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● 02.20.15
● Links 20/2/2015: Android Studio v1.1, GDB 7.9
Posted in News Roundup at 8:23 pm by Dr. Roy SchestowitzContentsGNU/LinuxGNU/Linux
=> ↺ Linux-based desktops work despite Windows app prevalence
- With so many devices already based on Linux — Android devices and Chromebooks, to name a few — it makes sense for some companies to consider virtual and cloud-hosted Linux desktops. Windows applications are a hurdle, however.
Desktop
=> ↺ Desktop */Linux Trends In Canada
- Now that we’ve pretty well figured out that the huge “Unkown” thing in StatCounter‘s “desktop” OS category is closely related to Android/Linux, this graph makes sense. Some people in Canada are hooking up Android/Linux systems to big screens. GNU/Linux is growing pretty well, not explosively, but definitely breaking out of the ~1% doldrums. ChromeOS is on a plateau, probably because schools just buy once or twice per annum. It’s all good. The grand total? 2.6%. It’s not wonderful but a far sight better than a year ago and this time GNU/Linux seems to be going places steadily. We have product/salesmen/promoters doing the job, finally. The growth in share is small, but this is a measure of a considerable rate of change of shipments/units/migrations on top of a huge installed base of PCs.
=> ↺ Why you should consider cloud-hosted Linux desktops
- With all the licensing troubles that can come with hosting Windows desktops in the cloud, some companies — and vendors — are looking to Linux operating systems instead.
- VMware plans to offer a Horizon View client for Linux, and Horizon DaaS, formerly Desktone, has had a hosted Linux option for years. Citrix is planning a similar strategy for XenDesktop and XenApp with Linux Virtual Apps and Desktops. These two big-name virtualization vendors putting attention on Linux shines a spotlight on the OS.
Server
=> ↺ Docker Project Partners with Oceanic Society for Open-source-a-thon to Support Whale and Marine Wildlife Conservation
=> ↺ Docker to host ‘Open-source-a-thon’ — proceeds will be used to adopt blue whale
- Every summer, I board a charter boat out of Captree State Park in New York to go fishing. Why do I do this? I love to fish and I cannot afford my own boat, so it is a great way to experience the Long Island nautical life for the afternoon (not to mention catch a tasty dinner). It is also a great way to have a technology-free day, leaving the smartphone at home and replacing it with a rod in my hand.
=> ↺ War Of Words: Cisco, HP Trade Barbs Over HP Open-Source Network Switch Launch
=> ↺ Facebook is aiming to overcome Cisco and Juniper with Open source Networking
- acebook recently released as an open source project its design for a networking device that it says will coordinates the actions of hundreds of thousands of servers in Facebook’s data centers.
=> ↺ HP Targets Cisco and Facebook With New Line of Open-Source Networking Gear
- Hewlett-Packard said on Thursday that it would sell a new line of networking switches that are manufactured by a Taiwanese company and depend on Linux-based, open-source software from another company.
Kernel Space
=> ↺ Demand for Linux developers on the rise
- The demand for Linux developers has jumped seven percent in comparison to last year, a study has shown.
- The 2014 Linux Jobs Report shows that hiring managers at tech-powered companies are focusing more attention on Linux talent, and that’s reverberating in the market, with stronger than average salary increases to those working with the OS.
- Dice and The Linux Foundation surveyed both hiring managers and Linux talent to gain a 360-degree view of the thriving jobs landscape, and here’s what they found.
=> ↺ Intel Quark SoC x86 Platform Support For Linux 3.20/4.0?
- Ingo Molnar has asked Linus Torvalds to pull the x86 platform support for Intel Quark SoC systems for the Linux 3.20/4.0 kernel.
=> ↺ Code Merged This Week For Linux 3.20/4.0 Is Just As Exciting As Last Week
- Last weekend I covered the changes so far for the next kernel release, which will be called either Linux 3.20 or Linux 4.0 depending upon Linus Torvalds’ end decision. This week more exciting code has landed.
