This page permanently redirects to gemini://gemini.techrights.org/2015/05/06/ubuntu-summit-news/.
● 05.06.15
● Links 6/5/2015: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Enters Beta, Ubuntu Summit News
Posted in News Roundup at 5:35 am by Dr. Roy SchestowitzContentsGNU/LinuxGNU/Linux
=> ↺ Video: 84-Year-Old Volunteer Rebuilds, Sends Linux Laptops to Africa
- Retired pastor James Anderson, age 84, has never worked in IT or had any formal computer training, but over the past two years he has rebuilt more than a hundred IBM ThinkPad laptops and sent them to schools and nonprofits in Africa – all running Linux.
- For the past nine years, Anderson has volunteered at FreeGeek, a Portland, Oregon-based nonprofit that recycles and rehabilitates old computers for donation. He spends four hours every Friday testing and rebuilding the ThinkPads, which he then loads with Linux Mint 17 and sends one or two at a time to Africa via personal couriers.
=> ↺ Open Source History: Why Did Linux Succeed?
- One of the most puzzling questions about the history of free and open source is this: Why did Linux succeed so spectacularly, whereas similar attempts to build a free or open source, Unix-like operating system kernel met with considerably less success? I don’t know the answer to that question. But I have rounded up some theories, which I’d like to lay out here.
=> ↺ Do you need a container-specific Linux distribution?
- You’ve always been able to run containers on a variety of operating systems: Zones on Solaris; Jails on BSD; Docker on Linux and now Windows Server; OpenVZ on Linux, and so on. As Docker in particular and containers in general explode in popularity, operating system companies are taking a different tack. They’re now arguing that to make the most of containers you need a skinny operating system to go with them.
=> ↺ Cloudsto X86 Nano PC is a tiny desktop with Ubuntu Linux (or Windows)
- The folks at UK retailer Cloudsto have been offering tiny desktop computers loaded with Ubuntu Linux for a little while. But most have basically been Ubuntu versions of existing Android boxes with ARM-based processors.
- Now Cloudsto is introducing a line of mini PCs with x86 processors, starting with the Cloudsto X86 Nano Mini PC. It’s available with either Windows 8.1 or Ubuntu 14.04.
=> ↺ An introduction to Linux from Opensource.com
- What is Linux? For many this seems like a question with an obvious answer, but the truth is there are a large number of people who would shrug their shoulders. Many have never heard of Linux (gasp!) or aren’t confident in their answer.
- Here at Opensource.com, we want to help answer that question in a manner that allows others pass it around and share it with the world. So, we created a new resource page which gently introduces Linux, the world’s most popular open source operating system.
=> ↺ Coders With Bad Attitudes
- Here’s why I’m even bothering to write this: I’m writing to the person who is considering Linux as a desktop system. I am writing to the kid who wants to explore computer programming. I’m writing to the person who is intrigued with the look and feel of Linux on the desktop.
- Should you run into this kind of person while you are asking for help or even offering to help others, just write him off as someone who had an extremely bad day and move along. He is most certainly an anomaly within the global Free Software community…within the Linux community.
Server
=> ↺ Kubernetes gobbles rkt for instant-on containers – no Docker required
- Cloudy Linux startup CoreOS kicked off its inaugural CoreOS Fest event in San Francisco on Monday with word that its homegrown rkt (pronounced “rocket”) container runtime software will be integrated into the Google-derived Kubernetes container orchestration software.
=> ↺ CoreOS Ramps Up The News As The Vendors Pick Their Sides In The Container Wars
- Application containerization is potentially the biggest disruptive technology in the IT infrastructure world today. Containerization not only puts at risk a number of vendors (think those who make their money from virtualization) but it fundamentally promises to enable a business transformation as well.
=> ↺ CoreOS Gives Up Control of Non-Docker Linux Container Standard
- Taking a major step forward in its quest to drive a Linux container standard that’s not created and controlled by Docker or any other company, CoreOS spun off management of its App Container project into a stand-alone foundation. Google, VMware, Red Hat, and Apcera have announced support for the standard.
- Becoming a more formalized open source project, the App Container (appc) community now has a governance policy and has added a trio of top software engineers that work on infrastructure at Google, Twitter, and Red Hat as “community maintainers.”
=> ↺ Linux Widens HPC Goalposts
- It is well known that the term “high performance computing” (HPC) originally describes the use of parallel processing for running advanced application programs efficiently, reliably and quickly. The term applies especially to systems that function above a teraflop or 10^12 floating-point operations per second, and is also often used as a synonym for supercomputing. Technically a supercomputer is a system that performs at or near the currently highest operational rate for computers. To increase systems performance, over time the industry has moved from uni-processor to SMP to distributed-memory clusters, and finally to multicore and manycore chips.
- However, for a growing number of users and vendors, HPC today refers not to cores, cycles, or FLOPS but to discovery, efficiency, or time to market. Some years ago, IDC came up with the interpretation of HPC to High Productivity Computing, highlighting the idea that HPC provides a more effective and scalable productivity to customers, and this term fits really well for most commercial customers.
=> ↺ Benefits of Linux Dedicated Servers
- Linux is a reliable and popular operating system – and this is quite fair. Any contemporary Linux dedicated server offers the best performance, maximum security, and reliability on the market without breaking your pocket book.
Kernel Space
=> ↺ Linux Kernel 3.14.40 LTS Arrives with ARM Improvements, Updated Drivers
- Linux kernel 3.14.40 LTS arrived a few days ago, as announced by Greg Kroah-Hartman on the kernel mailinglist, and it brings a number of important improvements to the ARM and PowerPC architectures, as well as several updated drivers.
=> ↺ kernel code coverage brain dump.
- Someone at work recently asked me about code coverage tooling for the kernel. I played with this a little last year. At the time I was trying to figure out just how much of certain syscalls trinity was exercising. I ended up being a little disappointed at the level of post-processing tools to deal with the information presented, and added some things to my TODO list to find some time to hack up something, which quickly bubbled its way to the bottom.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.10 to Be Called Wily Werewolf
- Mark Shuttleworth has just announced the name of the Ubuntu 15.10, the next iteration of the Linux distribution from Canonical, and it’s Wily Werewolf.
- The founder of Canonical used to make these announcements on this personal blog, but he has chosen the Ubuntu Online Summit keynote to make this one. What’s interesting about this particular name is the fact that it makes a full circle (almost) to the first Ubuntu release Ubuntu 4.10 (Warty Warthog), that dates back to October 2004.
=> ↺ Mark Shuttleworth Promises Ubuntu Phone that Turns into PC This Year
- Mark Canonical has announced that a pocket PC powered by Ubuntu will be released this year, but he just teased about it, and he didn’t reveal any additional details.
=> ↺ Linus Torvalds Announces Linux Kernel 4.1 Release Candidate 2
- Today, May 3, Linus Torvalds had the pleasure of announcing the immediate availability for download and testing of the second Release Candidate (RC) version of the upcoming Linux kernel 4.1, due for release in summer 2015.
Applications
=> ↺ GTK3 Download Manager uGet
2.0 Released
- uGet 2.0 was released recently, bringing support for multi-thread downloading and mirrors for the curl plugin, individual download speed limiting, new settings dialog and more.
=> ↺ Drop-Down Terminal Guake
0.7.0 Released, Available In PPA
- Guake is a drop-down terminal inspired by computer games consoles such as the one used in Quake, which slides down from the top of the screen when a key is pressed (F12 by default in Guake).
