are doing very often. RedNotebook is a professional application that allows you to create a log or journal of all those tasks as well as document issues with your network. The app can be seen as a professional journal for IT experts, although it can also be used by home users as well.
=> ↺ Lightbox-Style Image Viewer PhotoQt
1.2 Released
- PhotoQt 1.2 was released recently and it includes some important improvements, like better SVG support, XCF support, better handling of large folders (15,000+ files), shuffle and loop options for the slideshow and much more.
=> ↺ PhotoQt Image Viewer Reached 1.2, Dozens Added Features
- PhotoQt is an image viewer written in Qt 5 with a very basic interface, yet many options under the hood, and a fullscreen mode by default. The latest release brings many new features and bug fixes.
=> ↺ Ideal Backups with zbackup
- Data is growing both in volume and importance. As time goes on, the amount of data that we need to store is growing, and the data itself is becoming more and more critical for organizations. It is becoming increasingly important to be able to back up and restore this information quickly and reliably. Using cloud-based systems spreads out the data over many servers and locations.
Proprietary
=> ↺ Latest Opera Dev Brings Bookmarks Improvements and New Default Themes
- A new Opera development version has been released and the makers have made a number of important improvements to the browser that include better bookmarks and new themes for the application.
Instructionals/Technical
=> ↺ Howto – Install Steam on Fedora 21
=> ↺ Adjusting a backing track with SoX
=> ↺ Using Grub 2 as a bootloader for Xen PV guests on Debian Jessie
=> ↺ Fedora 21 Flashing WiFi LED
=> ↺ Creating a DMZ in OpenWRT
=> ↺ [Quick Tip] How To Restart Cinnamon After Crash
=> ↺ xf86-input-libinput compatibility with evdev and synaptics
=> ↺ Arch Linux on MacBook Pro Retina 2014 with DM-Crypt, LVM and suspend to disk
=> ↺ Install CachetHQ on Debian 7 VPS
=> ↺ How to install Munin on an Ubuntu 14.04 VPS
=> ↺ Filtering IMAP mail with imapfilter
=> ↺ Introduction to the OpenStack API
=> ↺ Local MirageOS development with Xen and Virtualbox
=> ↺ 6 Invaluable Assembly Books
=> ↺ Installation of Battle for Wesnoth strategy game from source on Ubuntu 14.04 Linux
=> ↺ How to apply image effects to pictures on Raspberry Pi
=> ↺ New Linux Foundation Self-Paced Sysadmin Course Will Prep You for Certification
=> ↺ How To Install Tor Browser 4.0.3 On Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 12.04 And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install Tor Browser 4.0.3 On Linux Systems
=> ↺ How To Install GNOME Pie 0.5.6 On Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 12.04 Systems Using GNOME Desktop
=> ↺ How To Install Xfdashboard 0.3.7 On Xubuntu 15.04, Xubuntu 14.10, Xubuntu 14.04 And Derivatives Using XFCE
=> ↺ How To Install Caffeine 2.8.2 On Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How to select areas with the paintbrush in Krita 2.9
=> ↺ Shadow Mapping in Qt3D 2.0
- One of the biggest driving factors behind the design of Qt3D 2.0 is the ability to configure the renderer in order to accommodate custom rendering techniques. In this blog post I will explain how to render a scene in Qt3D with shadows.
Games
=> ↺ Verdun WW1 FPS Major Engine Update, Plus A Few Thoughts About The Game
=> ↺ Steam’s Linux Client Has A Devastating Bug That Erases All The Files On Your Computer
=> ↺ Steam for Linux Bug Can Wipe Out All Files on a PC
=> ↺ Steam Has A Rather Silly Bug, And It Can Remove Your Files
- The issue is being a bit overblown though, as you need to do some pretty specific stuff to make it happen, and it isn’t just on Linux, the issue does exist in some form on Windows too. On Windows for example if you install Steam inside a folder with other data, it will remove that too…
=> ↺ Survival Game Stranded Deep Will Come To Linux Later
- I have been following this realistic survival game for about a year now as they stated Linux support on their official website. Some of its main features include an infinite procedurally-generated world, dynamic weather, hunting, crafting and on top of all that it has great graphics.
- They will soon be on Steam Early Access, but don’t expect Linux support at that time. The good news though, is the developers have verified that they didn’t forget penguin lovers, but just won’t deliver the game for us at the initial release.