=> ↺ Why All Linux (Security) Bugs Aren’t Shallow
- Zemlin quoted the oft-repeated Linus’ law, which states that given enough eyes all bugs are shallow. That “law” essentially promises that many eyes provide a measure of quality and control and security to open source code. So if Linus’ law is true, Zemlin asked, why are damaging security issues being found now in open source code?
=> ↺ Linux clockpocalypse in 2038 is looming and there’s no ‘serious plan’
- The year 2038 is still more than two decades away, but LWN.net editor and longtime Linux kernel chronicler Jon Corbet believes software developers should be thinking about that date now, particularly in the Linux world.
- Corbet raised the issue at his annual “Kernel Report” talk at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit in Santa Rosa, California this week. “Time to start worrying,” he said.
- The issue is similar to the dreaded Y2K bug, in that a longstanding deficiency in the way some computers record time values is due to wreak havoc in all manner of software, this time in 2038.
Graphics Stack
=> ↺ It Could Be A While Before Seeing The Tamil GPU Driver Code
- While the Tamil driver is moving along for open-source ARM Mali T-Series graphics support, it could be a while before seeing the actual source code.
- Luc Verhaegen presented at FOSDEM a few weeks back about his work on Tamil, the Lima driver project’s work on supporting the newer ARM Mali T-Series GPUs found on various SoCs. While Luc showed off some demos and is working towards a Tamil Mesa driver, the code hasn’t yet been opened up.
Applications
=> ↺ Calibre eBook Converter and Viewer Now Has Better ODT Format Support
- Calibre, an application that can be used to view, convert, and edit eBooks, has been upgraded and it has advanced to version 2.20. It comes with a quite a few new features and is now ready for download.
=> ↺ Ubuntu Touch Could Get Tox, a P2P Ultra Secure Messaging App
- The Ubuntu Touch platform is about to received a new messaging client called Tox that aims to provide the most secure environment possible for its users.
=> ↺ c, calcc and calccmd: Three small calculators
=> ↺ Why I Want Text-File Preferences For Every Application I Use
- I recently started using a text editor called Vim. For the uninitiated, Vim is a lightweight text editor often used for writing code that it comes pre-loaded on some if not all remote servers. Since it’s designed to be used without a mouse, there are tons of keyboard shortcuts to learn. This part isn’t a huge deal—for now just know that Vim is a text editor, like Notepad or Sublime Text or Word. (And note that I am still pretty shitty at using it.)
Instructionals/Technical
=> ↺ Block Basic Web Attacks with NginX
=> ↺ Nova metadata recorded in libvirt guest instance XML
=> ↺ Buffer Overflow: Overwriting the Return Value
=> ↺ How To Install Qterminal 0.6 On Arch Linux, Manjaro, Antergos And Other Arch Linux Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install UberWriter 14.09.08 On Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install Kernel 3.16.7 CKT6 On Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install Kernel 3.14.33 On Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Elementary OS, Deepin And Other Ubuntu Derivative Systems
Wine or Emulation
=> ↺ Wine 1.7.37 Adds UTF-7 Encoding, Interface Change Notifications
- Wine 1.7.37 was released today with various changes that have built up in the Wine community over the past two weeks.
=> ↺ Wine 1.7.37 Adds Multi-Channel Audio Support, Fixes 71 Bugs
- Wine 1.7.37 has just been released today, February 20, and it brings interface change notifications, support for the UTF-7 character encoding, various graphical fixes for themed controls, support for multi-channel audio, a new implementation of Wininet on top of the Win32 sockets, as well as several bugfixes.
=> ↺ The Wine Development Release 1.7.37 Is Now Available
Games
=> ↺ Bleed, A Bullet Hell Platformer Now On Linux
- Bleed is an indie bullet hell shootem-up platformer by Bootdisk Revolution. Originally released in 2013, the developer had stated low hopes of a native port release, but the wait for that day is now over! After showing up silently in my library, I decided to finally check it out and am very pleased to play this game!
