Linux and Open Source Blog

  • Home
  • WordPress Plugins
  • About
  • Contact

Category Archives: linux/unix/os distros

Why Linux Will Succeed On The Desktop

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

Linux Logo MediumI believe Linux will become the de-facto standard desktop operating system. Though it’ll take a while for many users to break free from ties to Windows, there is good reason to believe that this day will come.

Consider that the global community is already beginning to rally behind standard document formats. In addition, as browsers like Firefox gain more market share, users are less tolerant of Internet Explorer-only web sites. However, the transition is slow and will continue to be a slow one. Most people will switch away from Windows only when dollars are on the line.

More from Informationweek

Leave a comment .

What’s New in OpenBSD 4.2

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

OpenBSD is famous for its focus on security. On November 1st, the team is proud to announce Release 4.2.

Even though security is still there, this release comes with some amazing performance improvements: basic benchmarks showed PF being twice as fast, a rewrite of the TLB shootdown code for i386 and amd64 cut the time to do a full package build by 20 percent (mostly because all the forks in configure scripts have become much cheaper), and the improved frequency scaling on MP systems can help save nearly 20 percent of battery power.

And then the new features: FFS2, support for the Advanced Host Controller Interface, IP balancing in CARP, layer 7 manipulation with hoststated, Xenocara, and more!

Federico Biancuzzi interviewed 23 developers and assembled this huge interview…

Leave a comment .

Review: Asus Eee PC 701 4G

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

The Asus Eee PC 701 4G is the new affordable ultraportable notebook that’s bound to be on many consumer’s Christmas wishlist this year. Retailing for somewhere between $299 and $399, the Eee PC isn’t exactly a workhorse, but it will do just about every basic task you’d need from a laptop. Our initial hands-on actually proves it does more than we expected.

First, the specs for the review unit we have on hand, which is the Eee PC 701 4G:

  • Processor: Intel Celeron M ULV 900MHz
  • Storage: 4GB of Flash-based storage (SSD)
  • Memory: 512MB of DDR2 RAM (667MHz)
  • OS: Xandros Linux (Asus customized)
  • Screen: 7-inch screen with 800 x 480 resolution
  • Ports: 3 USB 2.0, 1 VGA monitor out, headphone jack, microphone input, SD card reader (SDHC compatible), Kensington lock slot, Ethernet 10/100
  • Webcam (0.3 MP)
  • Battery: 4-cell 5200 mAh 7.4V Li-Ion (rated at 3.5 hours)
  • Wireless: 802.11b/g Atheros
  • Input: Keyboard and Touchpad
  • Weight: approximately 2 lbs with battery, 2.5 lbs travel weight with AC adapter.

Asus teamed up with Xandros to develop a customized version of the Linux operating system for the new Eee PC, running KDE environment. Microsoft Windows requires a significant amount of storage space on the tiny 4GB SSD, and the added cost from installing genuine Windows would have added to the final retail price of the Eee PC. Xandros developed a point-and-click user interface that looks and acts similar to Windows … but easier. But Asus did recently announced that they are teaming up with Microsoft to release a version of the Eee PC that will come preloaded with Windows in 2008.


A view of the “Internet” tab displayed after startup

The Asus Eee PC comes preloaded with more than 40 applications for everything from work and email to listening to music and watching movies. Unlike the many free applications that come preinstalled on Windows-based computers, almost none of the applications on the Eee PC can be considered “bloatware.” In fact, almost every application on this notebook is both useful and easy to use.


The “Work” tab


The “Learn” tab


The “Play” tab

Click on the “Web” icon and the Firefox web browser opens. Click on the “Documents,” “Spreadsheets,” or “Presentations” icons and the Open Office application (compatible with Microsoft Office) opens so you don’t have to purchase additional office software. Click on any standard movie file and the video plays in either the Media Player application or inside Firefox … you don’t need to spend hours searching for video plugins and codecs, the movies just play. Don’t waste time downloading iTunes. Just plug in your iPod and the Music Manager detects the music player and begins importing the songs.

The point is that the Eee PC just works. We only wish we could say the same thing about the many Windows-based notebooks we review.


The “Settings” tab

Linux Review

More reviews can be found here. Here’s a look at other configurations of the 701 in the Eee PC lineup:

 

Model
Eee PC 8G Eee PC 4G Eee PC 4G Surf Eee PC 2G Surf
Display
7″ 7″
7″
7″
Operating System
Linux
Windows XP Comp.
Linux
Windows XP Comp.
Linux
Windows XP Comp.
Linux
Windows XP Comp.
Ethernet Connection
Yes Yes Yes Yes
WLAN Yes
Yes Yes
Yes
Memory 1GB DDR2
512MB DDR2 512MB DDR2
256MB DDR2
Solid State Disk Size
8GB 4GB 4GB
2GB
Camera Yes Yes No No
Audio Hi-Def
Stereo Spk/Mic
Hi-Def
Stereo Spk/Mic
Hi-Def
Stereo Spk/Mic
Hi-Def
Stereo Spk/Mic
Battery 4 Cells
5200mAh/3.5hrs
4 Cells
5200mAh/3.5hrs
4 Cells
4400mAh/2.8hrs
4 Cells
4400mAh/2.8hrs
Weight .92kg .92kg
.92kg
.92kg