=> ↺ Son Of Nor, Action Adventure Romp With A Twist
- This is a game that flew under the radar a little bit since its Linux launch a couple of months ago. Son of Nor is an action adventure title set amidst rolling dunes, temples and oases. Challenging collectibles, environmental puzzles and four player coop are just some of the game’s highlights.
=> ↺ Aspyr Media Is Almost Breaking Even with Linux Ports, Bets Everything on Steam Machines
- Aspyr Media, one of the studios that have been doing some of the biggest and most important ports for the Linux platform, has revealed that it’s almost breaking even financially and this is actually great news.
=> ↺ Aspyr bets the farm on SteamOS success
- Aspyr Media has revealed that it is betting its future on the success of Valve’s SteamOS project, and that despite the tiny minority of machines running Linux is already approaching a break-even point.
=> ↺ Move or Die Is Party Game with Modes That Last Only 20 Seconds
- Move or Die, a new competitive party game developed and published on Steam by Those Awesome Guys studio, has been released for all the supported platforms, including Linux.
=> ↺ Steam For Linux’s Single Line Of Script That Deletes All Your Stuff
=> ↺ Steam for Linux hit by file-deletion bug
=> ↺ Linux Games: Natural Selection 2
=> ↺ LZHAM 1.0 Isn’t Too Far Away For Compression Of Interest To Game Developers
- Rich Geldreich, the former Valve developer associated with some of the game company’s past Linux and OpenGL projects, is getting close to releasing LZHAM v1.0 as his lossless data compression library.
Desktop Environments/WMs
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
=> ↺ Python3 Backend has been finished
=> ↺ Interview with Andreas Antoniadis
- Around 1999 I discovered an SUSE Linux live CD and I was fascinated with the open source communities who were behind this operating system and the different applications. But I was young and inexperienced. I thought that I had to use the industry standard tools to be competitive. As I grew up, I realised that they were just tools and I was the artist. These days I think that open source communities are more important than ever! They are like a torch in the dark.
=> ↺ Notes From the PIM Sprint: A Vision for the KDE PIM Framework
- I know I know, the PIM sprint has already been last November, but in my defence (@David: !!!), the VDG and KDE as a whole has been so buzzing with activity in the meantime that I didn’t find the time to write the blog post I had meant to write about it. So here it is, better late than never.
=> ↺ Adobe’s Photoshop Ditched for Krita at French University Due to Lack of Support
- Krita is considered to be a digital painting application, but it’s best described as a raster graphics editor. No matter what you call it, the Paris 8 University has decided to drop Adobe’s Photoshop and to adopt Krita instead.
=> ↺ KDE Commit-Digest for 16th November 2014
=> ↺ Theme ‘Stationery’ added to ‘KDE – Pairs’
- As a part of my ongoing project “Adding new themes for KDE Pairs game”, a new theme ‘Stationery’ is added. The motivation behind selecting the particular theme lies on its simplicity. Stationery objects are very much familiar with pre-school children rather than other objects. Hence these stationery items can be used in the ‘Pairs’ game to develop their logical skills, rather than worrying about their familiarity with the domain.
=> ↺ Notes From the PIM Sprint: A Vision for the KDE PIM Framework
GNOME Desktop/GTK
=> ↺ Developers Close GTK+ Bug in Ubuntu That Allowed Users to Bypass the Lock Screen
- The Ubuntu developers have corrected a small issue with GTK+, which would allow users to bypass the lock screen in certain conditions. It might be a trivial matter, but it had to be fixed nonetheless.
- According to the security notice, “Clemens Fries discovered that GTK+ allowed bypassing certain screen locks by using the menu key. An attacker with physical access could possibly use this flaw to gain access to a locked session.”
=> ↺ Cinnamon 2.6 to Get Systemd Support
- The Linux Mint developers are not only working on the next iteration of the operating system, they are also trying to improve upon the Cinnamon desktop environment, which is also built by them.
Distributions
=> ↺ Analysis Of The Top 10 Linux Distributions Of 2014
- For the average desktop computer user I would recommend Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Zorin, Elementary and openSUSE as first choices with Debian, Fedora, Mageia and CentOS as secondary options. I would only choose Arch if you really want to control every aspect of your computer from top to bottom or you have an interest in learning more about the underpinnings of using Linux.
=> ↺ Manjaro Xfce 0.9.0 Pre1 Shows How Open Source Collaboration Works
- Manjaro Xfce 0.9.0 Pre1, a Linux distribution based on well-tested snapshots of the Arch Linux repositories and 100% compatible with Arch, is now ready for testing and download.