=> ↺ Strength Of The SWORD ULTIMATE, Fully Funded & Coming To Linux
- The game is a 3D, third-person, arcade-style, action-game that combines the tactical and skill-based combat of a Fighter with the progression, overwhelming odds, and awesome boss battles of an old-school Brawler!
=> ↺ Editorial: Linux Gaming Will Be Fine Even Without Steam Machines Succeeding
- Let’s get this straight, the Streaming feature of Steam and SteamOS is not the main aim of Steam Machines, but it is a complementary feature designed to help Windows gamers who can’t get their entire catalogue on SteamOS right away. I’ve seen some writers mention the Streaming feature as if that is what SteamOS was mainly designed for, but it’s the tip of the iceberg. It’s certainly a nice feature, but there’s a lot more to Steam Machines.
=> ↺ Bleed 2D Platformer Is Now Available on Steam for Linux
- Bleed is a new 2D action platformer developed and published by Ian Campbell on Steam for Linux. The developer has released a patch for the game and made it compatible with the Linux platform.
Desktop Environments/WMs
=> ↺ Xfce 4.12 Should Be Released in One Week, at the End of February
- After several emails between Xfce developers and numerous delays, it appears that the highly anticipated Xfce 4.12 desktop environment will finally be released at the end of February 2015, in the last weekend, most probably on March 1, if nothing goes wrong.
=> ↺ Xfce 4.12 Is Still Planned For Release In One Week
- Earlier this week we wrote about plans for Xfce 4.12 to finally be released and that it was being targeted for the end of February. Unlike failed Xfce 4.12 plans of the past few years, it looks like this release will actually pan out in one week’s time.
GNOME Desktop/GTK
=> ↺ Using play/pause buttons in Chrome with GNOME 3
- I wrote a post last summer about preventing Chrome from stealing the media buttons (like play, pause, previous track and next track) from OS X. Now that I’m using Linux regularly and I fell in love with Google Play Music All Access, I found that GNOME was stealing the media keys from Chrome.
- The fix is quite simple. Press the SUPER key (Windows key or Mac Command key), type settings, and press enter. Click on Keyboard and then on the Shortcuts tab. You should now see something like this.
Distributions
Reviews
=> ↺ Bodhi Linux 3.0.0 Released – Detailed Review and Installation Instructions
- Bodhi GNU/Linux is a Ubuntu-based distribution designed especially for Desktop computing and is best known for its elegant and lightweight nature. The Distribution philosophy is to provide a minimal base system that can be populated with the applications as per user’s choice. The base System only include those applications which are essentially required viz., ‘Etecad‘ File Manager, ‘Midori‘ web browser, ‘Terminology‘ terminal emulator, ePhoto and ePad. Apt or AppCenter can be used to download and install lightweight applications in one go.
New Releases
=> ↺ LinHES 8.3 Finally Makes the Switch to Kodi, Includes MythTV 0.27.4
- Cecil Watson, the developer of the LinHES (formerly KnoppMyth) GNU/Linux Live operating system designed especially to be used as a home entertainment system, proudly announced the immediate availability for download of LinHES 8.3 (Lorne Malvo), a release that introduces a new Linux kernel, as well as updated Nvidia drivers and core components.
Red Hat Family
=> ↺ Red Hat: Open Source ARM Platform Gets Closer to Prime Time
- Red Hat’s (RHT) investment in ARM hardware is heating up. This week, the company announced that more than 35 hardware and software companies have joined its ARM Partner Early Access Program, and that it expects its partners to begin delivering ARM software and drivers to the open source community starting now.
Fedora
=> ↺ New features in Fedora 22 Workstation.
