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NewsVac: News from around the Web

  • Moonlight 1.0 Beta Available 29 minutes ago
    Not long ago the Moonlight development team announced that the Linux Silverlight adaptation was drawing ever nearer to the 1.0 release. On December 1st, the Moonlight 1.0 beta version was released.
  • Dynamic Theming in Drupal 6 - Part 2 59 minutes ago
    In Part 1 we had a look at running multiple templates, and at creating dynamic elements and styles. In this article we will discuss about Creating Dynamic CSS Styling and Working with Template Variables.
  • Dynamic Theming in Drupal 6 - Part 1 1 hour, 29 minutes ago
    The Drupal system, when combined with the PHPTemplate engine, gives you the ability to create logic that will automatically display templates or specific elements in response to the existence of certain conditions. In this two part article we will look at running multiple templates, and at creating dynamic elements and styles. Among the techniques covered in these articles ( Part 1 and Part 2 ) are: using suggestions—naming conventions—to control template display, the use of $body_classes to create dynamic styling, and the implementation of the preprocessor function.
  • KDE 4.2: Codenamed Caterpillar, Promising a Butterfly 1 hour, 59 minutes ago
    KDE 4.2 has a good chance of silencing the criticism that erupted with the release of KDE 4.0.
  • Second Google Android phone revealed 2 hours, 29 minutes ago
    An Australian-based electronics company will ship the world's second Google Android phone, dubbed "Agora". It has a Blackberry Bold-esque form factor, and will ship on January 29. Interestingly, it will be very affordable at $A299 ($US192, GBP129, E151) and will be sold without a contract to any telco. APCmag.com has the full story.
  • The world's worst way to market Linux 2 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Ordering people to use Linux, at $725 U.S. a crack is no way to make Linux popular
  • The Friendly Interactive Shell (FISH) is ideal for UNIX users 3 hours, 29 minutes ago
    The Friendly Interactive Shell, or fish, is a joy to use. Its syntax, context-sensitive help, and color-coded command-line interface (CLI) greatly simplify the use of UNIX and ease the burdens of scripting. This article offers tips and tools on how to use it. So, go fish!
  • WiMAX deal "clears" Linux for takeoff 3 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Clearwire Corp. announced that it has completed a $14.5 billion transaction with Sprint Nextel to combine their Mobile WiMAX broadband services. The merger of the two largest WiMAX services may accelerate deployments crucial to the success of Linux MIDs, netbooks, and other devices.
  • HMI panels run Linux 4 hours, 29 minutes ago
    Kontron has enhanced its family of thin-client HMI (human-machine interface) devices. The fanless, Linux-compatible "Micro Client II" devices feature touchscreens from 7 to 15 inches, CompactFlash storage, and processors ranging from a 500MHz AMD Geode LX800 to a 1GHz Intel Celeron M, the company says.
  • Nokia alludes to Linux phone plans 4 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Nokia may move to Linux for some of its higher end smartphones, a senior official was quoted as saying in a Reuters article. Nokia VP Ukko Lappalainen was quoted as saying, "In the longer perspective, Linux will become a serious alternative for our high-end phones."
  • Linux music phone boasts stereo mini-jack 5 hours, 29 minutes ago
    Motorola formally announced its MotoRokr EM35, a slider version of the EM30 music phone that runs MontaVista Linux. The phone offers Bluetooth, USB, a 3-megapixel camera, and a haptic scroll interface, as well as music playback that is said to include virtual surround effects.
  • Nokia spins open Linux home automation gateway 5 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Nokia announced a home automation system based on the open source OpenWrt Linux distribution. Due in late 2009, the Z-wave wireless radio-equipped Nokia Home Control Center will let users remotely control security, automation, and energy management applications via their mobile phones, says Nokia.
  • Open source phone gains "fat" distro 6 hours, 29 minutes ago
    Barcelona, Spain-based Tuxbrain has released an application-rich Linux distribution for the Openmoko Neo FreeRunner phone called Fat and Dirty OpenMoko (FDOM). In addition, Openmoko announced that both Tuxbrain and French design firm FaberNovel have joined the company's network of more than 20 distributors.
  • Red Hat Spacewalk Expands Linux Management 6 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Red Hat's open source Network application project evolves with a plan to get rid of Oracle on the backend.
  • 6 of the Best Lean Linux Desktop Environments 10 hours, 59 minutes ago
    Mainstream Linux distributions typically default to one of two desktop environments, KDE or GNOME. Both of these environments provide users with an intuitive and attractive desktop, as well as offering a large raft of multimedia software, games, administration programs, network tools, educational applications, utilities, artwork, web development tools and more. However, these two desktops focus more on providing users with a modern computing environment with all the bells and whistles featured in Windows Vista, rather than minimising the amount of system resources they need.
  • More News

Linux.com : Features

Go-OO: The best office suite you never knew you used

By Federico Kereki on December 04, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

If you run Ubuntu, openSUSE, Debian, or Mandriva, among other distributions, then whenever you run OpenOffice.org you don't run the "official" version, but rather Go-OO, an office suite based on the OpenOffice.org source code. Go-OO includes enhancements and functions that haven't been accepted by Sun, and that may never be, because of licensing, business, or other reasons.