Reviews
=> ↺ Manjaro 0.8.11 – The lonely goatherd
- How shall I put it? Let there be no doubt. Manjaro 0.8.11 is a better version than 0.8.5 that I tested a while back. But calling it the best and most awesomest KDE around, as I’ve seen here and there in various forums and social media sites is literally pushing it. Now, it does deserve a lot of praise, A LOT, regarding its visual appearance. However, that is not enough to distract from or reduce the impact of the underlying system bugs.
- Desktop effects, printing, broken Steam packages, weird menu entries, misbehaving media player, an identity-confused collection of software, installation issues, missing swap use and very high memory consumption, all of these are big problems that the Manjaro dev team needs to address. But overall, the important thing here is progress.
- But if you’re asking me, the distro needs to simplify its mission statement, and focus on the core message of practicality. Hopefully, we will see that happen soon. Let’s call it the emergence of Manjaro into its own rightful place. At the moment, it’s trying to do so much, at the same time, it’s like a juggler with one ball too many. Grade wise? Hmmm, well, something like 7.5-8/10, and I am being generous. However, if all else fails, it so damn beautiful. Definitely one of the top three. Imagine Plasma 5 there. Looking forward to the next version.
=> ↺ The Mir display server and ReactOS
- I downloaded the most recent development snapshot of Ubuntu 15.04 “Vivid” which is said to feature Unity 8 running on Mir. I then tried running the technology preview in VirtualBox and on a desktop machine. When running in VirtualBox, at first Ubuntu with Unity 8 seemed quite similar to Ubuntu running the classic Unity desktop. The system booted, asked if I would like to try running the desktop in live mode or if I would like to install the operating system. Attempting to try the live desktop mode brought me to a login screen. I was unable to login or reach a terminal from the login page and so I rebooted my VirtualBox instance and tried installing Ubuntu’s Vivid preview.
=> ↺ Linux Mint 17.1 “Rebecca” KDE Review: The Best KDE spin I have used!
- If you are looking for a trouble free KDE distro for long term use, look no further than Linux Mint. The Linux Mint 17.1 KDE is perhaps the best KDE distro I’ve used in quite sometime. Though it presents the stock KDE DE but it irons out a lot of bugs and presents a really stable, smooth to use and super efficient distro. The RAM and CPU consumption is one of the lowest I have noted among KDE spins, the boot time is decent and the battery life is simply the best among Linux operating systems. It symbolizes the amazing work done by the developers before releasing a distro. I wish all other distros were like Linux Mint.
- So, by now you have understood that Mint 17.1 KDE is definitely recommended from my side for all users looking for a good KDE distro devoid of bloat and is very efficient. I go with the highest score I ever gave to a KDE distro for Linux Mint 17.1 KDE.
New Releases
=> ↺ Manjaro XFCE 0.9.0-pre1 edition released
- Some of you might already noticed that some of our developers started in September last year to work on our next release series we call Bellatrix (0.9.0). With this series we switch over to a more modern graphical installer framework called Calamares.
=> ↺ Makulu Cinnamon 2.0 is Live !
- MakuluLinux Cinnamon Edition 2.0 [MCDE] is now live, Read the release notes and grab your copy by clicking here, or via the Cinnamon section in menu above. Please take a minute to read the release notes, they give vital information about the release.
Screenshots
=> ↺ UberStudent 4.1 Screenshot Tour
=> ↺ Edu * Ro Beta 1 Screenshot Tour
Ballnux/SUSE
=> ↺ What’s new in SUSE LINUX 12?
- It’s been more than five years since SUSE delivered its last full release, and a lot has happened to the company during that time. In our testing we find that SUSE Linux 12 has been worth the wait. SUSE 12 is a broad set of Linux distributions ranging from desktop through enterprise level. We tested several instances and found them quite ready for enterprise use. All in all, SUSE 12 is a worthy competitor to Red Hat and Ubuntu in the enterprise Linux market.
=> ↺ SUSE Linux 12 challenges Red Hat
Red Hat Family
=> ↺ Submissions Open for 2015 Red Hat Certified Professional of the Year Award
=> ↺ A Proposal To Go 64-bit Only With Fedora 23
- An ambitious proposal is seeking to make Fedora 23 — the Linux distribution release due out around October — 64-bit-only for both x86 and ARM architectures.