- Matthias Clasen recently posted some updates on the Fedora development list about new features in Fedora 22 Workstation. As you may know, we’re getting ready to issue an Alpha, so it’s a great time to try out these changes.
Debian Family
Derivatives
Canonical/Ubuntu
=> ↺ Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS Arrives with Linux Kernel 3.16
- Canonical announced that Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS (Trusty Tahr), the second point release for the latest LTS branch, has been released and is now available for download.
=> ↺ Locally Integrated Menus (LIM) Set As Default In Ubuntu 15.04 Vivid Vervet
- After getting an option to always show the menus as well as global menu (Appmenu) support for Java Swing applications, yet another menu-related change has landed in Ubuntu 15.04 Vivid Vervet: locally integrated menu (LIM) is now the default menu.
=> ↺ Wayland/Weston 1.7.0 Make It For Ubuntu 15.04
- While Canonical remains committed to Mir as the future display server technology for Ubuntu Linux both on the desktop and for mobile devices, the upcoming Ubuntu 15.04 release does have the latest Wayland/Weston 1.7 support too.
Flavours and Variants
=> ↺ Kubuntu 14.04 LTS Update Out
- The second update to our LTS release 14.04 is out now. This contains all the bug fixes added to 14.04 since its first release in April. Users of 14.04 can run the normal update procedure to get these bug fixes.
=> ↺ Kubuntu 14.04.2 LTS Officially Released, Users Can No Longer Upgrade to Plasma 5
- Kubuntu 14.04.2 LTS (Trusty Tahr), a Linux distribution based on Ubuntu that uses the KDE desktop environment, has been released and is now available for download.
=> ↺ Edubuntu 14.04.2 LTS Has Been Officially Released
- Along with the release of Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS (Trusty Tahr) GNU/Linux computer operating system, as announced by Adam Conrad on behalf of Canonical, the Edubuntu team was also proud to announce earlier today, February 20, the immediate availability for download of Edubuntu 14.04.2 LTS, a release that includes new kernel and graphics stacks.
=> ↺ Elementary OS 0.3 Freya Beta 2 : Video Overview and Screenshot Tours
- Elementary OS 0.3 Freya Beta 2 has been released by Elementary OS Team, based on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and featuring with pantheon desktop environment, it comes with various User Interface improvements, UEFI/SecureBoot support, better and more discoverable multitasking, updated 3rd party apps (including Geary, Simple Scan, Document Viewer & more), Updated development libraries (including Gtk 3.14), Security and Stability improvements, tons of stylesheet and icon changes and fixes along with other interesting changes as well as almost 600 bug fixes.
Devices/Embedded
=> ↺ Raspberry Pi, oh my: From classrooms to the space station
- Well, this is starting to look sort of like “Jamie’s Mostly Raspberry Pi Stuff”, but that’s not intentional. There are just a lot of interesting things going on with the RPi at the moment, so that’s where I seem to be spending a lot of my time right now.
- The big news, of course, was the announcement and immediate availability of the Raspberry Pi 2 hardware two weeks ago. The new hardware needs updated software to really make the most of its capabilities, so there was also a new Raspbian and NOOBS release (1.3.12) made at the same time.
=> ↺ GDB 7.9 released
- Release 7.9 of GDB, the GNU Debugger, is now available via anonymous FTP. GDB is a source-level debugger for Ada, C, C++, Objective-C, Pascal and many other languages. GDB can target (i.e., debug programs running on) more than a dozen different processor architectures, and GDB itself can run on most popular GNU/Linux, Unix and Microsoft Windows variants.
Phones
Android
=> ↺ Is the Samsung Galaxy S6 about to become the coolest Android phone ever?
- Gauging what a smartphone is going to look like before its released is sort of like solving one of those toss-up puzzles on Wheel of Fortune – the answer gets clearer the longer you wait.
