Archive for September, 2008

Gentoo cancels release

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Gentoo has apparently cancelled it’s 2008.1 release, making this the second time in 12 months that a release has been cancelled.  Instead of using the usual twice yearly release cycle that most other distributions have, Gentoo developers are opting for a continuous approach.

In place of fixed releases, Gentoo is promoting a live, continuously updating distribution.  In practice this emphasises the use of minimal installation images which are then supplemented with updated packages straight from Gentoo servers and mirrors.

“We need to work harder to communicate the relative irrelevance of releases in a live distribution like Gentoo,” Gentoo developer Donnie Berkholz explained to InternetNews.com. Releases “have an overly large impact on what non-Gentoo users think of the health of the distribution, so problems with a small team within Gentoo are magnified in their effect on public opinion.”

Having recently converted my laptop to Gentoo, I can attest that this system seems to work quite nicely.  Portage, Gentoo’s package management system, really does the job.  Dependencies are resolved correctly at least 99% of the time and updating the entire system is a breeze.

While installing large applications such as OpenOffice or Gnome might take some time (i.e. hours and hours as everything is compiled locally), things do largely work quite nicely once installed.

InternetNews [via Tectonic]

Three of the worst Linux distros

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

As we all know, there lots of distros out there that excel in different areas and niches.  Ubuntu is great for beginners and desktop use, Red Hat/SuSE for the corporate types, Gentoo for control freaks (don’t get me wrong, Gentoo’s great…) and so forth.  And then there are the distros that make us Linux affcionados bow our heads in shame.  Distributions like Linspire (formerly Lindows), gOS, Linux XP and so on.

To this end, the Internetling blog has a post outlining the three worst offenders: gOS, ZevenOS, and Linux XP.  The last of these even appears to be in violation of the GPL as they only offer a 30-day trial version for download.

Internetling

10 alternative operating systems

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

Royal Pingdom has a post covering some of the more obscure operating systems out there.  On the list you’ll find SyllableOS, Haiku, AmigaOS 4.1, and seven others.  How big a role these niche OSes will play in tomorrow’s computing is debatable, but they are options for the chronically OS curious.

Royal Pingdom [via Tectonic]

W3.org Censored in Finland

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

The web site of W3C, w3.org or w3c.org, was briefly censored (Google Translation) by at least some of the local ISPs. For an unknown reason the URL was mistakenly entered into the Federal Police’s censor database. Some of the Finnish ISPs use the database to filter out questionable content such as child pornography. The censor database is itself already highly questionable and largely ineffective, as online activist Matti Nikki writes:

For example a document that goes by the name “Railaksen Selvitys” and dated 2005-12-16 lists several critical problems and unanswered questions regarding the censorship. These problems are listed in the very beginning of the document and include things like effectiveness of the filtering solutions, the problem of collateral damage when censorship affects more material than it should, freedom of speech, what kind of crimes the censorship should exactly target, etc. Most of these went unanswered and the problems are seen with the current implementation of the censorship. Some of the issues were only addressed partially, for example the freedom of speech regarding reception of illegal material was touched but the police has now been found censoring even sites that do not contain illegal material themselves. What is being practiced now isn’t what was planned.

This isn’t the first time that a site has been wrongly blocked; at least for a period in the past the Lapsiporno.info site protesting against the filtering, maintained by Matti Nikki, was blocked. (NB. ‘Lapsiporno’ is ‘child pornography’ in Finnish, but the Lapsiporno.info site has nothing to do with pornography, or indeed any other sordid materials)

Tietokone (Google Translation)

Open set-top box

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Neuros Technology is shipping its new open set-top box.  The HD-capable Open Source Device 2.0 runs several Linux stacks on a Texas Instruments CPU.

The OSD2 aims to be more than just a consumer device, however. Describing it as a “super-reference design,” Born explained that one aim for Neuros has been to create an open hardware design that can be used as the basis for other products, by customers who want to make set-top boxes, but do not want to design their own hardware. “We’re trying to do for the TV set what the IBM PC did for the computer — provide an open platform so Visicalc doesn’t have to be in the hardware business,” [Neuros CEO Joe Born] explained.

LinuxDevices.com

Sun Launches New Site for Hosting Open Source Projects

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Sun Microsystems have lauched a new site for hosting open source projects.  The primary goal of Project Kenai is to host open source projects and to encourage collaboration on them.

[Project Kenai is] More Than Just a Forge! [It] is the foundation for the connected developer of tomorrow. Freely host your open source projects and code. Find and collaborate with developers of like mind and passion from around the globe.

Project Kenai [via O Static]

Chromium: Google Chrome for Linux, courtesy of CodeWeavers

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

The folks over at CodeWeavers (of CrossOver fame) have managed to create a working port of Google Chrome for Linux and Mac using WINE.  The port is available for free on the CodeWeavers site.  Most of the Google Chrome functionality has been implemented, the biggest missing feature seems to be auto updates.

Jeremy White writes on the CodeWeavers blog:

[On] Thursday, September 4th, I called a company Fire Drill.  I said I wanted to ship ported versions of Chromium for Mac and Linux, and I wanted to do it as fast as possible.  By Friday, we had a first working build.  But it had a major problem – you couldn’t do https sites, so logging in to Gmail, for example, was right out.   Unfortunately, supporting that required that we finish the implementation of a nearly brand new DLL in Wine – the winhttp dll.  Luckily for us, Hans Leiddeker had recently joined CodeWeavers, and in a bit of a hazing ritual, we asked him to scramble madly to implement what we needed.  A little more than a week later, and he had done it.  Of course, there were many other people who pitched in and tuned Wine to make Chromium just that much nicer.

NB. The CodeWeavers implementation is “free as in beer” but not “free as in speech”.

Plone + Lighttpd + Varnish follow-up

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Earlier I posted about my efforts to get a Plone site running, together with Varnish for caching and Lighttpd for Load balancing. Our plans have now come to fruition and the site is running in its full glory at http://hhlinuxclub.org.

We’re still planning on producing a tutorial based on our experience and hope that the site will be of use to outsiders as well.

VLC media player 0.9.2 released

Monday, September 15th, 2008

VideoLAN have today officially released VLC media player 0.92.  The release includes many improvements, including:

  • A new QT-based interface
  • A media library
  • Album art support
  • System tray icon and minimizing
  • Full-screen controller

I’ve personally been using the nightlies of 0.9x for sometime now and can report that so far i’ve been very satisfied.

5 Open Source Real-time Strategy Games

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Here’s five open source RTS games for you strategy buffs among my readers.  All free, all open source.  All cross platform.

(more…)


Bad Behavior has blocked 376 access attempts in the last 7 days.