Fedora
=> ↺ Playing with plymouth themes
=> ↺ PLANNING FOR FEDORA WORKSTATION 22
- So Fedora Workstation 21 is done and out and I am extremely pleased to see the positive reception and great reviews. But we are not resting on our laurels here and are already busy planning for the Fedora Workstation 22 release. As many of you might know Fedora Workstation 22 is going to come up relatively fast, so we only have about 6 more weeks of development on it feature the freezes starts to kick inn. Luckily we have a relatively long list of items that we started working on during the Fedora Workstation 21 cycle that is nearing completing and thus should make the next release. We are of course also working on bigger long term developments that you should maybe see the first outline of in Fedora 22, but not the final version. I thought it would be nice to summarize some of the bigger items we expect to land and link to the relevant blogs and announcements for each one.
=> ↺ Fedora 21: problems with offline updates, other PackageKit stuff
- Since the middle of last week we’ve been aware of some bugs with the PackageKit stack. The initial bug report was for offline updates failing, but during testing of the fix for that, various other bugs were identified which could potentially cause problems with many PackageKit transactions – that’s mostly documented in this report. Mostly, though, folks only seem to have been noticing issues since libhif 0.1.7 came out as an update in late December.
=> Infrastructure DB dumps http://www.scrye.com/wordpress/nirik/2015/01/19/fedora-infrastructure-db-dumps/ ↺ Fedora Infrastructure DB dumps
- In Fedora Infrastructure, all our applications are Free software. It’s one of our base requirements, allowing anyone out there to examine source, improve or modify things. Sometimes, just having the source of an application isn’t enough, you need the raw data to figure out some issue or generate some metric or support a theory.
=> ↺ Fedora 23 Likely To Pursue Wayland By Default
- While Wayland by default replacing the X.Org Server as the default display environment has been talked about for a while within the next-generation Fedora world, it looks like Fedora 23 could finally be the time that the switch happens.
- Fedora 23 already has ambitious possibilities like only supporting 64-bit software while one of the more likely proposals is enabling Wayland by default. With Fedora 21, Wayland is shipped with Fedora Workstation as a log-in-time switch for GNOME, but the X.Org Server is still depended upon. With Fedora 22, the Wayland experience will be even better and then for Fedora 23 is when there might be the switch.
=> ↺ Fedora 22 Schedule (3×), Elections, and the state of Schrödinger’s Cat
- Fedora is a big project, and it’s hard to keep up with everything that goes on. This series highlights interesting events in five different areas every week. Here are the five events for January 16th, 2015:
Debian Family
=> ↺ Spamassassin Updates
- Spamassassin hasn’t been providing rules as part of the upstream package for some time. In Debian, we include a snapshot of the ruleset from an essentially arbitrary point in time in our packages. We do this so Spamassassin will work “out of the box” on Debian systems. People who install spamassassin from source must download rules using spamassassin’s updates channel. The typical way to use this service is to use cron or something similar to periodically check for rule changes via this service. This allows the anti-spam community to quickly adapt to changes in spammer tactics, and for you to actually benefit from their work by taking advantage of their newer, presumably more accurate, rules. It also allows for quick reaction to issues such as the one described in bug 738872 and 774768.
Derivatives
Canonical/Ubuntu
=> ↺ Ubuntu Could Be the First OS on Planet Mars
=> ↺ Unzip Vulnerability Closed in Ubuntu OSes
- Canonical has announced that an unzip exploit has been found and fixed for Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, and Ubuntu 10.04 LTS operating systems.
=> ↺ Microsoft Azure Update Brings Docker Image on Ubuntu Server
=> ↺ Ubuntu Could Be the First OS on Planet Mars
- Mars One is a project that aims to put people on planet Mars by 2025, before NASA and everyone else. The kicker is that it’s designed as a one-way trip for the colonists. The good news, if you can call it that, is that they seem to be favoring Linux.
Flavours and Variants
=> ↺ Linux Mint 18 Could Adopt Systemd
- The Linux Mint project is using Ubuntu as its base and there is even a branch that’s using Debian, but it looks that for the moment it won’t be using systemd as the default init system.
=> ↺ Bodhi Founder Returning as Ubuntu Heads to Mars
- Bodhi Linux founder, who recently resigned from the project, has announced that he’s decided to return. Accompanying that news was also the announcement for Bodhi Linux 3.0 RC2. Elsewhere, Gary Newell briefly recaps the top 10 distributions of 2014 and Phoronix.com is reporting that Fedora 23 is likely to default to Wayland. Adam Williamson introduces Updatrex™ in response to PackageKit bug and Softpedia.com said today that Ubuntu will probably be the first operating system on Mars.