=> ↺ T-Mobile Galaxy S5 lands Lollipop to lead this week’s Android device update roundup
- The T-Mobile variant of the Galaxy S5 is the latest to jump on board the Lollipop train. It’s been refreshing to see Samsung’s flagship score the latest Android build so quickly in comparison to previous versions of Android, especially with a new Galaxy S6 just around the corner.
- However, there are other updates to consider. Each week we gather up all the major software updates for the biggest devices; phones and tablets on U.S. carriers (and unlocked phones, of course), wearables, and round them all up so you don’t miss a thing.
=> ↺ Android Studio v1.1 hits the stable channel
- During Google I/O 2013 we were first introduced to Android Studio, though it would be two years before it would leave beta. Android Studio 1.0 arrived last December, but Google is wasting no time in pushing the platform forward now that it is out of beta. With that in mind, Android Studio 1.1 is now hitting the stable channel after two months of cooking in the background.
=> ↺ Android malware fakes phone shutdown to steal your data
- The malware requires an Android device to be “rooted,” or modified to allow deep access to its software. That may eliminate a lot of Android owners who don’t modify their phones.
=> ↺ New Android malware makes your phone look like it’s off, and then spies on you
=> ↺ Our Favorite Android, iOS, and Windows Phone Apps of the Week
=> ↺ Android 5.1 Update: What to Expect
- The Android 5.0.2 Lollipop update and Android 5.0.1 Lollipop update no longer serve as the company’s most current version of its new operating system. That distinction belongs to Android 5.1 Lollipop, a mysterious new update that is currently available on select Android One smartphones. Today, we want to set the table and take a look at what we expect from Google, its Android 5.1 update and the Android 5.1 release.
=> ↺ YouTube is launching an Android app for children
- YouTube will release a new app designed for kids on Monday, the Google-owned video service has confirmed to The Verge. The app — called YouTube Kids — will reportedly offer original episodes of TV shows aimed at youngsters, in addition to videos from child-centric channels on YouTube, and will let parents set timers to stop their spawn from watching too long.
=> ↺ Android L 5.1 Release Date & Download: Update Coming to Motorola Devices After Nexus & HTC?
- Some devices have already been rumored to be running on Android 5.1 Lollipop, but when will it be issued to Motorola devices?
- At the start of February, Tech Radar said that owners of the second generation Motorola Moto G (2014) may receive the Lollipop update soon.
=> ↺ Android 5.1 Lollipop release date confirmed for HTC One M7 GPE, Nexus devices to follow soon
- Google’s forthcoming Android 5.1 Lollipop update returns to the spotlight, as a HTC official has confirmed its release date for March on a spate of devices including the HTC One M7 Google Play Edition (GPE).
Free Software/Open Source
=> ↺ Facebook benefits from formalising management of open source
- Facebook is now contributing more to external open source projects and keeping closer tabs on its own open source efforts
=> ↺ Facebook Picking Up the Pace on Its Open-Source Code Journey
=> ↺ Bind Exploit Closed in Ubuntu 14.10
- Canonical has announced that a Bind vulnerability has been found and fixed for Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, Ubuntu 12.04 LTS operating systems.
=> ↺ Pivotal pivots to open source and Hortonworks
- A few days ago Pivotal made three major announcements: the creation of a Big Data Product Suite, a partnership with Hortonworks and the launch of an ‘Open Data Platform’.
=> ↺ INTERVIEW: TIM O’REILLY
- There are many memorable quotes attributed to Tim O’Reilly. Which isn’t surprising. He’s been talking for decades about open data, the internet and the direction technology is taking us. Like Arthur C Clarke, much of what he’s predicted, talked about and written has proven incredibly judicious. He popularised the ideas behind ‘Web 2.0’, as well as the incoming wave and impact of social media. He believes in an open government and that the internet will become a global brain of networks and things.
=> ↺ Enterprise Software Giants Live In An Open Source World
- A decade ago now, I was recruited by ZDNet to launch a blog about open source software.