=> ↺ 4MPlayer 12.0 Beta Is a Linux Distro Used Just to Play Video Files
- 4MPlayer is new interesting Linux distribution that has been built with a single use in mind, to play any kind of video files, including CDs and DVDs, without having to boot an entire distro and its desktop environment.
=> ↺ RcppAnnoy 0.0.6
- A few days ago, Erik released a new version of his Annoy library — a small, fast, and lightweight C++ template header library for approximate nearest neighbours — which now no longer requires Boost. While I don’t mind Boost (actually, quite the opposite), it appears to have been a blocker in getting the Python part of Annoy over to the world of python3.
=> ↺ virt-manager 1.2.0 released!
- Today I released virt-manager-1.2.0. You can read the release announcement here…
=> ↺ Calligra 2.9.4 Office Suite Released with Multiple Krita Improvements
- After a bogus Calligra 2.9.3 release, the developers of the number one open source office suite for the KDE desktop environment released Calligra 2.9.4, which brings multiple improvements to the popular Krita digital painting software.
=> ↺ KDE Applications 15.04 Is Now Available for Kubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet)
- On May 4, the Kubuntu developers had the pleasure of informing their users about the immediate availability of the recently announced KDE Applications 15.04 software suite for the Kubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) operating system.
Proprietary
=> ↺ Plex Media Server Now Supports PlayStation 4 Audio Transcoding
- The modern and powerful Plex Media Server, a free and cross-platform media server software for GNU/Linux, BSD, OS X, and Microsoft Windows platforms, has been updated recently to version 0.9.12.0.
Instructionals/Technical
=> ↺ The Hacker’s Guide to Python, 2nd edition!
=> ↺ Thunderbolt to Ethernet Adapter on Linux
=> ↺ How to Manage Your Files From the Command Line
=> ↺ How To Install LibreOffice 4.4.3 RC2 On Ubuntu, Debian And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install LibreOffice 4.4.3 RC2 On Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia, OpenMandriva And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ How To Install KXStitch 1.2.0 On Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 12.04 And Derivative Systems
=> ↺ Elasticsearch and Spark 1.3
- Elasticsearch has offered Hadoop InputFormat and OutputFormat implementations for quite some time. These made it possible to process Elasticsearch indices with Spark just as you would any other Hadoop data source. Here’s an example of this in action, taken from Elastic’s documentation:
=> ↺ [Video] Samsung NX1 Overview Training Tutorial
- Tony Northrup is an Award-winning author and photographer who has published more than 30 how-to books and sold more than a million copies around the world. He has created a video tutorial, that is over an hour long, for beginners and more advanced users that aims at getting you familiar with your Samsung NX1 Compact Systems Camera (CSC).
=> ↺ Firejail Seccomp Guide
- Firejail is a generic Linux namespaces security sandbox, capable of running graphic interface programs as well as server programs. The sandbox is lightweight, the overhead is low. There are no socket connections open, no daemons running in the background. All security features are implemented directly in Linux kernel and available on any Linux computer.
Games
=> ↺ Steam Linux Usage Drops Below 1%
- While we didn’t expect any big gains for the Linux gaming market-share over the past month, it does come as a surprise there’s a significant drop.
=> ↺ Linux loses ground in latest Steam hardware survey
- When Valve first announced that the Steam gaming platform was going to be made available on Linux computers back in 2012, few expected the OS to become the first choice for gamers. However, even despite the many hundreds of titles that have been made available via the service since then, the share of Linux users on Steam struggles to remain relevent.
=> ↺ Linux Game Publishing Remains Down For The Count
Desktop Environments/WMs
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
=> ↺ KDE Applications 15.04 Available for Kubuntu 15.04
- Packages for the release of KDE Applications 15.04 are available for Kubuntu 15.04. You can get it from the Kubuntu Backports PPA.
- Bugs in the packaging should be reported to kubuntu-ppa on Launchpad. Bugs in the software to KDE.
- To update, use the Software Repository Guide to add the following repository to your software sources list:
- ppa:kubuntu-ppa/backports
=> ↺ Open Source Krita App Wants to Be Faster than Photoshop, Hits Kickstarter Again
- Krita, an open-source digital painting software that proved to be a very powerful and useful solution, is once more present on Kickstarter and this time it wants to become faster than Photoshop.
=> ↺ KMouth is alive and well
- I meant to have a post about Gardening efforts next, but KMouth is improving lately, so I’ll throw out a quick post about progress.
- KMouth master branch is now Qt3 free. It’s still using K3Process for the speech synthesizer command-line calls, but all Qt3Support is gone.
=> ↺ Availability of Qt Free Edition
- In my last blog posts, I explained the KDE Free Qt Foundation, which guarantees the free availability of the Qt Toolkit. Today, The Qt Company introduced a new Qt online installer that requires users to accept additional license terms. Many people have contacted me with concerns about this change. I share this concern. Even before this, I have already been concerned about the structure of the qt.io download page, since it blurs the lines between the Qt Toolkit itself and additional, proprietary products.
GNOME Desktop/GTK
=> ↺ GNOME 3.17.1 Has Been Officially Released
- As we reported last week, the GNOME development team started work on the next major version of the acclaimed desktop environment, GNOME 3.18, and they’ve just released the first snapshot, GNOME 3.17.1.
=> ↺ GNOME’s Mutter Updated for GNOME 3.18 with More Wayland Improvements
- Mutter, the default window manager and compositor of the acclaimed GNOME desktop environment received an update as part of the first development release of the upcoming GNOME 3.18, due for release on October 23, 2015.
Distributions
=> ↺ What are the differences between Linux distributions?
- Linux offers a tremendous amount to any computer user, but the proliferation of distributions can sometimes be confusing to newer folks. A Linux redditor asked what the differences were and got some helpful answers.
New Releases
=> ↺ MakuluLinux 9 Xfce Is Available for Download, Based on Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS and Xfce 4.12
- Jacque Montague Raymer, the lead developer and founder of the MakuluLinux distribution based on the world’s most popular free operating system, Ubuntu, had the pleasure of announcing the release of MakuluLinux 9 Xfce.
=> ↺ Ultimate Boot CD 5.3.4 Officially Released, Includes PhotoRec 7.0 and TestDisk 7.0
- Ultimate Boot CD, an ISO image that gathers together all the necessary tools for helping users with advanced system repair tasks and general system maintenance, reached version 5.3.4.
Screenshots/Screencasts
=> ↺ Introducing the First openSUSE MATE Live CD – Screenshot Tour
- Today, we have the great pleasure of introducing you to the first ever openSUSE Live CD built around the MATE desktop environment, as it looks like the openSUSE team plans on delivering a MATE flavor as well, after Ubuntu got its own.
Ballnux/SUSE
=> ↺ Linux Kernel 4.0 Arrives in openSUSE, KDE Plasma 5.3 and GCC 5.0 Coming Up Next
- The openSUSE development team, through Dominique Leuenberger, had the pleasure of informing openSUSE users about what happened last week on Tumbleweed, the rolling-release branch of the openSUSE Linux operating system.
Red Hat Family
=> ↺ Rival Technology to Docker Gets Google’s Thumbs-Up
- Docker has certainly gathered most of the headlines in the container space, but the team behind CoreOS deserves some praise for creativity, too. We’ve been covering their creation, dubbed Rocket, extensively. Rocket is a new container runtime, designed for composability, security, and speed, according to the CoreOS team.
