четвртак, 2. фебруар 2012.

The Perfect Database Server: Firebird 2.5.1 And FreeBSD 9

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Here is the guide on installing Firebird 2.5.1 from FreeBSD 9 Ports and creating your first test database; also we show you how to install Flamerobin GUI (administration tool) and the PHP driver for it. This was tested on fresh FreeBSD 9 on a kvm-linux virtual machine.

Download a compressed snapshot of the Ports Collection into /var/db/portsnap.

# portsnap fetch

Or update it. If you are running Portsnap for the first time, extract the snapshot into /usr/ports:

# portsnap extract

If you already have a populated /usr/ports directory and you are just updating, run the following command instead:

# portsnap update

Enter firebird server ports directory:

# cd /usr/ports/databases/firebird25-server

Compile and install firebird server:

# make -DPACKAGE_BUILDING
# make install

Enable it by adding

firebird_enable

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Virtual Users And Domains With Postfix, Courier, MySQL And SquirrelMail (CentOS 6.2 x86_64)

(1,001.3 MB) (01/29/2012)VMware Image Import GuideList of all VMware Images

Free Support
Paid SupportNavigationHowtosLinuxAndroidCentOSDebianFedoraKernelMandrivaPCLinuxOSSuSEUbuntuWeb ServerApacheCherokeeLighttpdnginxBackupControl PanelsISPConfigDNSBINDMyDNSPowerDNSdjbdnsDesktopEmailAnti-Spam/VirusPostfixFTPHigh-AvailabilityMonitoringMySQLProgrammingC/C

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How Many Lumia Sales? As Nokia (and Microsoft) ashamed to reveal number, lets count..

Communities Dominate Brands: How Many Lumia Sales? As Nokia (and Microsoft) ashamed to reveal number, lets count - and compare to N9 MeeGo salesCommunities Dominate Brands

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Where Mozilla Ubiquity Failed, Ubuntu HUD will Succeed

"I'm not easily impressed by 'new' ideas in the Linux desktop space, which is why the Ubuntu HUD is even more interesting to me.

The HUD is based on a concept that I really believe in and supported (though my own usage and newb attempt at script) when Mozilla tried the same idea a few years ago with Ubiquity. Mozilla however has this obnoxious habit of killing projects that I like (or in their parlance - putting them on the backburner - ubiquity, prism, skywriter just to name a few). Ubiquity was supposed to become something called Taskfox in Firefox 3.6 but that never happened.

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Red Hat Quietly Joins the OpenStack Effort

"Word is that Red Hat refused to sign on to OpenStack when it was announced, because it didn't like the governance model. Red Hat also has its own cloud management software projects. But the company that once dismissed OpenStack seems to be coming around. Look closely at the OpenStack community, and you'll find quite a few Red Hat engineers, including some that have become core contributors to OpenStack projects.

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среда, 1. фебруар 2012.

Share And Discover Cool Bash Tricks With Bash One-Liners

Wanna impress your friends with some cool one-liners? Well not those kind of one-liners, I'm talking about the nerdy ones. Well, not exactly nerdy, let's call them geeky. Anyways, Bash one-liners is an open-source project made for sharing and discovering such nifty Bash tricks that will help you tweak or fix your Linux/Unix/BSD computer. Apart from letting you browse existing scripts, the site also lets you submit your own ideas.

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How I Manage Bandwidth Using Trickle On Ubuntu

or in stand alone mode.

Trickle is a great tool command line based. trickle can be limit application bandwidth, upload or download speed, and prioritizing daemons. You can use Trickle to cap application speeds per application, download, filetype or globally.

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Pentaho Open Sources Big Data Capabilities with Kettle

"Open source business intelligence vendor Pentaho is bringing Big Data transformation capabilities into the open source fold. Pentaho announced today the new Kettle 4.3 release, which includes new capabilities for transforming and working with Big Data.

Kettle is an Extract, Transform and Load (ETL) technology, which enables applications to take data from outside sources, transform it into a usable format and make it available for loading in a database or business intelligence application. Pentaho has had an open source edition of Kettle for several years, but previous to the new 4.3 release Big Data capabilities were only available to paying enterprise customers. Pentaho is opening up its Big Data ETL capabilities as open source now to capitalize on what it sees as a market opportunity.

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Webopedia Term of the day: What is Linux Mint?

"A popular open source distribution of the Linux operating system that provides several desktop environment options for users dissatisfied with GNOME 3 or for users looking for a desktop environment more similar to the task-oriented GNOME 2 than the more application-oriented GNOME 3. Linux Mint users can select the GNOME 3 environment with the option of two new GNOME 3-based desktop environments -- Cinnamon and Mint GNOME Shell Extensions (MGSE) -- or they can choose the GNOME 2-based MATE environment.