- At the time, the concept was controversial. Proprietary giants like Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and IBM (NYSE:IBM) argued that open source was insecure, that the business model would not work, that it would destroy the enterprise software space, that they couldn’t make money with it.
- One decade on and it’s clear what has happened. Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Android dominates the consumer space, and those who advocate proprietary models would claim it proves their point. Android OEMs don’t make money, while Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), with its proprietary model, is making a fortune.
=> ↺ Pivotal Open Sources Their Big Data Suite
=> ↺ Untangling the intense politics behind Node.js
- The news that broke at the Node Summit last week — that Joyent and others are proposing to create a Node.js Foundation — came as no surprise to anyone who has been watching the controversy around everyone’s favorite server-side JavaScript platform. It’s been clear for a while that Node.js has outgrown its roots and become an important structural tool for the software industry.
- Node.js’s hosts at Joyent didn’t plan for this — the code had been an employee project rather than a strategic investment. While Node.js is an important part of Joyent’s operations, it’s not a key product for the company, which has certainly spent far more to host it than it has received in business value as a pioneer of container-based cloud deployment. Joyent deserves credit for acting responsibly and maintaining its commitment as steward, despite the intense interest — and fierce political intrigue — in which it found itself.
=> ↺ Node.js fork JXcore goes open source, aims for mobile developers
- With all the noise surrounding the Io.js variant of Node.js, it’s easy to forget about another Node fork that’s been quietly percolating: JXcore. Last year it added multithreading (sort of) and the ability to turn Node apps into stand-alone executables — but at the cost of JXcore being a closed source project.
=> ↺ ONF launches open source community to bolster SDN software development
- The Open Networking Foundation (ONF) has announced the launch of an open source software community and code repository aimed at consolidating and accelerating development efforts around software and solutions that take advantage of software defined networking.
Web Browsers
Mozilla
=> ↺ Mozilla Firefox 36 Will Bring Support for HTTP/2
- This just got in: Mozilla Firefox 36.0 will bring support for the brand-new HTTP/2 protocol, according to the official release notes from the last Beta version of the web browser. HTTP/2 will enable a faster, more responsive, and more scalable Web.
SaaS/Big Data
=> ↺ PLUMGrid Offers Virtual SDN Sandbox for Testing OpenStack Concepts
- There are lots of IT adminstrators out there wrestling with sticky issues as they pursue OpenStack deployments, and many of them say that they simply need to experiment with security and stabiity before rolling out mission-critical applications. Enterprises simply don’t want to trust a cloud platform and move apps and data to the cloud without having full platform confidence.
=> ↺ Q&A: MapR Technologies’ Tomer Shiran on Hadoop, Myriad, Apache Drill, and Data Analytics
- Recently, MapR Technologies, focused on Hadoop and Big Data analytics, has been out with some interesting announcements that we covered. We wrote about Myriad, an open source project focused on consolidating big data with other workloads in the datacenter, in this post. And we covered the latest release of the MapR Distribution including Hadoop in this post.
Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
=> ↺ LibreOffice 4.3.6 “Still” Is Out with 110 Fixes
- The Document Foundation announced the release of LibreOffice 4.3.6, which is a new maintenance version in this branch of the famous office suite.
=> ↺ Creating Forms for Easy LibreOffice Database Entry on Linux
- The LibreOffice suite of tools includes a very powerful database application ─ one that happens to be incredibly user-friendly. These databases can be managed/edited by any user and data can be entered by anyone using a LibreOffice-generated form. These forms are very simple to create and can be attached to existing databases or you can create both a database and a form in one fell swoop.
Business
=> ↺ Pentaho’s Open Source Background Keeps It Flexible in a Changing Marketplace
- Enabling customers to ride the waves of tech trends is a big part of Pentaho Corporation’s business approach, said the tech company’s Vice President of Product and Solutions Marketing, Donna Prlich, during a live interview on theCUBE. With a new technology emerging every day, Prlich explained, it’s essential for customers to be flexible without sacrificing their ability to “get value from Big Data.”
FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
=> ↺ GDB 7.9 Brings Improvements To The Python Scripting API
- Today’s release of GDB 7.9 brings many improvements to the Python scripting API, compilation and injection of source code into the inferior with GCC 5.0+, resume improvements, hardware watchpoint support on GNU Hurd x86, MIPS SDE target, and a number of new commands.
=> ↺ Tell Lenovo: respect user freedom and prevent future Superfishes
- Security experts have discovered a highly threatening vulnerability in software preinstalled on some Windows computers manufactured by Lenovo through January 2015. Extreme negligence on the part of Lenovo and unscrupulous programming by its adware partner Superfish seem to have caused the vulnerability.
Public Services/Government
=> ↺ Visegrad countries and Bulgaria compare eGovernment practices
- Best practices in the implementation of eGovernment services by public administrations in Bulgaria will be compared with those in the Visegrad countries – the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, at a workshop in Sofia on 26 February. According to a press announcement, Bulgaria’s coalition government is making the modernisation and increase of eGovernment services one of its priorities.
Openness/Sharing
=> ↺ This electrical engineer built an open-source headlamp for doctors in developing countries
- That’s what Amanda DelCore learned through the work of Dr. Laura Stachel, who designed a portable light kit when she saw that doctors and nurses in developing countries had to postpone treatment when their lights would go out. The doctors and nurses were especially excited about the headlamps included in Stachel’s kit because they were hands-free.
=> ↺ What do off-patent GM soybeans say about possibilities of open source biotech?
- March of 2015 marks the beginning of a new era in genetically modified foods. It’s the first year farmers can plant a generic version of glyphosate-resistant soybeans—the first GMO to be patented by Monsanto in 1996. There are some caveats to this, but it’s also a case that no longer fits the anti-GMO meme denouncing large agribusiness for holding intellectual property rights over seeds.
Open Data
=> ↺ The open data platform, like United Linux before it, will fail
- ODP, much like UnitedLinux before it, is an effort by the also-ran vendors in a market to prop themselves up against more successful competitors. It’s bad strategy, and bad for Hadoop. Fortunately, like United Linux, ODP will fail.
Programming
=> ↺ PHP 5.6.6 Patches for GHOST Vulnerability
- The so-called GHOST (glibc gethostbyname buffer overflow) vulnerability that was first disclosed in January isn’t just about glibc apparently. On February 19, PHP developers released PHP 5.6.6 providing a mitigation for CVE-2015-0235 – aka – GHOST.
=> ↺ PHP version 5.4.38, 5.5.22 and 5.6.6
=> ↺ Announcing a Specification for Hack
- Today we are excited to announce the availability of the initial specification for the Hack programming language.
Leftovers
=> ↺ Sources: Marissa Mayer is firing people at Yahoo (YHOO)
=> ↺ Adobe Photoshop: changing your perception of reality for 25 years
- On the 25th anniversary of the launch of Adobe Photoshop, Sophie Curtis examines why the software program has become a cultural phenomenon
=> ↺ Metrolink delays after ANOTHER driver ends up on tram tracks on new Manchester Aiport line
- Since November 25, at least 12 drivers have ended up on the tram tracks – half of those on the new Manchester Airport line.
Security
=> ↺ Friday’s security updates
Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
=> ↺ Top 10 Bogus ISIS Stories
- ISIS’s violent bona fides are not in doubt to anyone paying attention. They’ve targeted religious minorities, beheaded aid workers, sold women into sex slavery and have been all-around devastating for those under their rule. But as America debates the possibility of a full-scale ground invasion of ISIS-controlled territory, it’s important to note that much of the ISIS threat — namely that which targets the West — has been habitually overstated by an uncritical media.