=> ↺ Google, Twitter, Red Hat Speak Up For Container Standard
=> ↺ Google voices support for Docker rival, Rocket
=> ↺ CoreOS gains on Docker, with support from Google, Red Hat, VMware
- The short answer appears to be yes. To varying degrees, Google, Red Hat, VMware, and Apcera have joined the list of App Container (AppC) adoptees. But preemptively replacing Docker doesn’t seem to be on the agenda; it’s more about increasing the list of container options available to customers and letting the market decide.
=> ↺ Google, Red Hat, and VMware announce CoreOS container support
- Before we declare Docker the champion of the container wars, CoreOS begs to differ. If CoreOS was just doing this alone, it might not matter much. But, CoreOS has some big friends, Red Hat, Google, VMware and Apcera, that will make its efforts count.
=> ↺ Google, VMware, and Red Hat just joined together to kneecap red-hot startup Docker
=> ↺ The EVP, Chief People Officer of Red Hat is Selling Shares
- Today, the EVP, Chief People Officer of Red Hat, Delisa Alexander, sold stocks of RHT for $815.6k.
=> ↺ Earnings Focus: Red Hat, Inc.
=> ↺ Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Enters Beta
- Even though RHEL 7 is the latest version, the Linux vendor continues to add new features to RHEL6.x. Linux vendor Red Hat on May 5 released its Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6.7 beta, providing users with a preview of features and capabilities that will become generally available later this year.
=> ↺ Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 Beta Now Available
- We are pleased to announce the beta release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7, the latest version of our Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 platform. Nearly five years into its lifecycle, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 continues to provide a stable, proven, and predictable foundation for organizations seeking to build and deploy large, complex IT projects with confidence.
- The beta release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 includes a number of new and updated features to help organizations preserve investments in existing infrastructure, bolster security, stability, and systems management/monitoring capabilities, and embrace the latest Linux innovations.
Fedora
=> ↺ Korora MATE Has Returned and It Looks Gorgeous, Based on Fedora 21
- The Korora Project had the pleasure of announcing the general availability of the MATE edition of the Korora 21 Linux distribution, based on the popular Fedora 21 operating system.
=> ↺ F22 Cloud/Atomic Test Day May 7th!
- Hey everyone! Fedora 22 is on the cusp of being released and the Fedora Cloud Working Group has elected to organize a test day for May 7th in order to work out some bugs before shipping it off to the rest of the world.
=> ↺ RPM Fusion, RussianFedora and future
- All this issues fixed in RussianFedora always (we release alpha, beta versions of RFRemix with 1-2 days delay after Fedora), so we support devel branches of Fedora. Also we’re using Koji to build packages and git to store RPM specs, patches.
- Today I did copy and update of ffmpeg and mpv packages from rpmfusion to RussianFedora. They already in F22 and rawhide repos. Tomorrow I will do the same for F21.
Debian Family
=> ↺ ScreenLock on Jessie’s systemd
- Something I was used to and which came as standard on wheezy if you installed acpi-support was screen locking when you where suspending, hibernating, …
Derivatives
=> ↺ Tails 1.4 RC1 Anonymous Live CD Uses Tor Browser 4.5 and Debian 8 Jessie Sources
- The Tails development team announced the immediate availability for download and testing of the first Release Candidate (RC) version of the upcoming Tails 1.4 amnesic incognito Live CD distribution that has been used by Edward Snowden to stay invisible online and browse websites anonymously.
=> ↺ Ultimate Boot CD Live Aims to Become a Parted Magic Replacement, Based on Debian
- The development team behind the popular UBCD (Ultimate Boot CD) project have announced recently that they are working on a Live version of Ultimate Boot CD, which is currently based on the Debian GNU/Linux operating system and has the ultimate goal of becoming a Parted Magic replacement.
=> ↺ Knoppix Topics: An interview with Linux pioneer Klaus Knopper
- At this year’s CeBIT trade show in Hanover, Germany, Christopher von Eitzen sat down with Linux legend Klaus Knopper to discuss his popular Knoppix Linux distribution as well as Linux and accessibility in open source software.
- Designed to boot and run directly from a CD, DVD or USB flash drive without needing to be installed on a computer’s hard drive, Knoppix incorporates automatic hardware detection with support for a wide range of video and sound cards, USB devices and other peripherals and uses and on-the-fly decompression to run entirely in a computer’s memory. The CD version carries up to 2GB of executable software, while the single-layer DVD edition stores up to 10GB of data. The operating system can be used, for example, as a rescue system, to demonstrate Linux, as an educational CD, or installed directly to a system.
Canonical/Ubuntu
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.04 Received Very Well by Linux Community
- Canonical released Ubuntu 15.04 a couple of weeks ago, and it seems that it’s been a success. The community is mostly reporting a nice experience, which is important since this is the first Ubuntu release that uses systemd instead of upstart.
=> ↺ Launchpad Can Now Import Git Repositories
- Canonical has announced that Git repositories can now be hosted directly on Launchpad, which was one of the most requested features of the community.
=> ↺ New Ubuntu Touch OTA Update Planned for This Week
- Ubuntu Touch is working great on the Bq Aquaris and Nexus 4 devices, especially after the previous update, and now the developers are focusing on a new OTA upgrade that should also bring some interesting fixes.
=> ↺ The World’s First Ubuntu-Powered Drone Is Here – Video
- After introducing the Erle-Copter drone powered by Ubuntu Snappy Core back in February 2015, Erle Robotics, a Spanish company known for all sorts of Linux-powered robots, launched on May 3 the world’s first Ubuntu-powered drone.
=> ↺ BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition review: A promising start
- The first ‘production’ smartphone running the Ubuntu operating system is finally here. Designed and marketed by the Spanish company BQ (not to be confused with the Chinese company BQ Mobile) and made in China, the first Ubuntu Phone is based on the 4.5-inch BQ Aquaris E4.5, which normally ships with Android 4.4. Included with the BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition are two copies of the quick-start guide (in four languages each, one of the eight being English), a charger (with a built-in two-pin continental mains plug) and a 1-metre USB-to-Micro-USB cable. A comprehensive User Manual is available for download from the BQ website. The list price for the Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu Edition, which is only available in the EU, is €169.90 (~£125).
=> ↺ Ubuntu and Windows set to contest desktop/smartphone hybrid market
- Ubuntu also aims to offer a phone that would provide a middle ground between mobile and desktop before the year is out, according to the founder of the company behind the OS, Mark Shuttleworth. Shuttleworth confirmed that the device will launch in 2015 in a YouTube Q&A earlier this morning, according to a report by Liliputing.
=> ↺ Ubuntu phone that works as a desktop PC coming in 2015
=> ↺ Watch: Mark Shuttleworth’s Keynote for Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf)
- In case you didn’t have the time to watch today’s live keynote video with Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical and the famous Ubuntu Linux operating system, you can watch the recording right now (see the video at the end of the article).
=> ↺ A massive change for Ubuntu package management is on the horizon
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.10 is called Wily Werewolf: Linux Wrap
- In the online Ubuntu summit on Monday, Mark Shuttleworth announced that the 15.10 release of Ubuntu, due out in October, will be codenamed Wily Werewolf. Other names that I liked were Wooley Wammoth and Wicked Wabbit. The 15.10 release will see more work on convergence ready for the LTS release next year.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Won’t Have Unity 8 by Default, the Community Will Decide
- Canonical wanted to have Unity 8 and Mir ready for Ubuntu 16.04 LTS in order to provide them by default, but it looks like that is not going to happen. Instead, the community will be able to choose the default desktop they want for that particular LTS release.