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Installing Ruby on Rails in Linux

By Drew Ames on December 04, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

Ruby on Rails is garnering a lot of praise as an easy-to-use, database-driven Web framework for developing Web applications. Most of the documentation for Ruby on Rails centers on Macintosh, with the remainder seemingly only for Windows machines, but RoR is perfectly usable on Linux computers too. This article explains how to install and begin developing with RoR in Linux.

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Quickly share your screenshots with JShot

By Ben Martin on December 04, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

With the JShot screen capture and uploader utility, you can quickly put all or part of your screen on the Web and send a URL to it to a friend. JShot is free for noncommercial use, and is great when you want to show people a screen capture and don't want to have to deal with file names and upload permissions.

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Indian GNU/Linux advocate and independent FOSS consultant Raj Mathur (video)

By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller on December 03, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

New Delhi resident Raj Mathur is living proof that a Free and Open Source Software advocate can earn a decent living working with clients who are using or planning to use FOSS. Raj has also been a member of the Open Source Initiative board of directors and is a leading member of his local Linux users group. He's also contributed to more than a few Free Software projects over the years. Raj is a "heartbeat of GNU/Linux" kind of guy -- not famous, but a stalwart soldier in the worldwide FOSS army. (And a nice person, too.)

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KNDISwrapper is half-done, but far from half-baked

By Bruce Byfield on December 03, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

If any process ever cried out for a graphical interface, it is using NDISwrapper to enable wireless devices to run on GNU/Linux using Windows drivers. The process is often torturous, especially for first-time users, who are unsure whether any problems are due to NDISwrapper's limitations or their own inexperience. By organizing and explaining the process, KNDISwrapper promises to remove much of the labor. But, so far, it only partly delivers on that promise by neglecting the hardest part of working with NDISwrapper -- finding the right Windows driver.

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Bidirectional filesystem syncing - DirSync Pro vs. Unison

By Ben Martin on December 03, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

Everyone knows and loves rsync, the command that lets you clone a directory tree to another disk or system with the ability to keep the clone fresh in an incremental and bandwidth-efficient manner. Sometimes, however, you want to sync in the reverse direction. With bidirectional filesystem syncing tools, there is no primary filesystem -- you just tell the tool to make sure both target directories, or clones, are identical. Here's a hands-on look at two tools designed to accomplish that task: DirSync Pro and Unison.

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Browse all your source code revisions with ViewVC

By David Pendell on December 02, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

For programmers on big projects, a version control system for managing source code is vital, but working on files in a large project from one of these programs' command-line interfaces is cumbersome. Worse, the results of the commands lack highlighting to show the differences between files and revisions. ViewVC is a handy browser-based code viewer that allows users to browse a source code tree managed by either CVS or Subversion, look at changes, compare revisions at the file or line level, and perform other operations -- just about anything except allow users to check out or commit files.

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Three graphical mount managers

By Bruce Byfield on December 02, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

Mounting and unmounting filesystems used to be straightforward in GNU/Linux. A basic knowledge of the mount command or some editing of /etc/fstab in a text editor and you were done. However, with the addition of udev in the 2.6 kernel for autoplugging, and the demand for hotswapping USB devices, along with the increased use of logical volume managers and other complications, the process is now more complicated -- perhaps too complicated for many among the growing number of desktop users. That is where graphical mount managers such as Forelex Mount Manager, PySDM, and MountManager find their niche.

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Keeping an eye on your network with PasTmon

By Ben Martin on December 02, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

The PasTmon passive traffic monitor keeps an eye on your network, recording which clients are interacting with which services, when and how long things took. You can then use the application's PHP Web interface to investigate these figures to see if any host is connecting to Web services that it shouldn't, or is contacting services suspiciously more frequently than you would expect for normal operation, or when response times become excessively long.

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Keeping tabs on your network traffic

By Shashank Sharma on December 01, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

One of the first things I do upon installing a Linux distribution is put the Network Monitor applet on my GNOME panel. Watching the blue lights twinkle on and off makes me aware of network traffic. But if you want more details about what's happening on your network, such as which application is hogging bandwidth or what each network interface is up to, you can turn to specialty tools like NetHogs and IPTraf. While NetHogs is a unique tool altogether, IPTraf can be used on a server as well as by a home user.