=> ↺ Veteran War Reporters: O’Reilly’s Falklands Fibs Violate “Journalism 101″
- Revelations that Bill O’Reilly may have misled viewers about his reporting from the Falklands War back in 1982 are drawing fire from veteran war correspondents who contend apparent embellishments like O’Reilly’s hurt the credibility of all combat journalists.
=> ↺ How Fox News Responded To Bill O’Reilly’s Falklands Fibs
- Fox News has gone to war with Mother Jones after the liberal magazine published a story raising questions about the credibility of host Bill O’Reilly’s past statements about his experience as a war correspondent.
=> ↺ Who Killed the Argentine Prosecutor? More Than 400,000 March for Justice in Buenos Aires as Controversy Grows
- As many as 400,000 people marched through the pouring rain in the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires on Wednesday demanding an independent judiciary. The march came one month after the mysterious death of special prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who had accused Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, of helping to cover up Iran’s role in the deadly 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center that killed 85 people and injured hundreds in Buenos Aires. On January 18, Nisman was found dead in his apartment of a gunshot wound to the head. His body was discovered just a day before he was due to testify before lawmakers on his findings on the 1994 attack. Just four days before his death, Nisman appeared on television and outlined his allegations against the president and Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman. Investigators initially said Nisman’s death appeared to be a suicide, but no gunpowder residue was found on his hands. If it was not a suicide, who killed him? That question has gripped Argentina for the past month. We make sense of this unfolding story with Sebastian Rotella, senior reporter for the investigative news website ProPublica. He first covered the investigation into the 1994 bombing as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times based in Buenos Aires.
Environment/Energy/Wildlife
=> ↺ CNRL’s Steve Laut Says Oilsands Face ‘Death Spiral’ If They Don’t Cut Costs
- As the world’s oil glut continues to build, wiping out hopes of a price recovery, the head of one of Canada’s largest oilsands operators is warning the industry faces a “death spiral” if it doesn’t figure out how to cut costs.
- Speaking before the Chamber of Commerce in Fort McMurray, Steve Laut, president of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. (CNRL), said oilsands companies can still return to health, but only if they aggressively begin to cut costs.
- Costs have risen so far, so fast that oil producers were making three times as much profit in 2004, when oil was at $40 a barrel, than they were a few years ago when oil was at $100 a barrel, Laut said, as quoted at the Globe and Mail.
Privacy
=> ↺ UK Surveillance: The Fightback Begins – Please Join
- It’s one of the longest, most-detailed stories that The Intercept has published so far, and is well-worth reading in its entirety. What it shows is that GCHQ and the NSA really do want access to everything, and that they are prepared to do more or less anything to get that. Put together with all the other Snowden revelations, plus the news from earlier this week about infected hard drive firmware – almost certainly another NSA project – and things might seem utterly desperate.
- And yet there are some glimmers of hope. A couple of weeks ago, the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT), which reviews complaints about surveillance in the UK, decided that British intelligence services acted unlawfully in accessing millions of people’s personal communications collected by the NSA – the first time it has ever ruled against the intelligence and security services in its 15-year history. It’s true that the ruling was unsatisfactory in many ways, but it still sets an important precedent. And then just this week, the UK government was forced to make a humiliating admission that it was unlawful for intelligence agencies to have monitored privileged conversations between lawyers and their clients for the past five years.
=> ↺ NSA’s Stealing Keys To Mobile Phone Encryption Shows Why Mandatory Backdoors To Encryption Is A Horrible Idea
- Over the last few months, ever since both Apple and Google announced plans to encrypt data on iOS and Android devices by default, there’s been a ridiculous amount of hand-wringing from the law enforcement community about requiring backdoors, golden keys and magic fairy dust that will allow law enforcement to decrypt the information on your phone… or children will die, even though they actually won’t.
- It would be nice to see that the revelation of the NSA undermining one use of encryption led people to realize the stupidity of undermining other forms of encryption, but somehow, it seems likely that our law enforcement community won’t quite comprehend that message.
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