=> ↺ Next Ubuntu Codename Announced, New Laptops
- Ubuntu dominated the headlines today with its Ubuntu Online Summit for 2015 beginning today. Mark Shuttleworth gave the keynote and informed a loyal public of the new 15.10 lsb_release -a. Elsewhere, Ubuntu 15.04 gets a thumbs-up and Ebuyer.com is now selling Ubuntu laptops.
=> ↺ Ubuntu Is Slowly Moving Towards the Rolling Release Model
- Developers from Canonical explained last week that they intended to rebase the Ubuntu Next flavor (featuring Mir and Unity8) on Snappy, which means that they were also considering moving to a rolling release model, even if it was just for this branch.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.10 Codename Announced (And a Whole Heap More)
- Wow! What wonderment! The Ubuntu 15.10 has has been revealed as ‘Wily Werewolf’.
=> ↺ Ubuntu and Windows set to contest desktop/smartphone hybrid market
=> ↺ Canonical set to release their own Ubuntu Continuum phone in 2015
=> ↺ Relax, it’s just Ubuntu 15.04. AARGH! IT’S FULL OF SYSTEMD!!!
- Most users will notice very little overall difference in this latest Ubuntu release, but it’s this change that packs the biggest punch.
- There are a couple of new things that make 15.04 worth the upgrade from previous versions, but the really big changes – like the move to Unity 8 and the whole “convergence” of the desktop and mobile versions – remain in the future.
=> ↺ AMD-Powered HP Ubuntu Powered Laptops To Go On Sale In UK
=> ↺ Would you buy an Ubuntu phone that doubled as a desktop PC?
=> ↺ Canonical and Ebuyer team up to bring Ubuntu-powered laptops to the UK
=> ↺ Ebuyer Starts Selling Ubuntu Laptops
=> ↺ Shuttleworth’s Ubuntu smartphone-PC hybrid is back
=> ↺ HP’s Ubuntu 14.04 laptops offer workstation-on-a-budget performance
=> ↺ Ubuntu phone that offers desktop experience coming this year
=> ↺ Canonical promises Ubuntu Edge-like convergent smartphone
=> ↺ Ubuntu Phone still coming 2015, unfazed by MS Continuum
=> ↺ There’s No Plans for Ubuntu Phones Based on Ubuntu 15.10 (Wily Werewolf), Says Canonical
=> ↺ Bq E4.5 Aquaris Has A Hidden Factory Mode Menu. See How To Access It.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.10 Wily Werewolf (Based On Debian 9.0) Will Be Released On The 30th Of October
=> ↺ Mark Shuttleworth Says Microsoft Didn’t Copy Convergence Idea, Ubuntu Will Be First
=> ↺ Ubuntu Devs and Users Talk About Windows with Buttons on the Wrong Side
- The Ubuntu community is having a vivacious discussion regarding the placement of the window buttons on the left side. From the looks of it, some users would prefer to have the option of moving the buttons to the right side.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.04 review: Beauty or “boring” is in the eye of the beholder
- Snow melts and trees blossom, but nothing really says spring around the Ars Orbital HQ like the arrival of a new version of Ubuntu Linux. Right on schedule, Canonical has recently released Ubuntu 15.04, also known as Vivid Vervet.
- Ubuntu 15.04 arrived in late April and has, judging by other reviews, largely underwhelmed. According to the popular storyline, there’s not much new in 15.04. Of course, a slew of changes and unforeseen features in 15.04 could have just as easily earned a negative reaction, probably from the same people calling the actual release boring. The top of the Linux mountain is a lonely, criticism-strewn place.
- The truth is, this line of thought is partially correct. There isn’t much new in 15.04, at least not in terms of visible changes to the Unity desktop.
=> ↺ Snappy Ubuntu Core takes off in a quadcopter
- Erle Robotics has launched an Ubuntu Core “Snappy” version of its open source Linux and ROS-based Erle-Copter quadcopter, with Erle-Copter app store access.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.04 Gets an Update to Fix a Dnsmasq Vulnerability
- Canonical has published details in a security notice about a Dnsmasq vulnerability in Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 14.10, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, and Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, that has been found and fixed.
=> ↺ Bq Aquaris e4.5 Ubuntu Edition Has Hidden Factory Mode
- The Bq Aquaris e4.5 Ubuntu Edition has been out for some time and is available for purchase right now. It’s the only Ubuntu phone on sale, and one of the users found out how to access a hidden Factory Mode that gives access to all kinds of cool stuff.
=> ↺ Ubuntu 15.10 Will Be Called Wily Werewolf
- Mark Shuttleworth has announced today that Ubuntu 15.10, scheduled for release in October 2015, will be named Wily Werewolf.
=> ↺ A New Ubuntu Phone Will Become Available Later This Year
- After announcing that the code name of Ubuntu 15.10 will be Wily Werewolf, Mark Shuttleworth has also announced that a new Ubuntu phone will be released this year, its vendor being still unknown for now.
=> ↺ The Ubuntu Online Summit For Ubuntu 15.10 Takes Place Right Now, New Information Being Revealed
=> ↺ Mark Shuttleworth Announced That They Will Let The Community Decide Whether To Use Unity 8 And Mir As Default Or Not, On Ubuntu 16.04
- Mark Shuttleworth has announced yesterday that the codename of Ubuntu 15.10 will be Wily Werewolf and that a new Ubuntu phone will get released this year.
=> ↺ Some Ubuntu Users Do Not Appreciate That They Cannot Move The Close, Minimize And Maximize Buttons On The Right Anymore
Flavours and Variants
=> ↺ Ubuntu MATE Project Donates Money to Ubuntu and Debian
- The Ubuntu MATE project is known for the fact that it contributes back, and it rewards developers for their work. It happened a few times already, and the latest projects awarded are Ubuntu and Debian.
=> ↺ Chromixium – An Ubuntu Based Google’s Chrome OS Clone
- Today, We have come up with an interesting news for both Ubuntu and Chrome OS users. Meet Chromixium – the new modern desktop operating system based on Ubuntu that has the functionality, look and feel of Google’s “Chrome OS”. Chromixium has brought the elegant simplicity of Chromebook and flexibility and stability of Ubuntu together. Chromixium puts the web front and center of the user experience. Web and Chrome apps work straight out of the browser to connect you to all your personal, work and education networks. Sign into Chromium to sync all your apps and bookmarks. When you are offline or when you need more power, you can install any number of applications for work or play, including LibreOffice, Skype, Steam and a whole lot more. Security updates are installed seamlessly and effortlessly in the background and will be supplied until 2019. You can install Chromixium in place of any existing operating system, or alongside Windows or Linux.
Devices/Embedded
=> ↺ 5 of the Best Raspberry Pi Projects Out There
- Raspberry Pi, when first launched about two years ago, became an instant phenomenon. After all, who could have thought of a $35 computer that lets you browse the web and does most of your office work? What is even more surprising is the reception it got from average users. Usually, one would expect a bare-minimum $35 board computer that runs Linux to be popular only among developers or geeks. However, as many as 100,000 Raspberry Pi units were sold on the day of its launch eventually selling more than 2.5 million units till date.
=> ↺ Tiny UAV-oriented i.MX6 SBC has HDMI in and out
- Gateworks unveiled a tiny, UAV-oriented SBC that runs Linux or Android on an i.MX6 SoC, and offers HDMI in/out, USB, serial, GPIO, CAN, mini-PCIe, and more.