=> ↺ Bodhi Linux 3.0.0 RC2 Reloaded
- Just over four months ago I announced that I was stepping down from the active role I had maintained in the Bodhi Linux project since it started a little over four years ago. Today I am happy to share that I am returning in my full capacity as project manager/lead developer and I come bearing gifts!
Devices/Embedded
=> ↺ The TrackingPoint 338TP, the Linux Rifle that’s accurate up to a mile
- First, the 338TP uses the .338 Lapua Magnum long-range rifle for its base. This rifle started as a design for a US Marine sniper rifle. Then, to acquire the target, the rifle uses a laser to enable you to “tag” your target. More than just a laser-targeting system, its sensors also track wind speed, direction, temperature, and barometric pressure. As serious shooters know, all of these factors must be taken into account for an accurate shot at great ranges.
=> ↺ BeagleBone SBC beefs up Lego Mindstorms EV3
- An “EVB” Kickstarter project replaces the Lego Mindstorms EV3 robot’s ARM9 brick with a BeagleBone Black, adding performance, expandability, and sensors.
=> ↺ Samsung set to sell 30 Million Tizen TVs in 2015
- Samsung Electronics Co. have revealed that they plan to sell 30 million Tizen TVs in 2015, according to an Industry source. Samsung aim to ship an estimated 60 million TVs in 2015 with Tizen TVs expected to be over 50% of that figure. These will be using the new quantum-dot display technology which has the capability of showing 1 billion colours, which is 64 times more than what current TV models can perform.
=> ↺ CompuLab aims to put a Mint in your pocket
- Israel’s maker of small fanless computers CompuLab has revealed a tiny computer for Linux lovers, the MintBox Mini. A fifth of the size of the original MintBox, which was based on the company’s fit-PC3 and launched in 2012, the silent, fanless Mini will come with a quad-core processor, solid state storage and be available in the second quarter of 2015 for US$295.
Phones
Android
=> ↺ Myth-Busting Google’s Android Problem
- In general, your Android device probably already includes a fair bit of Lollipop features — even if you don’t actually have the full system upgrade installed. The only exceptions would be hopelessly outdated devices that simply can’t run newer Google Play Services and Google Search apps, or users who prefer updating their apps manually and haven’t gotten around to it in the last several weeks.
=> ↺ Adobe Opens Lightroom’s Door to Android
=> ↺ Android 5.0 Lollipop Update for HTC One M8, HTC One M7: New Leak Shows HTC Scheduled Updates?
=> ↺ OnePlus to Roll Out Stable CM-Based Android 5.0 Update to OnePlus One Next Month
- The wait is finally over. OnePlus One owners can rest their curiosity as the company has decided to shower the first stable version of CyanogenMod-based Android 5.0 Lollipop update over its flagship smartphone. The updated ROM will be rolled out to OnePlus One owners in India starting next month, one of the top CM engineers revealed during an interview with Android Central.
=> ↺ Five great Android apps for kids
- Starter apps are the ones you want to use to ensure your child’s digital journey starts with a bang and not with a thud. These introductory apps set the stage for what kids can expect going forward. But your child’s age is relevant, so the following five starter apps — selected for their ability to provide a positive experience — are divided into two age categories. And iOS owners, these apps are available on your devices as well.
=> ↺ Why Google Stopped Securing Older Versions Of Android
- So, is Google setting more than half its users up for a fall? In practice this may not have a huge impact for most. It may encourage phone manufacturers and the telecoms companies that sell them on to us to be more forthcoming with software updates for their devices, reducing the number of devices running out-of-date software.
- Ultimately, the key message is that we need to start thinking of mobile devices as computers, not just phones, with all the caveats about security software, updates and precautions which that entails. This could be the tough love from Google that pushes people in that direction.
=> ↺ Nexus 6 Android 5.0.1 Lollipop Update Review
=> ↺ Android Lollipop 5.0 Update: Samsung Galaxy S5, S4, Note 3, and Note 4
=> ↺ 11 Nexus Android 5.0.2 Lollipop Release Date Tips
- With a Nexus Android 5.0.2 Lollipop release date now here for two more devices, we want to offer up some helpful tips to Nexus users poised to receive the Android 5.0.2 Lollipop update from Google. These tips should help make release day go a lot smoother for Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 users looking to make the move.
=> ↺ A Chinese Company Made This Super Cheap Android Phone That Looks Exactly Like The iPhone 6
- This is the Gold-East MS937, and it looks a lot like the iPhone 6. Everything from the size of the bezels along the side of the screen to the gold trim look reminiscent of the iPhone.
