<b>LWN.net:</b> "I have been looking forward to the release of SimplyMepis 8.5 for at least six months. I used SimplyMepis 8.0 the first half of last year with its KDE 3.5 desktop and was very content."
<b>SourceForge.net: </b>"PLplot is a cross-platform software package for creating scientific plots. This is a development release of PLplot. It represents the ongoing efforts of the community to improve the PLplot plotting package."
OS Roundup: Despite the noisier iPhone or Blackberry debate, the OS still matters. When it comes to mobile, Windows is losing ground to Linux and other OSes. Will the release of Windows Phone later this year enable Microsoft to prevail?
OS Roundup: Despite the noisier iPhone or Blackberry debate, the OS still matters. When it comes to mobile, Windows is losing ground to Linux and other OSes. Will the release of Windows Phone later this year enable Microsoft to prevail?
As a matter of fact, link building is the strongest recognition of search engine optimization over the World Wide Web these days. The truth of the matter is that it involves a wide range of techniques as well as options for the professional SEO experts such as article marketing, social media submission, blogs postings, blogs commenting, press release, forums, and directory submission.
<b>Free Software Magazine: </b>" I'm working on not one, but two animated science-fiction films using free software tools, intended for a free-licensed release on the internet under new distribution models. And, being a writer, I'm going to write about it."
Let's say I'm developing a second version of an API, and there's some changes in method names and so on from the previous version.
What's a good way to document these changes ? I mean, is it better to document while changing (but, maybe, there will be more changes before the release, so I think it could be more work than necessary) or write down some topic and document after all the changes are done ?
Linux Mint 17 disponible en version finale avec les bureaux Cinnamon et Mate
Qiana sera supporté jusqu'en 2019 La célèbre distribution Linux Mint 17 est disponible en version finale, quelques jours seulement après la publication de la release candidate.Téléchargeable sous deux saveurs différentes (Cinnamon et Mate), cette version apporte un nombre important de nouvelles fonctionnalités, d'optimisation des performances et d'améliorations qui ne pourront que séduire les fans du système d'exploitation...
<b>Developer.com:</b> "By typical development conventions, PHP 5.3 only qualifies as a "point release." However, the features packed into this new version are easily the most significant PHP development enhancements since PHP 5.0 was released in 2004."
<b>Linux Planet:</b> "The open source desktop world got a boost this week with the release of GNOME 2.30 -- the latest incarnation of one of the leading open source desktop GUIs that's a part of nearly every major Linux distribution."
If your web portal has been optimised, then you must look out for off page optimisation techniques in order to get quality back links as it matters a lot in the online world. If you have some news worthy information, be the first to write about it. Post them in forums, news release and blogs.
<b>Begin Linux:</b> "I was excited to try the Arch-based KahelOS on my Dell desktop for several reasons. Just like Arch, KahelOS is on a rolling release schedule and uses Pacman package manager. Also, this version of KahelOS uses Gnome 2.30.0."
Now available, Oracle Application Development Framework (ADF)
Essentials enables the global developer community to leverage the
core capabilities of Oracle ADF free of cost. Oracle ADF
Essentials is standards-based and deploys on GlassFish Server Open Source Edition, giving developers
the ability to adopt and extend Oracle ADF functionality to new
environments.
Read the Press Release here.
Over at the Google Code Blog, there's a pretty significant announcement, about the release of APIs for Latitude . the idea, as you might expect, is that the...
In the past, we could tweak grub-pc so that it simply shows all OSes/options as a simple list, slightly editing /etc/grub.d/10_linux. How can we do that in the 2.02~beta2-9 release supplied with Trusty Tahr 14.04?
With several kernels installed (eg generic and lowlatency) submenu is boring with such a /etc/default/grub when I need to change OS:
GRUB_DEFAULT=saved
GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT=true
GRUB_TIMEOUT=3
# GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="acpi_osi=Linux"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX=""
Thank you
<b>wine-Reviews:</b> "The Bordeaux Technology Group released Bordeaux 2.0.4 for FreeBSD and PC-BSD today. Bordeaux 2.0.4 is a maintenance release that fixes a number of small bugs."
<b>LWN.net:</b> "As of this writing, the current kernel prepatch is 2.6.34-rc6. A couple more prepatches are most likely due before the final release, but the number of changes to be found there should be small. In other words, 2.6.34 is close to its final form, so it makes sense to take a look at what has gone into this development cycle. In a few ways, 2.6.34 is an unusual kernel."
Since the initial beta release of Google Chrome for Linux last December , we've been hard at work adding the polish necessary to upgrade the browser to our...
<b>Desktop Linux Reviews:</b> "The last time I looked at SimplyMEPIS was the 8.0 release. In this review I'll be taking a look at the latest version, SimplyMEPIS Linux 8.5. SimplyMEPIS is based on Debian, and it uses KDE as its desktop environment."
With the latest release of Google Chrome, Chrome is the first browser to include support for a new HTML5 feature that lets web developers reduce the privileges of...
How can I safely upgrade an Ubuntu installation from one release to another? What should I do before upgrading to ensure it goes smoothly, and is there any clean-up I need to do afterwards?
In particular, do I need to do anything special if I am using packages from PPAs, if I have a graphics card that needs drivers, or if I'm running a custom Linux kernel?
This is a general question , but as example we take Ubuntu 12.04 and Ubuntu 12.10
Today at Google I/O we announced that Android 2.2 is right around the corner. This is our seventh platform release since we launched Android 1.0 in September 2008...