- Like other Gateworks Ventana boards, such as the recent Ventana GW5200, the tiny “Ventana GW5510″ runs Linux or Android on a Cortex-A9-based Freescale i.MX6 SoC clocked to 800MHz, and offers a wide-range power supply and -40 to 85°C temperature support. Other Ventana-like features include a programmable pushbutton switch, as well as programmable board shut-down and wake-up for remote sensor applications.
=> ↺ Linux-ready COM mates an i.MX6 SoC with an FPGA
- Armadeus has launched a Linux-equipped module that integrates a Freescale i.MX6 SoC with a Cyclone V GX FPGA, and offers SATA, CSI, DSI, and optional WiFi.
- French technology firm Armadeus Systems has been selling Freescale i.MX based modules for years, including the circa-2009, i.MX27 based APF27. For the new “APF6_SP” computer-on-module, Amadeus has turned to Freescale’s Cortex-A9 i.MX6 SoC, which it had previous adopted for its APF6 COM. The feature set on the APF6_SP is very similar, with one major exception: the addition of an Altera Cyclone V GX FPGA.
=> ↺ Thin Mini-ITX board packs quad-core 2.4GHz punch
Phones
Tizen
=> ↺ Abstract Modern backgrounds for Samsung Galaxy / Gear 2 / Gear Neo and Z1 – Vol 12
=> ↺ Leaked Images of the upcoming Samsung Z2 Tizen Smart Phone?
- We have mentioned previously about the rumoured upcoming Samsung Z2 Smartphone and an un-named Global Tizen Smartphone. Well today these are allegedly leaked images of the Samsung Z2, a Tizen based Quad core Smartphone with 1Gb memory, 540 x 960 Screen to be released 1H 2015, which is potentially only a few weeks away.
=> ↺ Samsung Officially Launches their Tizen Curved SUHD 4K TVs in the Philippines
- The new line of Tizen 4K Samsung SUHD TVs has now officially been launched in the Philippines at an event held a few days ago. The new line-up of TVs includes the JS9500, JS9000 and JS8500 models, supporting screen sizes ranging from 55 to 88 inches. Samsung boasts that their TV technology, which uses nano-crystal semiconductors, leads in color and brightness compared to its competitors.
Android
=> ↺ Screenshot of Xperia Z Running Android 5.0.2 Lollipop Leaks Online; Update Release for Sony Flagship Smartphone Imminent
=> ↺ Best new Android widgets (May 2015)
=> ↺ Android L 5.0, 5.1 Lollipop Download & Release Date: Samsung Galaxy Note 3, Galaxy S3, HTC One M8 & More Updates Out!
=> ↺ Samsung Galaxy Note 4 Android 5.0 Lollipop Update Problems: How To Fix Battery Life And Performance Issues
=> ↺ Samsung to Fix Galaxy S5′s Android 5.0 Lollipop Issues With Micro-Updates
- Samsung started pushing the Android 5.0 Lollipop update to the Galaxy S5 flagship smartphone late last year.
- Soon after the update rolled out, users began reporting various bugs in the final Android 5.0 Lollipop build for the Samsung Galaxy S5. This even led the company to pause the Android Lollipop update in European regions for a major period. Samsung Norway back in March while replying a user on Facebook had confirmed that the update caused various bugs.
=> ↺ Android 5.0 rollout for original Sony Xperia Z imminent
=> ↺ Android Influencer: Google’s Adrian Ludwig is dedicated to making Android as safe as it can be
- Android has had an unfortunate reputation over the years. There have been numerous criticisms that the open source mobile operating system is unsafe; that it’s riddled by constant security threats and malware.
=> ↺ Android 5.1 Lollipop Update For Moto X 2014 Coming Next Week
- Moto X 2014 owners will soon be able to update their smartphone to the latest Android 5.1 Lollipop software. Motorola announced that the update is set to make its way to the units next week.
=> ↺ Android games will make more money than iOS games by 2018 thanks to China
- The Android platform will soar past iOS in terms of revenue in a few years, but that doesn’t necessarily mean more money for Google.
=> ↺ What will Android 6.0 M be called? (poll results)
- Cupcake, Donut, Eclair, Froyo, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich, Jelly Bean, KitKat, Lollipop. No, these aren’t just the names of various delicious treats – they’re also the names of each consecutive, major Android release after Alpha and Beta.
=> ↺ 5 Things to Know Now About the Android 5.1.1 Update
- Last week, Google’s Android 5.1.1 Lollipop update finally started to pick up steam. With Android 5.1.1 Lollipop updates finally on the move, we want to take a look at five things Nexus users need to know now about Google’s Android 5.1.1 update and its release.
=> ↺ Android tool catches apps silently pumping hundreds of ad, tracking servers red-handed
- Security researchers have developed an Android application that’s capable of alerting when other apps on a phone or tablet are covertly tracking users and connecting to ad networks.
- The team at France’s Eurecom and Technicolor Research – explained in a paper published in the Cornell University Library archive that their prototype NoSuchApp application* functions as an on-board proxy: it monitors traffic and compares URLs silently requested by apps to a list of known ad-serving and user-tracking domains.
=> ↺ Android Lollipop is gaining more users as new flagships come out
- It took a while for Android Lollipop to even get its own slice on the OS pie chart Google releases regularly, but it now seems to be steadily gaining popularity. According to the latest Android stats collected from April 28th to May 4th, nine percent of devices are now running Lollipop. While that’s still quite small, it’s almost double last month’s percentage (five percent). KitKat’s stat slid down to 39.8 percent from last month’s 41.4 percent, so a number of stragglers might have finally upgraded. However, we’re sure the new flagships that recently started shipping with Lollipop out of the box (such as the Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge) helped boost the version’s usage. All the older versions’ percentage are slightly down from last month’s, as well, but Froyo’s impressively still hanging on at 0.3 percent.
=> ↺ Nexus 9 Android 5.1.1 Update: What to Expect
- Last week Google finally released the latest Android 5.1.1 Lollipop update aimed at fixing a few last outstanding bugs and issues since the initial Lollipop release back in November. This is the fourth update, however, the Nexus 9 hasn’t received anything past Android 5.0.1 back in November, but we’re hearing the Nexus 9 Android 5.1.1 Lollipop update could be here any day now.
=> ↺ More LG G3, G2 Android 5.0 Lollipop Problems Reported By Users
- Users of the LG G2 and G3 smartphones are experiencing widespread performance issues after receiving the Android 5.0 Lollipop update. LG G2 and G3 owners report various problems involving battery drain, slow charging and Wi-Fi connectivity, among others.
=> ↺ Latest Android distribution numbers see Lollipop at almost 10%
- Back in January, the news came out that after just three months, the brand new Android 5.0 Lollipop was installed on roughly 1.6% of active Android devices. Since then, it has been slowly but surely climbed upward. In the latest distribution numbers, Google’s tasty sweet treat has reached 9.7 percent market share.
Free Software/Open Source
=> ↺ Valve’s Mods Blunder Prompts Reddit Community to Create Open Source Steam Replacement
- Valve has recently gone through a major PR debacle after the company announced that it’s implementing paid mods for games and Skyrim in particular. Their decision was short-lived, and it was retracted, but they have managed to incur the rage of the community. Independent developers are now working on a new game launcher that will make Steam obsolete.
=> ↺ Biicode goes open source early after outpouring of community support
- After the announcement, our community growth skyrocketed. Our investors were so impressed by the welcoming of our open source announcement that they let us go ahead with open sourcing biicode early. We worked hard to release most of it in biicode 3.0.