=> ↺ Google’s Massive New Android Update Is Coming To The Galaxy S5
- Just a few weeks after Samsung started pushing out the Lollipop update to Galaxy S5 owners in Poland and Spain, reports are now indicating the update has gone live in the United Kingdom.
=> ↺ Android Authority this week
=> ↺ Will Google Glass 2.0 be the next iPod?
- There have been quite a few reports in the media announcing the end of Google Glass. Some journalists have even written what amounts to obituaries for the much-maligned Glass technology. But is Google Glass really going away? I think not and in this column I’ll tell you why Glass 2.0 just might be the next iPod.
Free Software/Open Source
=> ↺ Interview: Mesosphere’s Ben Hindman on the Need for a Data Center OS
- One of the most interesting new companies leveraging an open source Apache project has to be Mesosphere, which OStatic covered in a recent post. The company offers a “data center operating system” (DCOS) built on the open source Apache Mesos project, and has announced a recent round of $36M in Series B funding. New investor Khosla Ventures led the round, with additional investments from Andreessen Horowitz, Fuel Capital, SV Angel and others.
- According to Mesosphere’s leaders, the tech industry now needs a new type of operating system to automate the various tools used in the agile IT era. They argure that developers and operators don’t need to focus on individual virtual or physical machines but can easily build and deploy applications and services that span entire datacenters.
Web Browsers
Mozilla
=> ↺ Fix Add-ons not working in Firefox 35
- Firefox 35 has been pushed to the Stable channel recently by Mozilla and while the majority of users did not notice any incompatibilities or issues, some users noticed that one or multiple of installed browser add-ons stopped working suddenly.
SaaS/Big Data
=> ↺ OpenStack as a social contract, what’s new in Nova, and more
- Interested in keeping track of what’s happening in the open source cloud? Opensource.com is your source for what’s happening right now in OpenStack, the open source cloud infrastructure project.
=> ↺ Big data, big growth
- Open source NoSQL companies are making headlines for investment figures, but they’re offering knowledge and building communities too
Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
=> ↺ Saying Goodbye to Java the Hard Way
- Google is rapidly becoming our Internet overlords, if they aren’t already. Gmail and Chrome are not Google products…we are the products. We are the marketable items. Gmail and Chrome are simply the useful playgrounds given to us in order for them to collect our data. Why does the choice between a red pill and a blue pill come to mind?
BSD
=> ↺ Snippets: Io.js, FreeBSD in the Cloud and 6502 Basic
- FreeBSD hasn’t been out in the clouds that much but that may be changing. DigitalOcean has announced FreeBSD on their cloud and thats a company who has till now only done Linux as their OS. Someone quickly posted the Dmesg output to show it was a real thing too. This could be a very special year for FreeBSD.
FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
=> ↺ 30 years of FSF
- Indeed it’s been made using Free Software only and goes through the work of the foundation for the past thirty years.
=> ↺ January 2015 GNU Toolchain Update
=> ↺ GNU libtool-2.4.5 released
- The Libtool Team is pleased to announce the release of libtool 2.4.5.
Project Releases
=> ↺ whatmaps 0.0.9
- This release fixes the integration with recent systemd (as in Debian Jessie), makes logging more consistent and eases integration into downstream distributions. It’s available in Debian Sid and Jessie and will show up in Wheezy-backports soon.
=> ↺ QEMU 2.3 To Bring An Ivy Bridge CPU Model, New MIPS CPUs
- QEMU 2.2 was just released last month while already for QEMU 2.3 is a long list of changes.
Public Services/Government
=> ↺ Free software group French ministries extends scope
- MIMO, France’s inter-ministerial working group on free software, is expanding its reach. The responsibility of the working group now includes the selection and certification of solutions that allow large-scale desktop management, including inventory management and software deployment.
=> ↺ Sweden Greases The Skids For FLOSS In Government
Openness/Sharing
=> ↺ Carl Turner Architects designs open source Floating House
Open Access/Content
=> ↺ University of Illinois professor embraces open-source textbooks
- One professor at the University of Illinois thought textbooks were getting too expensive, so he partnered with other educators to write their own book and make it available online to download for free.
Open Hardware
=> ↺ 5 favorite Raspberry Pi and Arduino projects
- First, what do I mean by open hardware? I mean that the components that make up a device are available for the user to see. No secret formulas. The ingredients are completely transparent, and if you chose, you can source the raw parts and assemble them yourself. You can also learn from the process of assembly and with a team spirit share any problems encountered, then improving the formula of the device. For example, you could suggest better parts or improve the code to make it run faster.
