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Linux.com :: Feature -
7 days and 12 hours ago
Many of you have commented that our NewsVac section hasn't been refreshed since the middle of
last month. Others have noticed that our story volume has dropped off. Changes are coming to
Linux.com, and until they arrive, you won't see any new stories on the site.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
8 days and 12 hours ago
The free and open source software community has been waiting for the G1 cell phone since it was first announced in July. Source code for Google's Android mobile platform has been available, but the G1
marks its commercial debut. It's clearly a good device, but is it what Linux boosters and FOSS
advocates have long been anticipating?
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Linux.com :: Feature -
9 days and 12 hours ago
Many public administrations already use open source Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to let
citizens look at public geographic data trough dedicated Web sites. Others use the same
software to partially open the data gathering process: they let citizens directly add
geographic information to the official, high-quality GIS databases by drawing or clicking on
digital maps.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
10 days and 12 hours ago
The Interclue extension is supposed to give you a preview of
links in Firefox before you visit them, saving you mouse-clicks and, with a little luck, allowing
you to move quickly between multiple links on the same page. Unfortunately, the determination to
monetize the add-on and keep its source code closed results in elaborations that make the basic
idea less effective, and its constant pleas for donations make Interclue into nagware. As much as
the usefulness of the basic utility, Interclue serves as an object lesson of the difficulties
that the decision to go proprietary can take.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
13 days and 12 hours ago
Shell programming is heavily dependent on string processing. The term string is used generically
to refer to any sequence of characters; typical examples of strings might be a line of input or a
single argument to a command. Users enter responses to prompts, file names are generated, and
commands produce output. Recurring throughout this is the need to determine whether a given
string conforms to a given pattern; this process is called pattern matching. The shell has a fair
amount of built-in pattern matching functionality.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
14 days and 12 hours ago
Many religions have some sort of holiday during this season, where we look back at the joyful
moments of the year that's coming to a close, and look ahead with anticipation and hope to the
year to come. We hope your year is filled with all you wish for.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
15 days and 12 hours ago
Google Maps gives you a quick and easy way to add maps to
your Web site, but when you're using Google's API, your ability to display other data is limited.
If you have your own data you want to display, or data from sources other than Google, OpenLayers, an open source JavaScript library, can give you more
options.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
16 days and 7 hours ago
At a time when new and buggy features cloud basic computer functions, it's refreshing to see a
new release of a distro like Slackware that stays true to
its core philosophy. Slackware has an unfair reputation of being a distro only for experienced
users. Granted it doesn't sport many graphical configuration tools, but it balances that with
stability and speed.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
16 days and 12 hours ago
Documentation is one area in which free/libre/open source software (FLOSS) is weakest. A project
called FLOSS Manuals is trying to remedy this
situation. The idea behind project is to create quality, free documentation for free software.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
17 days and 7 hours ago
A next-generation package manager called Nix provides a simple
distribution-independent method for deploying a binary or source package on different flavours of
Linux, including Ubuntu, Debian, SUSE, Fedora, and Red Hat. Even better, Nix does not interfere
with existing package managers. Unlike existing package managers, Nix allows different versions
of software to live side by side, and permits sane rollbacks of software upgrades. Nix is a
useful system administration tool for heterogeneous environments and developers who write
software supported on different libraries, compilers, or interpreters.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
17 days and 12 hours ago
Managing buddies on a few online social networks isn't too much of a hassle, but throw in your
contact list from instant messaging platforms and online apps and services like Flickr, Digg, and
Twitter, and you have a contact list that'd rival that of Kevin Bacon. Managing so many
people can be a headache, but here are three browser plugins that can help you manage your online
presence more efficiently.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
20 days and 7 hours ago
As a regular browser of the Firefox
Add-ons site, I'm troubled by the apparent proliferation of proprietary extensions in the
last year. Maybe I've simply exhausted the free-licensed extensions that interest me, but
recently every interesting-looking extension seems to be a proprietary one -- especially in the
recommended list. Nothing, of course, in the Mozilla privacy or legal notice prohibits proprietary extensions
simply because they are proprietary, but I find them not only contrary to the spirit of free and
open source software (FOSS), but, often, annoying attempts to entangle me in some impossible
startup.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
20 days and 12 hours ago
The past couple of years have seen an explosion of open source programming languages and
utilities that are geared toward children. Many of these efforts are based around the idea that,
since the days of BASIC, programming environments have become far too complex for untrained minds
to wrap themselves around. Some toolkits aim to create entirely new ways of envisioning and
creating projects that appeal to younger minds, such as games and animations, while others aim to
recreate the "basic"-ness of BASIC in a modern language and environment.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
21 days and 7 hours ago
It's that time of the year again. No, not Christmas -- it's the time of the year we get the
latest versions of our favorite Linux distributions. Version 11.1 of openSUSE is being released today. Designated as a point
release, there are enough new goodies to warrant a new install or upgrade.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
21 days and 12 hours ago
Let's take a look at three projects that are aimed at showing calendar information through a Web
interface: WebCalendar, VCalendar, and CaLogic. These projects run on a LAMP server and provide a Web interface to calendar
events.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
22 days and 7 hours ago
For many years Spamhaus has been top dog in the anti-spam
world of DNSBL (Domain Name System Block List;
also known as Realtime Blackhole Lists or RBLs). But Spamhaus is no longer a 100% free service.