=> ↺ Singapore’s prime minister releases source code for his hand-coded Sudoku-solver
- Singaporean prime minister Lee Hsien Loong has decided to reveal the source code of the Sudoku-solving app he personally coded.
- The PM revealed he likes to program in his spare time last month and mentioned the Sudoku-solver. He’s since taken to Facebook to announce the source code dump.
- “The program is pretty basic,’ the PM writes, “it runs at the command prompt, in a DOS window. Type in the data line by line (e.g. 1-3-8—6), then the solver will print out the solution (or all the solutions if there are several), the number of steps the program took searching for the solution, plus some search statistics.”
=> ↺ New tutorials, developments in open digital humanities
- Welcome to the third installment of my monthly column, where I explore how open source software and the open source way are used in the digital humanities. Every month I take a look at open source tools you can use in your digital humanities researc, as well as, a few humanities research projects that are using open source tools today. I will also cover news about how transparency and open exchange, and principles of the open source way, being applied to the humanities.
=> ↺ EMC open-sources ViPR Controller
=> ↺ EMC ScaleIO free for dev/test users
=> ↺ EMC makes software-defined ViPR open source
=> ↺ EMC releases ViPR Controller into the open source wild with Project CoprHD
=> ↺ EMC Announces Open Source Version of ViPR Controller
=> ↺ EMC hopes to extend ViPR Controller’s reach with open-source release
=> ↺ EMC to Distribute Free, Open-Source Software for the First Time
=> ↺ EMC to open-source ViPR – and lots of other stuff apparently
- ViPR is software storage controller tech that separates the control and data planes of operation, enabling different data services to be layered onto a set of storage hardware products – such as EMC’s own arrays, Vblocks, selected third-party arrays, JBODs and cloud storage. The data services are typically ways of accessing data, such as file services,
- The open source software will be called Project CoprHD* and be made available on GitHub for community development. It will include all the storage automation and control functionality and be supplied under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL 2.0). Public supporting partners for CoprHD are Intel, Verizon and SAP.
=> ↺ IT Innovators: Creating an Open Source Solution to Help IT Professionals Secure their Data in the Cloud
- When Kurt Rohloff was working as a senior scientist at Raytheon BBN Technologies, he quickly realized the value of encryption when storing data in the cloud. However, he viewed the fact that the data couldn’t be computed on after encryption as a major obstacle in what he needed to accomplish.
=> ↺ Netflix (NFLX) Announces Release of Open Source FIDO for Security Incidents
=> ↺ Netflix open-sources security incident management tool
=> ↺ Netflix looses FIDO hack attack dog as open source
- Netflix has released source code for its automated incident response tool to help organisations cut through the noise of security alerts.
- Project lead and security boffin Rob Fry together with Brooks Evans, and Jason Chan announced the unleashing of the Fully Integrated Defense Operation (FIDO) saying it has chewed the time to respond to incidents from weeks to hours.
=> ↺ Myth-Busting the Open-Source Cloud Part 2
=> ↺ Enabling Open Source SDN and NFV in the Enterprise
- I recently attended the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in Shenzhen, China, to promote Intel’s software defined networking (SDN) and network functions virtualization (NFV) software solutions. During this year’s IDF, Intel has made several announcements and our CEO Brian Krzanich showcased Intel’s innovation leadership across a wide range of technologies with our local partners in China. On the heel of Krzanich’s announcements, Intel Software & Services Group Senior VP Doug Fisher extended Krzanich’s message to stress the importance of open source collaboration to drive industry innovation and transformation, citing OpenStack and Hadoop as prime examples.
=> ↺ How Open-Source Software Will Speed Up Rebuilding Nepal’s Historic Sites
- A recent article by Gizmodo’s Alissa Walker gives a great overview of how these massive projects have benefitted from recent advances in technology. One of the bigger innovations of the last 10 years has been the open-source software Arches. Developed by The World Monuments Fund (WMF) and the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI), the software provides collaborative tools to document and analyze the “before” data for a damaged site. A group, whether of historians, architects, or a whole city, can contribute information they have from the site, like aerial photos or video, among other documentation.
Events
=> ↺ How – and Why – to Speak at Linux Foundation Events
- The open source community lives and grows through collaboration. That collaboration is driven online but we’ve witnessed first hand how much can be done and quickened by face-to-face meetings. This is due, in part, to the session speakers at events like LinuxCon, CloudOpen, Embedded Linux Conference and more. Speakers at our events represent the leaders and subject matter experts across a diverse range of technology areas and lend so much more to the event experience than just speaking. They help grow the community through their contribution; they make the experience for attendees so much more rich; and they represent the passion and genius that Linux and open source are known for.
=> ↺ The unofficial guide to OpenStack Summit Vancouver
Web Browsers
Chrome
=> ↺ Google’s New ‘Password Alert’ Extension Another Step To Protect Against Phishing Attempts
- Google has taken another step toward protecting users from fishing attempts by releasing a new Google Chrome extension ‘Password Alert’. The extension protects users from being gmail account overused with other non-google websites. As soon as it detects that the password has been exposed to any non-google website/service, it prompts to reset password immediately.
Mozilla
=> ↺ Mozilla Could Make New Firefox Features Cater to HTTPS Only
- We’ve been writing about the benefits of HTTPS (HTTP Secure) connections, as opposed to basic HTTP connections, for years. The Electronic Frontier Foundation even endorses a browser extension called HTTPS Everywhere that uses it to encrypt communications on the web.
SaaS/Big Data
=> ↺ Apache CloudStack Could Find Momentum in China
=> ↺ OpenStack Daddy Chris C Kemp says it’s like Linux in 1996
- Chris C Kemp, the former NASA CIO credited with originating OpenStack, has predicted stacks-in-a-box that make the cloud platform more accessible and easier to use aren’t far off.
- Speaking at CeBIT Australia, Kemp responded to a Register question about OpenStack usability by saying “in 1996 Linux was no fun either, but it provided a lot of value.” That value, and the fact the platform was open, led to innovation and the more polished Linuxes available and widely-used today.
- Kemp reckons that cycle will repeat for OpenStack.
=> ↺ University Sao Paulo Move to Open Source Apache(tm) CloudStack(tm) to Power Latin America’s Largest Educational Cloud
Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
=> ↺ LibreOffice 4.4.3 RC2 Is Out, Stable Version Should Arrive Very Soon
- The Document Foundation has just announced that the second RC (Release Candidate) for the LibreOffice 4.4.3 branch has been released and is now available for download and testing.
=> ↺ new area fill toolbar dropdown
- The GSOC 2014 Color Selector is in LibreOffice 4.4, but it’s not used for the “area fill” dropdown in impress or draw. So I spent a little time today for LibreOffice 5.0 to hack things up so that instead of using the old color drop down list for that we now have the new color selector in the toolbar instead. Gives access to custom colors, multiple palettes, and recently used colors all in one place.
CMS
=> ↺ What’s New for You This May in Open Source CMS
- WordPress issued an emergency update last week to patch a fresh zero-day vulnerability that could have enabled commenters to compromise a site. The previously unknown and unpatched weakness affected current versions of WordPress, according to Finnish company Klikki Oy.
- On April 26 — just three days after WordPress released it’s latest version, 4.2 — Klikki Oy released a video and proof of concept code for an exploit of the flaw, which allows a hacker to store malicious JavaScript code on WordPress site comments. The script is triggered when the comment is viewed.