Programming
=> ↺ A Launchpad Module for Ruby
- At some point last year I started to write a Launchpad API client in Ruby, for the very simple reason that Kubuntu CI tooling is almost entirely written in Ruby and I wanted to avoid round tripping into Python to use launchpadlib for trivial things such as querying the version of a package in a PPA. Not only would that be slightly slower it also raises the ever so unfortunate problem of how to exchange data between Ruby and Python.
Leftovers
Security
=> ↺ N.S.A. Drilled Into North Korean Networks Before Sony Attack, Officials Say
- The trail that led American officials to blame North Korea for the destructive cyberattack on Sony Pictures Entertainment in November winds back to 2010, when the National Security Agency scrambled to break into the computer systems of a country considered one of the most impenetrable targets on earth.
=> ↺ L3A My impromptu speech about what went wrong at the NSA
- To do the controlling the NSA has to replicate the total world in realtime in their computer model!! The whistleblowers I read about and spoke to had in fact suggested to only filter the massive incoming flow of surveillance data, to extract certain patterns, and NOT STORE IT or keep files updated about all individual citizens. The generals decided to do that total storage We already see the first symptoms by USA and the five eyes countries of ‘simplification’ by law enforcement and legal system that perform arrests, judgement and jailing based on secret info provided by the NSA. Many other things are already going wrong in conflict with the Constitution and Human Rights. Civilisation is only a thin layer, can be gone in minutes.
Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
=> ↺ January 17, 1961: President Eisenhower Warns of the ‘Military-Industrial Complex’ in His Farewell Address
- When Dwight D. Eisenhower left office in January 1961 he warned against the growing menace to democracy of “the military-industrial complex,” to which The Nation devoted an entire issue in October of 1961 authored by Fred Cook, who more or less single-handedly revived the muckraking tradition in the United States with his issue-length investigations in the 1950s of the CIA, the FBI and the culture of political corruption in New York City. Here, in “Juggernaut: The Warfare State,” Cook investigated and expanded on Eisenhower’s warning, which had, up to that point, received relatively little attention in the mainstream press.
=> ↺ Scahill: Cable News ‘Terror Analysts’ Profit from Fear
- On Sunday morning’s Reliable Sources, The Intercept co-founder Jeremy Scahill reiterated his critique of cable news’ habit of hosting “terror experts” who have financial stakes in prolonged and expanded military conflicts.
- The concept of terror experts/analysts was heightened in the past couple weeks following the Paris attack, and some outlandish statements by the likes of “terror expert” Steve Emerson.
- “CNN has some great reporters on the ground,” Scahill said. “When you get into this kind of fear-generating territory is when you have these so-called ‘terror analysts’ on the air, many of whom also work for risk consultancy firms that benefit from the idea of making us afraid.”
Environment/Energy/Wildlife
=> ↺ Rate of environmental degradation puts life on Earth at risk, say scientists
- Humans are ‘eating away at our own life support systems’ at a rate unseen in the past 10,000 years, two new research papers say
Finance
=> ↺ Putin’s Unreported Genius On Ukraine: Currency Warfare
- Putin did not invade Ukraine to invade Ukraine, but as a genius invasion against the U.S. Dollar. Almost all media have missed the high-level geopolitical chess at play and focused so narrowly on the individual moves, that they’re completely missing the big picture. There’s currently a war about what reserve currency the world should use – and the U.S. is poised to lose.
=> ↺ Wikileaks collectors demand bankruptcy for Valitor
- Two companies, handling the collection of the funding for Wikileaks, have demanded that Valitor, which handles VISA in Iceland, should be made bankrupt due to an unpaid claim for damages, amounting to about 10 billion kronas (approx: 75 million dollars) with interests.
PR/AstroTurf/Lobbying
=> ↺ Mind Pollution
- Mind pollution has permeated the internet. Computer articles are mostly written from the point of view of a person who uses Microsoft products. The assumption is that everyone uses Microsoft Windows and Windows software. To be fair there are a few OSX and Linux articles. Heaven help you if you use something really unusual like Plan 9 or HaikuOS. I can only assume those folks have a lot of patience and a strong will.
=> ↺ Maureen Dowd Sets Martin Luther King Straight on How Freedom Is Won
=> ↺ CNN’s Brian Stelter Calls Out Fox News For Its Anti-Muslim Coverage
- Stelter: “I’m Worried That All Of This Content On Fox … Plays Into A Narrative That Portrays Muslims As The Other, As Somehow Evil”
Censorship
=> ↺ No Mark Zuckerberg, you are NOT Charlie, argues Tibetan writer
=> ↺ Charlie Hebdo releases app as ‘survivors’ issue’ sells out
- Want to get the latest issue of the world’s most controversial magazine but can’t get your hands on a paper copy? Don’t worry, there’s an app for that.