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Lower the U.S. national debt by expanding the government's use of Free Software

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Miro Internet TV: Internet TV for Ubuntu Desktop

"Miro, a new application for Internet video has been designed to be an easy app that will give users an amazing full-screen show. With over thousands of free videos that can be viewed from the Internet, Miro gives the user the ability to download all the chosen videos they enjoy as soon as they are released.

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IBM to realign Symphony with Apache OpenOffice

"This one didn't go quite the way I thought it might: it turns out that, as I speculated back in October, IBM is indeed dropping production of its Lotus Symphony office suite, ending a five-year run on the Microsoft Office alternative.

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Drush: Managing Drupal from the Command Line

"With its vast number of plugins, Drupal can be used to build many different kinds of websites, from simple blogs to photo journals to corporate websites. Managing all of these different kinds of websites with Drupal

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Meet Bill Gates, the Man Who Changed Open Source Software

"But at the same time, Microsoft realized how powerful the free software movement could be, and the company was exploring ways it could make nice with the ever-growing community of developers who used open source. For two years, Sam Ramji had served as head of open source strategy at Microsoft, and every three months, he met with Bill Gates and other execs to show off various open source technologies put together by a small team of Microsoft engineers.

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Women in Tech: Manuela Hutter sees endless possibilities

code and helping develop top browser features for their desktop web browser, like Speed Dial and our synchronization tool Opera Link."

Complete Story

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Canonical Adds Unity Settings in Ubuntu 12.04 LTS

"At the request of many Ubuntu users who hated the Unity interface, introduced with the Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal) release, it looks like Canonical is trying hard to make it more user friendly by adding new functionality and allowing users to easily configure it.

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Ubuntu 12.10 Developer Summit Sponsorship Open

"Canonical announced a couple of days ago, January 27th, that the sponsorship for the upcoming Ubuntu Developer Summit 2012 event is now open for submissions.

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How to install Ubuntu the way you've never done it before

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Pentaho Open Sources 'Big Data' Integration Tools Under Apache 2.0

Monday, 30 January 2012 06:05ComputerWorld

BI vendor Pentaho is open sourcing a number of tools related to "big data" in its Kettle data-integration platform and has moved the project overall to the Apache 2.0 license, the company announced Tuesday.

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The Dead Simplest Way to Root Your Nook Tablet [Nook]

We've seen the Nook Tablet rooted before, but this has to be the easiest process out there. All you need is a 2GB SD card, a computer that runs Windows, and a Nook Tablet with tablet software version 1.4.1 or earlier. Read more at GizmodoGizmodo Set as favorite Share This Email thisComments (0)

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Kindle Fire Stokes Interest in Amazon Earnings

Monday, 30 January 2012 06:36CNET

With Amazon reporting fourth-quarter earnings tomorrow, the main attractions will be tablet figures and the effect on sales of e-books, music, video, and apps.

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Tablet Shipments To Reach 383.3 Million By 2017, 46% In Emerging Markets

Monday, 30 January 2012 06:36TechCrunch

Post-PC era? Here we come: According to new data from NPD, tablet PC shipments are expected to grow from 72.7 million units in 2011 to 383.3 million units by 2017. For comparison purposes, worldwide PC shipments for 2011 were 352.8 million, after seeing a 6% decline in Q4. While those numbers are remarkable enough on their own, what’s really interesting is where much of the growth will come from: the emerging market. Emerging markets are expected to account for up to 46% of worldwide shipments by 2017, up from the 36% share in 2011. “The emerging market opportunity for tablets has been flying under the radar mainly because the device brands aren’t household names and there are concerns regarding the sustainability of the market,” says NPD Senior Analyst Richard Shim. But the...

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Red Hat Quietly Joins the OpenStack Effort

Monday, 30 January 2012 06:58ReadWriteWeb

Word is that Red Hat refused to sign on to OpenStack when it was announced, because it didn't like the governance model. Red Hat also has its own cloud management software projects. But the company that once dismissed OpenStack seems to be coming around. Look closely at the OpenStack community and you'll find quite a few Red Hat engineers, including some that have become core contributors to OpenStack projects.

 

Read more at ReadWriteCloud

 

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Distribution Release: Clonezilla Live 1.2.12-10

Monday, 30 January 2012 06:58DistroWatch

Steven Shiau has announced the release of Clonezilla Live 1.2.12-10, a new stable version of the project's utility live CD designed for disk cloning tasks: "This release of Clonezilla Live (1.2.12-10) includes major enhancements and major bug fixes: the underlying GNU/Linux operating system was upgraded, this release is....