=> ↺ IBIS: A powerful, Drupal-based info gathering tool
- I’m very excited about Joshua Lee’s talk on the Drupal-powered International Biosecurity Intelligence System (IBIS) at DrupalCon 2015. Though I’m no biosecurity expert, the aggregation methods and process workflow for gathering biosecurity information is relevant to many industries. In his talk, the technology for creating this data aggregation system will be covered, as well as how the Drupal community can both benefit and contribute to this project.
FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
=> ↺ FSFE Newsletter – May 2015
- The European Commission has published a new version of its strategy for the internal use of Free Software. The FSFE provided input to the Commission during the update phase and while the strategy is broadly similar to the previous version, there are some improvements.
- Unlike previous versions, this time the strategy is accompanied by an action plan aimed at putting it into practice. However, the action plan is not public, so it is not possible to assess the Commission’s progress towards its own goals. We would welcome it, if the Commission would soon publish its action plan.
Public Services/Government
=> ↺ Helsinki to prefer open source IT solutions
- The city administration of Helsinki (Finland) will prefer open source software solutions for new IT solutions. The city council on 13 April adopted a new IT strategy, emphasising a preference for open source, especially when developing or commissioning the development of software solutions.
=> ↺ Open source increase in Swiss public administration
- Switzerland’s public administrations are increasingly turning to using open source, according to the country’s IT trade group SwissICT and the open source advocacy group /ch/open. Like in 2012, the two groups have surveyed public administrations and companies in the country. They notice a “high increase in the use of open source software.”
Openness/Sharing
=> ↺ Turkey wants to re-engage in OGP
- The Turkish government will restart the process of participating in the Open Government Partnership, after having been found “acting contrary to the OGP process for two consecutive Action Plan cycles”.
=> ↺ 5 ways to promote an inclusive environment where good ideas can emerge
- People in tech companies and particularly in open source communities believe in and value meritocracy—letting the best ideas win. One thing that’s become increasingly clear to me over the past few years is this: meritocracy is a great driver of innovation, but if we want to get to the best ideas, we need diversity of thought and an inclusive environment where everyone feels welcome to participate and offer different perspectives. Indeed, to live up to our ideal of meritocracy, we must consistently question and seek to improve it.
Open Data
=> ↺ New gold standard established for open and reproducible research
- A group of Cambridge computer scientists have set a new gold standard for openness and reproducibility in research by sharing the more than 200GB of data and 20,000 lines of code behind their latest results – an unprecedented degree of openness in a peer-reviewed publication. The researchers hope that this new gold standard will be adopted by other fields, increasing the reliability of research results, especially for work which is publicly funded.
Open Access/Content
=> ↺ Open Access Reproducible Research Gets A New Gold Standard – From Computer Scientists
- A new gold standard has been set for openness and reproducibility in research – and it was done by Cambridge computer scientists. At a talk today at the 12th USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation in Oakland, they are going to unveil peer-reviewed results with 200 GB of data and 20,000 lines of code.
Open Hardware
=> ↺ 3D Printed Open Source Adaptable Wheelchair Design Released for Handicapped Dogs
- Now the design the engineering team came up with is available as an open source device for anyone who wants to help a handicapped animal. The construction plan, the print data, and parts lists can all be downloaded from the Multec website or this Instructable the company published.
=> ↺ Hackaday Prize Entry: A Low Cost, Open Source MRI
- This low cost magnetic resonance imager isn’t [Peter]’s first attempt at medical imaging, and it isn’t his first project for the Hackaday Prize, either. He’s already built a CT scanner using a barium check source and a CCD marketed as a high-energy particle detector. His Hackaday Prize entry last year, an Open Source Science Tricorder with enough sensors to make [Spock] jealous, ended up winning fourth place.
Programming
=> ↺ HHVM 3.7 Brings More Performance Improvements
- Facebook today announced the public release of HHVM 3.7.0, the latest version of the HipHop Virtual Machine that powers their Hack language and PHP implementation.
Leftovers
Security
=> ↺ Security advisories for Monday
=> ↺ Tuesday’s security updates
=> ↺ Mumblehard–Let’s End Its Five-Year Reign
- Linux has a well deserved reputation as being one of the most secure platforms for individuals and businesses. This is largely due to the way security is integrated into the system, but there is a great risk in being too complacent. Recent events serve to remind us that there is no such thing as an uncrackable system.
=> ↺ Mumblehard Malware Mugs Linux Servers
- “It’s more a question of an uptick in publicity,” suggested Bill Weinberg, senior director of open source strategy at Black Duck Software.
=> ↺ Linux malware went un-noticed for years
=> ↺ Linux, BSD web servers at risk of Mumblehard infection
Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
=> ↺ Britain and Nato launch biggest war games on Russia’s doorstep as tensions grow
- Britain and Nato have launched their biggest war games on Russia’s doorstep amid growing tensions over Vladimir Putin’s military aggression.
- The largest ever Nato anti-submarine exercise, including the Royal Navy, is under way off the coast of Norway just weeks after reports of Russian submarines encroaching in to foreign waters.
Finance
=> ↺ UK Supreme Court rules on money laundering arrangements
- The UK Supreme Court recently ruled on the law relating to prosecutions for entering into, or becoming concerned in, an arrangement which facilitates the acquisition, retention, use or control of criminal property for, or on behalf of, another person – contrary to s328 Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.
=> ↺ Calling TPP Foes ‘Simplistic,’ USA Today Simply Gets the Numbers Wrong
- It’s USA Today, not the unions, who are being simplistic here. The data they are relying on refers to gross output. This would include the full value of a car assembled in the United States, even if the engine, transmission and the other major components are imported.
- It also doesn’t adjust for inflation. If USA Today used the correct table, it would find that real value added in manufacturing hasn’t “nearly doubled”–it’s risen by a bit less than 41.0 percent since 1997, compared to growth of 45.8 percent for the economy as a whole.
- The story here is a one of very basic macroeconomics. The $500 billion annual trade deficit ($600 billion at an annual rate in March) implies a loss of demand of almost 3.0 percent of GDP. In the context of an economy that is below full employment, this has the same impact on the economy as if consumers took $500 billion every year and stuffed it under their mattress instead of spending it. USA Today might try working on its numbers and economics a bit before calling people names.
PR/AstroTurf/Lobbying
=> ↺ Male Gaze and its Impact on Gender Portrayals in Media
- The male gaze theory posits that because men control the creation of media; the media messages are dominated by a male point of view. The CEOs of the six companies that own 90% of media are all white males. Those same corporations are also heavily invested in the entertainment industry.
=> ↺ A World Without Celts
- The Guardian reflects the metropolitan London world of New Labour, and nothing else. Its coverage of the referendum, particularly by Severin Carrell, achieved the remarkable feat of being even less fair and containing even more lies than the Scotsman. But if you want really to get inside the mind of Labour, the Guardian remains the place to go to know what the Labour elite – London’s Balls, Cooper, Miliband, Harman, Umunna, Jowell etc. are thinking.
=> ↺ Channel 4 News
=> ↺ Jim Murphy and Eddie Izzard – Here’s How to Do It
=> ↺ Herald in World’s Worst Photoshop
=> ↺ For Meet the Press, Bernie Sanders Is He Who Must Not Be Named
- Meet the Press host Chuck Todd can’t seem to get enough of the 2016 presidential race. Yet the one major candidate who announced he was running last week–Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent who declared on April 30 he was running for the Democratic nomination–was strikingly ignored on Meet the Press‘s May 2 broadcast.
