Tag Archives: OS

Happy 17th Birthday, Debian!

An anonymous reader writes “Debian turns 17 today. Yes it has really come a long way from being Murdock’s pet project back in 1993 to being the distribution on which the most popular Linux distribution, Ubuntu, is now based.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

Ubuntu Drops SPARC, IA64

“Maverick Meerkat is set to become the last version of Ubuntu that’ll run on Oracle’s Sparc, ending a four-year relationship. Also getting canned is Ubuntu running on Hewlett-Packard’s Itanic 64-bit challenger. Meerkat is currently in feature-freeze ahead of October’s official launch, and apparently nobody’s stepped up to maintain the Linux ports to either Sparc or Itanium. The Ubuntu Sparc port has fallen out of use and updates have slipped, meaning it’s fallen below the level of quality needed for an Ubuntu port. Ubuntu on HP’s IA64 is in slightly better shape, but – still – nobody’s actively maintaining it.”

Link to the original site

Windows 95 Turns 15

In what has surprised me greatly, nobody has submitted anything to us regarding this day in the history of computing. Sure, memories of her may not be fond, and with the magical unicorn power of hindsight you’d rather forget you ever dated her so intensely, but she served a purpose. She led a revolution that changed the world forever, and while you may have hoped for a more charismatic leader, I think it’s unfair not to honour the fact that she turned 15 today.

Link to the original site

Native ZFS Is Coming To Linux Next Month

An anonymous reader writes “Phoronix is reporting that an Indian technology company has been porting the ZFS filesystem to Linux and will be releasing it next month as a native kernel module without a dependence on FUSE. ‘In terms of how native ZFS for Linux is being handled by this Indian company, they are releasing their ported ZFS code under the Common Development & Distribution License and will not be attempting to go for mainline integration. Instead, this company will just be releasing their CDDL source-code as a build-able kernel module for users and ensuring it does not use any GPL-only symbols where there would be license conflicts. KQ Infotech also seems confident that Oracle will not attempt to take any legal action against them for this work.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

Linux To Take Over Microsoft In Enterprises

shougyin writes “For years, Linux has enjoyed much of its success as a replacement for Unix. Companies turned to Linux to replace Unix servers, or for new deployments within a Unix-heavy environment. Linux is still king there, but it’s starting to encroach on Microsoft as well. Big companies are planning overwhelmingly (76.4%) to add more Linux servers in the next year, and less than half (41.2%) of the companies are planning to add Windows servers in the next year. Even more interesting, nearly half (43.6%) are actively planning to decrease use of Windows servers in the next year.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

Windows 95 Turns 15

An anonymous reader writes “15 years ago on this day, Microsoft’s then new Windows 95 was released. Among other things it moved users away from the archaic file manager and program manager to Windows explorer and the start menu. Compared to today’s ‘social desktop,’ I’d much rather have the simpler and more sparse (pre-Internet Explorer integrated) Windows Explorer, though I do not like the (lack of) stability that Windows 95 offers. Of course if you were alive then, you’ve probably seen the commercials.” I fondly recall downloading build after build and installing them. But within months of the official release, I switched to Linux.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

Making Ubuntu Look Like Windows 7

DeviceGuru writes “Although it won’t help Linux run Windows-specific software applications, this easy hack produces an Ubuntu desktop that looks and feels a lot like Windows 7. It’s particularly suitable for reviving older PCs or laptops on which the main activities will be web-browsing, email, document writing, and streaming music and videos from from the web. The process installs a Windows 7-like GNOME theme on an otherwise standard Ubuntu 10.04 installation, although it might work on other Linux distros with GNOME and appropriate other packages installed. Naturally all this begs the question: why would anybody want to do this? Why indeed!” People have been doing this sort of look-and-feel swap-out for years; it seems best to me as a practical joke.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

Ubuntu 10.10 Beta Released

RandyDownes sends word that Canonical has released the beta version of Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat). The release announcement boasts faster boot times, GNOME 2.31, and a speedier version of Evolution. In addition, “The Ubuntu Software Center has an updated look and feel, including the new ‘Featured’ and ‘What’s New’ views for showcasing applications, and an improved package description view. You can now easily access your package installation history too.” The release notes and download page are both available.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Link to the original site

MorphOS 2.5 Released, Adds eMac Support

And the MorphOS team continues to expand their hardware support. They released MorphOS version 2.5 today, which adds support for Apple’s eMac computers (the 1.25Ghz models, the 1.42 models have not yet been tested). Of course, there’s also a whole load of fixes and improvements, too.

Link to the original site

Native ZFS Port for Linux

Employees of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have ported Sun’s/Oracle’s ZFS natively to Linux. Linux already had a ZFS port in userspace via FUSE, since license incompatibilities between the CDDL and GPL prevent ZFS from becoming part of the Linux kernel. This project solves the licensing issue by distributing ZFS as a separate kernel module users will have to download and build for themselves.

Link to the original site