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Managing your MP3s with Zina

By David Pendell on December 01, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

Large collections of MP3 files can be hard to manage. Organizing your music into directories helps some, but when you want to play just those tracks in a certain genre or from a certain year, no amount of directory organization will help -- but Zina, a powerful Web application, can.

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Recent Firefox extensions for tab addicts

By Bruce Byfield on December 01, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

The number of Firefox extensions continues to grow. For example, when I last wrote about tab extensions just over a year ago, about 110 existed. Now, despite the need to rewrite many extensions to make them compatible with Firefox 3.0, the number is over 190, and the choice is greater than ever. Basic functionality, coloring options, positioning of the tab bar, automatic opening of tabs at startup -- whatever your need, you can probably find it on the Firefox add-ons site.

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openDesktop.org provides super-portal to free software sites

By Bruce Byfield on November 28, 2008 (2:00:00 PM)

When users want the latest in free and open source software (FOSS), they are likely to think first of sites like freshmeat, or perhaps Softpedia or GnomeFiles. However, as the FOSS community has divided into specialized communities, sites for new releases have proliferated, to the point where it is difficult to keep track of them all. Since 2007, openDesktop.org has provided a portal for many of these specialized sites. Under the slogan "Let's build the desktop of the future," openDesktop.org provides a quick overview of new software that is independent of desktop or distribution.

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Giving thanks for a long weekend

By Linux.com Staff on November 27, 2008 (2:00:00 PM)
Today is the Thanksgiving holiday in the US, and we're enjoying the day off with our families. In fact, we're enjoying it so much that we're taking tomorrow too. That means a reduced posting schedule on our sites. We'll be back to our regular schedule on Monday.

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Gmail notifiers let you know "you've got mail"

By Federico Kereki on November 26, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

If you are into email like Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan were in the movie You've Got Mail, you probably want to be warned as soon as any message enters your mailbox. If you use Gmail, you can try one of several Gmail-specific applications that let you know when new messages arrive.

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Run your NFS server in the user address space with NFS-GANESHA

By Ben Martin on November 26, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

NFS-GANESHA is an NFS version 2-4 server that runs in the user address space instead of as part of the operating system kernel. Filesystem in Userspace (FUSE) lets you run a filesystem in the user address space instead of as part of the Linux kernel, but the FUSE support in the Linux kernel from many Linux distributions does not allow you to export FUSE through NFS. NFS-GANESHA lets you expose FUSE through NFS without patching your kernel.

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Fedora 10 proves infrastructure matter

By Bruce Byfield on November 26, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

Glancing at the features list for Fedora 10, at first you might be unimpressed. Many of the features are basically infrastructure improvements, fixing known problems and enhancing performance while laying the groundwork for future developments. However, infrastructure affects almost everything you do with your computer, and the more you use Fedora 10, the more you are likely to conclude that -- one or two minor problems aside -- this may be the strongest Fedora release yet, as well as the first glimpse of its future.

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Three applications for making disc labels

By Ben Martin on November 25, 2008 (8:00:00 PM)

Making labels for DVDs and their cases is an often overlooked task. Many discs are lucky to have some terse information quickly scrawled on them after burning. But there are some fine open source applications available for creating labels for CD-ROM and DVD disks and printing jewel case inserts, including gLabels, kover, and cdlabelgen.

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TiddlyWiki derivatives help you get things done

By Dmitri Popov on November 25, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)

TiddlyWiki excels at managing notes and text snippets, but can you tweak it for other uses? If you take a look at some applications based on TiddlyWiki, the answer appears to be a resounding yes. With TiddlyWiki derivatives, you can manage tasks, track projects, keep tabs on contacts, and organize book collections. Like the original TiddlyWiki, each derivative consists of a single HTML file which you have to download to your local hard disk. Open the downloaded file in a browser, and the TiddlyWiki-based tool is ready to go.

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Upgrading to the newest Fedora release

By Bruce Byfield on November 25, 2008 (9:00:00 AM)

With Fedora 10 scheduled for release today, many users are thinking about how they are going to upgrade. A complete upgrade is something you do no more than twice a year, so the details are easy to forget. Also, the Fedora upgrade process, which centers on pointing to a new repository, is more complex than, say, the equivalent Debian process, in which repositories remain constant and only their contents change with a new release. But an even stronger reason for the uncertainty is that a Fedora system can be upgraded in at least four ways, each of which has its advantages and disadvantages.

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