=> ↺ Chuck Todd Responds: Looking at Whether Meet the Press Mentioned Sanders or Not Is ‘Arbitrary’
- Todd may think seeing whether or not someone has been mentioned on Meet the Press is “some arbitrary way to judge the show,” but it seems to us to be a fairly straightforward way to gauge who the show thinks is an important part of the political discussion and who is not. And a tally of the show’s mentions of potential presidential candidates so far in 2015 is revealing.
=> ↺ Opening up the Shadowy World of Trade Secrets
- How the European Commission gave lobbyists pretty much what they wanted
=> ↺ The Times, They Are No Longer A-Changing
Censorship
=> ↺ 2 Gunmen Killed Outside Community Center Hosting ‘Draw the Prophet’ Show
- Two people were fatally shot Sunday outside a Garland, Texas, community center that was hosting an event displaying cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, local officials said.
- Garland police spokesman Joe Harn said that two men drove up to the community center and “opened fire on the security officers” hired to protect the event before being shot themselves.
Privacy
=> ↺ France set to join the spy game
- French MPs are due to approve a bill reforming French intelligence law to counter terrorist threats. But critics warn that the draft law is a license to spy on citizens’ private lives. Erin Conroy reports from Paris.
=> ↺ French National Assembly Approves Mass Surveillance of French Citizens!
- The Intelligence Bill, which was presented on the fast track on 19 March by French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, rallied a very large, argued and vigorous opposition, from a number of civil rights associations, collectives, lawyers’ and magistrates’ unions, but also administrative authorities such as the CNIL (French Data Protection authority) and the CNCDH (French National Consultative Committee for Human Rights).
=> ↺ House Refuses To Consider USA Freedom Amendment Stopping NSA’s Backdoor Searches… Even As Everyone Supports It
- As we’ve noted, there’s a new USA Freedom Act in town, and it’s on the fast track through Congress. It has some good stuff in there, and is generally a step forward on surveillance reform and ending certain forms of bulk collection — though there are some concerns about how it can be abused. But one thing that plenty of people agree on, is that even if it’s a step, it doesn’t go nearly far enough. Last Thursday, there was a markup in the House Judiciary Committee, to help move the bill to the floor, and some amendments were proposed to improve the bill — all of which got rejected.
- What was especially frustrating, was that for at least one key amendment, everyone agreed that it was important and supported it, and yet they still refused to support it. The reasoning, basically, was that the existing bill was the work of many, many months of back and forth and compromises, and the administration and the House leadership had made it clear that it would not approve a single deviation, even if it was really important. The amendment in question was basically a replica of an appropriations amendment from Reps. Ted Poe, Zoe Lofgren and Thomas Massie that we wrote about last year, which surprised many by passing overwhelmingly in the House, only to be stripped out by the Senate.
Civil Rights
=> ↺ US Presidential Election Is So Corrupt Even The Person In Charge Says She Has No Power To Stop Abuse
- If you were holding onto the faint hope that federal election campaigns were ever going to be anything but “buy your way into office” spending sprees, you may as well kiss it goodbye. The Federal Election Committee’s head has just admitted her agency is completely powerless to do the one thing it’s supposed to be doing.
=> ↺ New York state police handcuff and shackle ‘combative’ five-year-old
- The idea that police officers should use handcuffs and leg shackles to control an unruly individual is hardly unusual in the US, where fondness for the use of metal restraints runs through the criminal justice system.
- What is unusual is when the individual in question is five years old, and the arrest takes place in an elementary school.
- New York state police were called last week to the primary school in Philadelphia, New York, close to the Canadian border, after staff reported that a pupil, Connor Ruiz, was disruptive and uncontrollable. When officers arrived at the premises, they placed the five-year-old boy in handcuffs, carried him out to a patrol car and put his feet into shackles before taking him to a medical center for evaluation.
Internet/Net Neutrality
=> ↺ Facebook’s free Internet for the poor leaves out high-bandwidth sites
- Facebook’s Internet.org, which aims to give impoverished people around the world free mobile access to a selection of Internet services, is opening the platform to developers after facing criticism that the program’s restrictions violate net neutrality principles.
=> ↺ Facebook Opens Up Free Internet Platform Amid Net Neutrality Debate
- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is opening up his Internet.org platform to developers to help bring new types of content to the more than four billion people who lack Internet access.
- The move comes weeks after several Indian firms decided to pull out of the project due to concerns that the app does not provide equal access to information, one of the principles of net neutrality.
DRM
=> ↺ Community is the focus of 2015′s International Day Against DRM
- Today, a wide variety of community groups, activist organizations, and businesses are taking part in the ninth International Day Against DRM (dayagainstdrm.org).
Intellectual Monopolies
Trademarks
=> ↺ 1000-Year-Old Village Told To Stop Using Name Because Of Trademark Claim From Hotel Chain Founded There
- Techdirt has covered its fair share of idiotic legal threats over trademarks, but the following example is spectacular even for a field that has many superb examples of corporate bullying. It concerns the village of Copthorne (population 5,000), in the English county of West Sussex. It’s rather well established: it’s been around for a thousand years, and is mentioned in the Domesday Book, which was compiled in 1086. Recently, though, its village association was threatened with legal action for using the name ‘Copthorne’ on its Web site, as the Plymouth Herald newspaper reports…
Copyrights
=> ↺ Microsoft Logs IP Addresses to Catch Windows 7 Pirates
- A presumed pirate with an unusually large appetite for activating Windows 7 has incurred the wrath of Microsoft. In a lawsuit filed at a Washington court, the Seattle-based company said that it logged hundreds of suspicious product activations from a Verizon IP address and is now seeking damages.
=> ↺ European Court To Explore If Linking To Infringing Material Is Infringing
- A couple of years ago in the Svensson case, the European Court of Justice (CJEU) made it clear (finally) that merely linking to content is not infringement. That was a case involving a news aggregator linking to official sources. However, in a new case that has been referred to the CJEU, the court will examine if links to unauthorized versions of content is infringing as well. The excellent IPKat has the details of the case which involves a blog that linked to some pre-publication Playboy photos in the Netherlands. A lower court had said that it wasn’t copyright infringement, but still broke the law, by facilitating access. On appeal, the court found that the free speech concerns outweighed the copyright concerns. From the description by the lawyer representing the blogger (“Geen Stijl news”):
=> ↺ Forget, Mayweather v. Pacquaio: The Big Fight Was Apparently Hollywood v. Periscope Streaming
- Remember, just last week, when HBO and Showtime were flipping out about a couple of streaming sites promising to broadcast live streams of the big Floyd Mayweather/Manny Pacquiao fight? Apparently, they had the wrong target.
=> ↺ NZ court unfreezes some assets so Kim Dotcom can cover $100K+ in monthly costs
- As Kim Dotcom remains stuck in legal limbo, his once-extravagant life keeps moving on and costing plenty of money. Auckland Now reports that Dotcom will theoretically be able to keep the balancing act up for a while longer, as this week a New Zealand court released some of Dotcom’s frozen financial assets to specifically allow the Mega mogul to pay for his continual monthly expenses.
=> ↺ Hollywood Urged Cameron to Keep DVD Ripping Illegal
- A few months ago the UK Government legalized copying of MP3s, CDs and DVDs for personal use, as that would be in the best interest of consumers. A common sense decision for many, but leaked emails now show that Hollywood fiercely protested the changes behind the scenes.
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