Eee PC 4G $399 with 512MB memory and 4G flash drive and built-in camera
Eee PC 4G Surf $349 with 256MB memory and 4G flash drive and built-in camera
Eee PC 2G Surf $299 with 256MB memory and 2G flash drive

The Eee PC might have a weird name, but it’s one of the few products that lives up to the marketing hype. This notebook truly is “easy to learn, easy to work, and easy to play.” Eee PC is the single most impressive notebook priced below $400. The technical specs might look sub par, but the usability and overall performance of the Eee PC rivals notebooks costing several thousand dollars more.

1 Comment .

What The Google Phone Could Do For Linux

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

Even the best technology needs a sugar daddy. Seven years ago, Linux got just that when IBM said it would put $1 billion on the then-nascent open-source operating system, pushing the software into the corporate mainstream. Now the same could be about to happen for Linux with the mobile phone, with Google set to give Linux a major endorsement this November.

Industry insiders say Google is about to release Linux-based software that will bind mobile phones to Google’s online services, a move likely to exacerbate the growing conflict between Google and Microsoft over the future of the mobile-phone market.

Complete Article

Leave a comment .

Low-Cost Board Runs Linux, Google Apps

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

An anonymous reader writes to mention that hardware hacking enthusiasts can now get their hands on the guts of the Everex TC2502 Linux PC for just $60 (USD). The compact x86-compatible “gOS Dev Board” offers a lightweight Linux-based OS designed for use with Google Apps. ” Along with a Firefox browser supporting the Google toolbar, gOS includes local productivity applications, such as OpenOffice.org. However, its main goal is “coherently packaging Google Apps to give users the idea that they can use Google as their main environment,” explained Paul Kim, of Everex. “

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

3 Comments .

Red Hat Joins Open Source Java Project

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

narramissic writes “Red Hat has signed on to Sun’s OpenJDK project and agreed to coordinate its own Java development efforts for Linux with the project. Red Hat will align the work it has done on IcedTea (its own implementation of some parts of the Java SE JDK) with OpenJDK. As part of its participation in OpenJDK, Red Hat will eventually create a compatible OpenJDK implementation for its Enterprise Linux distribution and will also use OpenJDK to create a runtime for its JBoss Enterprise Middleware that is optimized for a Linux environment.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Leave a comment .

Google’s Open Source Mobile Platform

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

As expected, today Google took the wraps off of the gPhone (as the media have for months been referring to the rumored project). Google is “leading a broad industry alliance to transform mobile phones into powerful mobile computers,” and will be licensing its software to all comers on an open source basis under the Apache license. (The Wall Street Journal’s Ben Worthen demonstrates a miserable grasp of what “open source” means.) Google’s US partners include Nextel and Sprint, but not AT&T nor Verizon. Phones will be available in the second half of 2008 — not the spring as earlier reports had speculated. News.com’s analysis warns that Google won’t take over the mobile market overnight, though they quote Forrester in the opinion that Google may be one of the three biggest mobile players after several years of shakeout.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Leave a comment .

Linux-Powered Lego-Like Devices Target Developers

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

An anonymous reader writes “A six-person startup is readying a product resembling nothing so much as a set of electronic Legos for device designers. The idea is to provide a set of snap-together components from which engineers can build ‘anything,’ the company claims, without having to learn solid state electronics. Both hardware and software (Linux/Java phoneME/OSGi) are open source, so that over time, the Lego box will grow, the company hopes. Initially, there’s an ARM11-powered base with built-in wifi, and modules for camera, GPS, motion detector, LCD display, keyboard, touchscreen, and stereo speakers. Ooh, and a mysterious ‘teleporter,’ too.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Leave a comment .

DIY CPU Demo’d Running Minix

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

DeviceGuru writes “Bill Buzbee offered the first public demonstration of the open-source Minix OS — a cousin of Linux — running on his homebrew minicomputer, the Magic-1, at the Vintage Computer Festival in Mountain View, Calif. The Magic-1 minicomputer is built with 74-series TTL ICs using wire-wrap construction, and implements a homebrew, 8086-like ISA. Rather than using a commercial microprocessor, Buzbee created his own microcoded CPU that runs at 4.09 MHz, and is in the same ballpark as an old 8086 in performance and capabilities. The CPU has a 22-bit physical address bus and an 8-bit data bus.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Leave a comment .

Is CentOS Hurting Red Hat?