- The Charlie Hebdo app features the so-called “survivors’ issue” of the satirical magazine, which sold out within minutes in France and across Europe this week. Versions are available for iOS, Android and Windows Phone. Once downloaded, users can purchase the latest edition for $2.99.
Privacy
=> ↺ Facebook Messenger adds voice transcription (for some)
=> ↺ ORG responds to consultation on Communications Data Codes of Practice
Civil Rights
=> ↺ Opinion: Raoul Wallenberg Day is a time to remember the power of an individual to confront evil
- Prior to Wallenberg’s arrival as a Swedish diplomat in Budapest in July 1944, some 430,000 Hungarian Jews had been deported to Auschwitz in only 10 weeks — the fastest, cruelest, and most efficient mass murders of the Nazi genocide. Yet Wallenberg rescued more Hungarian Jews than any single government, notably saving 20,000 by issuing Schutzpasses, documents conferring diplomatic immunity. He even went to the trains as mass deportations were underway, distributing Schutzpasses to people otherwise consigned to death.
- Wallenberg saved an additional 32,000 by establishing dozens of safe houses in a diplomatic zone protected by neutral legations. He organized hospitals, soup kitchens and childcare centres, and when thousands of Jews were sent on a 200-kilometre death march in November 1944, he followed alongside, distributing improvised Schutzpasses, as well as food and medical supplies.
=> ↺ Perpetuating Guantánamo’s Travesty
- “Guantánamo is a betrayal of American values,” the former military officers wrote. “The prison is a symbol of torture and justice delayed. More than a decade after it opened, Guantánamo remains a recruiting poster for terrorists, which makes us all less safe.”
=> ↺ Doxing victim Zoe Quinn launches online “anti-harassment task force”
- On Friday, Depression Quest developer and doxing victim Zoe Quinn launched an online “anti-harassment task force” toolset, staffed by volunteers familiar with such attacks, to assist victims of a recent swell of “doxing” and “swatting” attacks.
Internet/Net Neutrality
=> ↺ White House Leaves FTC To Decide Net Neutrality Laws
- The new rules triggered a lively debate by the US public, with users leaving four million online comments on the FCC website.
=> ↺ The Biggest Foes of Obama’s High Speed Internet Plan
- President Obama’s strong support for community internet networks drew sharp criticism on Wednesday from cable and telecom industry groups, as well as Republican lawmakers who called the White House’s plan to boost local internet coverage and speeds an unacceptable breach of “states’ rights.”
DRM
=> ↺ Pirates defeating watermarks, releasing torrents of Oscar movie screeners
- When an incomplete and early version of the X-Men Origins: Wolverine leaked to torrent sites in 2009, Twentieth Century Fox announced that the uploader “will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”
Intellectual Monopolies
Copyrights
=> ↺ Pirate Party Delivers on Copyright
- EU copyright rules simply aren’t suited to cope with the increase of cross-border cultural exchange facilitated by the Internet…
=> ↺ Pirate Bay’s Fredrik Neij Wants You to Write Him a Letter
- Former Pirate Bay operator Fredrik Neij is currently the last person serving his sentence for his involvement with the notorious torrent site. To make his stay in prison a little easier he’s hoping to receive letters, cards and other goodies from people around the world.
=> ↺ Why Kim Dotcom hasn’t been extradited 3 years after the US smashed Megaupload
- Kim Dotcom has never been shy. And in December 2011, roughly a month before things for Dotcom were set to drastically change, he still oozed with bravado: Dotcom released a song (“The Megaupload Song”) in conjunction with producer Printz Board. It featured a number of major pop stars—including the likes of Kanye West, Jamie Foxx, and Serena Williams—all singing that they “love Megaupload.” If the star power wasn’t enough, Dotcom placed an exclamation point at the end. In the lyrics, he claimed that Megaupload comprised four percent of all Internet traffic. He rapped that the site received 50 million hits daily.
=> ↺ MPAA Wants to Censor OpenCulture’s Public Domain Movies
- With a rather peculiar takedown request Hollywood is going after OpenCulture.com, one of the largest collections of cultural and educational media online. According to a takedown notices the MPAA sent to Google, Open Culture’s list of 700 free public domain movies contains copyright infringing material.
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