Even small nonprofits are now expected to pay at least $250 per year for a subscription to the
Spamhaus DNSBL Datafeed Service. Now a new, free alternative to Spamhaus has arrived: the
Barracuda Reputation Block List (BRBL),
provided by well-known, open source-based Barracuda Networks. And Barracuda CEO Dean Drako
says the company has no plans to charge for the service in the future. He says that BRBL
(pronounced "barbell") "does cost us a little bit of money to run, but we think that the
goodwill, the reputation and the understanding that Barracuda is providing the service will do us
well in the long run."
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Linux.com :: Feature -
22 days and 12 hours ago
If Parkinson's Law for
computers holds true, then no matter how much disk space you have, it will get used up. If you're
already feeling a pinch, consider using a disk space analyzer tool to see what's eating your
space.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
23 days and 5 hours ago
The week-long Ubuntu Developer Summit (UDS) meets every
six months at changing locations to discuss what will be in the next release of Ubuntu. The
mostly unpublicized FOSScamp always meets the weekend before.
The FOSScamp un-conference has no program, no invited speakers, and costs nothing. Like some sort
of geek Woodstock but smaller, the Ubuntu hip just show up.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
23 days and 12 hours ago
Pulse is a build server that can monitor your source repository
and trigger a build and test cycle every time somebody does a commit. With Pulse you will always
know if the most recent sources in your revision control system compile and if they pass your
unit and system tests. Better yet, Pulse allows you to build and test your current working copy
of checked-out source, during a so-called Personal Build, so you
can see if your code breaks things before you commit your changes to the central
repository.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
24 days and 7 hours ago
Properly speaking, Nadav Rotem's Open Text
Summarizer (OTS) is not a summarizer at all. True summaries generally involve rewording
contents at a higher level of generality while preserving the meaning, not just producing a
condensed version of the original the way that OTS does. However, within its limits, OTS is an
efficient tool for automatically producing abstracts of non-fiction, that, in the last 15 months,
has received favorable mention from at least four academic publications, including one in which
it outperformed similar utilities, including commercial ones such as Copernic and Subject Search Summarizer.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
24 days and 17 hours ago
All WordPress site owners have their own list of "must have" plugins. Is one or more of these
administration and security add-ons among yours? Each adds valuable functions to WordPress, and
is simple to configure and use.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
27 days and 7 hours ago
For a long time, I recorded a basic list of all the backups I made of my movie collection in a
scruffy notebook. In due time, I found that relying on a simple piece of paper was wishful
thinking. I then endured the laborious process of migrating my list to a spreadsheet on my
computer -- but that still wasn't enough. Eventually I found Griffith, a movie collection manager, and was pleasantly surprised
to discover what it was capable of.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
27 days and 17 hours ago
While I'm a die-hard Google user -- especially the PIM apps -- I still appreciate offline
applications for the integration with the desktop, speed, and features they sport. The Evolution
contact and calendaring application is a great example: it's as feature-packed as Microsoft
Outlook, but with GNOME integration, and it's fast. Gmail, by comparison, is slow and
lacks any desktop integration. In a perfect world, Evolution would sync with Google's PIM apps.
Unfortunately, there aren't any good, easy-to-use, comprehensive guides for setting up Evolution
to sync with all of these apps -- until now.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
28 days and 7 hours ago
After more than a year in development, Amarok, a multipurpose
media player with a host of features, has issued release candidate code for version 2. It comes
with a completely redesigned interface, and takes advantage of KDE 4's new libraries and
interfaces. While you may have a hard time getting used to the new interface, you'll probably
come to appreciate all the improvements.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
28 days and 7 hours ago
GameLayers' Passively Multiplayer
Online Game (PMOG), which allows users to immerse themselves in a virtual world of
adventures, challenges, and intrigue, has been picking up traction thanks in part to its robust
open source framework. Underpinning the popular online game is Ruby on Rails, a full-stack framework for developing
database-backed Web applications that works with a variety of Web servers and databases.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
29 days and 7 hours ago
Two Oregon educators who founded the K12Linux
project seven years ago are glad that they have been able to hand that project over to Fedora,
the home they always meant for K12Linux to have.
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Linux.com :: Feature -
29 days and 17 hours ago
GNOME's Vala programming language lets you use the GLib2
object system at the heart of the GNOME
desktop without having to do object-oriented programming in ANSI C. Unlike Mono or Java, a Vala
program does not require any virtual machine or runtime libraries, so people who use your Vala
objects don't even have to know they are not written in C.
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