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ownCloud 3 Released

Monday, 30 January 2012 07:03LWN

Version 3 of the ownCloud personal cloud system has been announced. New features include a browser-based text editor, an integrated PDF viewer, a photo gallery application, an improved calendar application, and, inevitably, an application store. "The browser based text editor supports 35 programming languages for syntax highlighting, keyboard shortcuts, drag...

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Ubuntu 11.10 vs. Mac OS X 10.7.2 Performance

Monday, 30 January 2012 07:32Phoronix

After delivering benchmarks last week that were comparing the Intel Sandy Bridge performance of Mac OS X 10.7 "Lion" vs. Ubuntu 11.10 "Oneiric Ocelot" when it came to the Sandy Bridge OpenGL graphics performance, here's a comparative look at the performance of Ubuntu 11.10 against Mac OS X 10.7.2 from the Intel Sandy Bridge-based Mac.

 

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The Ever-Changing Linux Filesystems: Merging Directoris into /usr

Exclusive

If you don't like change, working in IT has to be a harrowing experience. That's particularly true in open source, where few stand on tradition and things move at breakneck pace. The latest change that has a few folks excited? Fedora's proposal to "move all to /usr." On the face, this might seem like a shocking departure from standards – but look a bit deeper and it seems to make sense.

The proposal for Fedora comes from Harald Hoyer and Kay Sievers. The long-term plan is to "clean up the mess and confusion the current split of / vs. /usr has created. All tools will move back to /usr where they belong, and the rootfs will only contain compat-symlinks into /usr. Almost the entire system installed by packages will reside in /usr."

But wait, isn't the split there for a reason? Yes, but the reasons that /usr has been split off are rooted in the history of Unix and the limitations of the tiny (space-wise) hard drives that the original UNIX equipment came with. On the BusyBox list, Rob Landley noted that the /usr split came about when "the operating system grew too big to fit on the first RK05 disk pack (their root filesystem)" it was allowed to "leak out" on to the second one "which is where all the user home directories lived (which is why the mount was called /usr).

"They replicated all the OS directories under there (/bin, /sbin, /lib, /tmp...) and wrote files to those new directories because their original disk was out of space. When they got a third disk, they mounted it on /home and relocated all the user directories to there so the OS could consume all the space on both disks and grow to THREE WHOLE MEGABYTES (ooooh!)."

Landley goes on to say that the /usr split "stopped making any sense before Linux was ever invented" for several reasons. The early system startup is dealt with by initrd and initramfs. Shared libraries mean that you can't upgrade /lib and /usr/bin independently anymore.

The size issue? Well, hard drives weren't exactly huge when Linux was invented, but users had a lot more room to work by the time Linus Torvalds started working on Linux. These days? Even embedded devices have a lot more room than the dinky hard drives the early Unix guys had to work with. Now, when I say "dinky" I only mean storage capacity. Those things were huge, but they couldn't even hold a copy of Dark Side of the Moon as a 128KB MP3. (Not least of which because the album wasn't recorded until after the /usr split, and MP3 hadn't been invented – but you get the idea.)

The Proposal

So the proposal in front of Fedora is to move directories /bin, /sbin, /lib, and /lib64 under /usr.

This will improve compatibility with other

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Rockbox's Developers Weigh In On Open Source Digital Music Innovation

Monday, 30 January 2012 07:58OStatic

The world of digital music is now dominated by lots of useful proprietary tools--with Apple's ruling the roost--but there are also many free open source tools and applications worth looking into. Of these, Rockbox, an open source firmware replacement for MP3 players from manufacturers ranging from Archos to iRiver to Apple, is easily one of the most popular. Lisa originally covered Rockbox in this post, and we covered it again here. Now, in an interview, several of Rockbox's developers are weighing in on its benefits, its user base and its future.  Rockbox has been around for over a decade, and especially if you have an older MP3 player that you would like to add functionality to, it can greatly improve your digital music experience. It's essentially like having..

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Solving the Common Standards Problem in the Open Data Space

Monday, 30 January 2012 08:00OpenSource.comLast year during my Open Government Data Camp keynote speech on The State of Open Data 2011 I mentioned how I thought the central challenge for open data was shifting from getting data open (still a big issue, but a battle that is starting to be won) to getting all... Read more at OpenSource.comOpenSource.com Set as favorite Share This Email thisComments (0)

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