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

AlexGr writes “Jeff Gould raises an interesting question in Interop News: Why does Red Hat tolerate CentOS? The Community ENTerprise Operating System is an identical binary clone of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (minus the trademarks), compiled from the source code RPMs that Red Hat conveniently provides on its FTP site. It is also completely free, as in beer. CentOS provides no paid support, but it does track Red Hat updates and patches closely, and usually makes them available within a few hours or at most a few days of the upstream provider, which it refers to for legal reasons as “a prominent North American Enterprise Linux vendor.” Free support for CentOS can be found in numerous places around the web, and a few third parties offer modestly priced paid support for those who want it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Leave a comment .
« Previous Page
Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • Does an un-confirmed Bitcoin transaction expire?
  • Looting of the Fox: The Story of Sabotage at ShapeShift
  • Decentralization, Scalability, and Fault Tolerance of Bitcoin
  • Stripe will soon accept Bitcoin payments
  • Zynga announces Bitcoin acceptance in game
  • How to import very large sql dump via phpmyadmin
  • How to compare the content of two folders automatically
  • Top 5 reasons to start experimenting with Linux
  • The day our mind became open sourced
  • Mark Shuttleworth wants to turn canonical (ubuntu) into the next Apple Inc.

Categories

  • applications/software (26)
    • browsers (2)
    • development (1)
    • information management (1)
    • Mobility (1)
    • multimedia (5)
    • office suites (2)
    • security (6)
    • servers (6)
    • system (2)
  • audio/video/pics (3)
  • Bitcoin (3)
  • books & literature (1)
  • cms/portals (1)
  • desktop environments (7)
    • gnome (2)
    • kde (5)
  • events/shows (3)
    • interviews (1)
    • people (1)
    • surveys (1)
  • games & gaming (2)
  • general topics (4)
  • guides (112)
    • how to (105)
    • tips (87)
    • tutorials (86)
  • hardware (8)
    • desktop & laptop pc (5)
    • gadgets & mobiles (2)
  • howtoforge (47)
  • internet/web (4)
    • design & development (2)
  • linux and open source blog (49)
  • linux.com (76)
  • linux/unix/os distros (113)
    • debian/ubuntu based (10)
    • mac/osx (2)
    • other distros (3)
  • news (217)
  • open source (8)
    • business & foss (2)
  • other (26)
    • uncategorized (26)
  • Programming (3)
    • PHP (2)
  • quotes & thoughts (10)
  • random stuff (4)
    • cool stuff (3)
    • funny stuff (1)
  • review/preview/tests (7)
  • wordpress/blogging (3)

Archives

  • July 2016
  • April 2016
  • January 2015
  • April 2014
  • January 2014
  • November 2013
  • February 2013
  • November 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • August 2011
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2006

Recent Posts

  • Does an un-confirmed Bitcoin transaction expire?
  • Looting of the Fox: The Story of Sabotage at ShapeShift
  • Decentralization, Scalability, and Fault Tolerance of Bitcoin
  • Stripe will soon accept Bitcoin payments
  • Zynga announces Bitcoin acceptance in game
  • How to import very large sql dump via phpmyadmin
  • How to compare the content of two folders automatically
  • Top 5 reasons to start experimenting with Linux
  • The day our mind became open sourced
  • Mark Shuttleworth wants to turn canonical (ubuntu) into the next Apple Inc.

Categories

  • applications/software (26)
    • browsers (2)
    • development (1)
    • information management (1)
    • Mobility (1)
    • multimedia (5)
    • office suites (2)
    • security (6)
    • servers (6)
    • system (2)
  • audio/video/pics (3)
  • Bitcoin (3)
  • books & literature (1)
  • cms/portals (1)
  • desktop environments (7)
    • gnome (2)
    • kde (5)
  • events/shows (3)
    • interviews (1)
    • people (1)
    • surveys (1)
  • games & gaming (2)
  • general topics (4)
  • guides (112)
    • how to (105)
    • tips (87)
    • tutorials (86)
  • hardware (8)
    • desktop & laptop pc (5)
    • gadgets & mobiles (2)
  • howtoforge (47)
  • internet/web (4)
    • design & development (2)
  • linux and open source blog (49)
  • linux.com (76)
  • linux/unix/os distros (113)
    • debian/ubuntu based (10)
    • mac/osx (2)
    • other distros (3)
  • news (217)
  • open source (8)
    • business & foss (2)
  • other (26)
    • uncategorized (26)
  • Programming (3)
    • PHP (2)
  • quotes & thoughts (10)
  • random stuff (4)
    • cool stuff (3)
    • funny stuff (1)
  • review/preview/tests (7)
  • wordpress/blogging (3)

Archives

  • July 2016
  • April 2016
  • January 2015
  • April 2014
  • January 2014
  • November 2013
  • February 2013
  • November 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • August 2011
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2006
Privacy Policy

Est. 2002

linewbie.com serving the linux and open source community since April 09, 2002

CyberChimps WordPress Themes

© Linux and Open Source Blog