Linux 3.4 Released
jrepin writes with news of today's release (here's Linus's announcement) of Linux 3.4: "This release includes several Btrfs updates: metadata blocks bigger than 4KB, much better metadata performance, better error handling and better recovery tools. There are other features: a new X32 ABI which allows to run in 64 bit mode with 32 bit pointers; several updates to the GPU drivers: early modesetting of Nvidia Geforce 600 'Kepler', support of AMD RadeonHD 7xxx and AMD Trinity APU series, and support of Intel Medfield graphics; support of x86 cpu driver autoprobing, a device-mapper target that stores cryptographic hashes of blocks to check for intrusions, another target to use external read-only devices as origin source of a thin provisioned LVM volume, several perf improvements such as GTK2 report GUI and a new 'Yama' security module."
As much as Linux is doing rather well despite the plethora of different versions and security risk from the open code base, using it is rather risky for legal reasons as well. Red Hat stole much of Linux from SCO's Caldera, and are distributing it without paying royalties, meaning users could be on the hook for several hundred dollars a license and casting the future of Red Hat's offerings in jeopardy.. Litigation is ongoing now, and experts expect SCO to win a crushing verdict any day now. Linux has some neat features, but there's a lot of fear, uncertainty, and doubt in the community about its legal future.
Achievement Unlocked
Most gratuitous use of the word "fuck" in a serious Slashdot post.
[Old Man mode]: I remember a time before PulseAudio, and before JACK, and before ALSA: The Linux kernel had some built-in drivers ("OSS-Free"?) which supported adequate functionality for every sound card/chip on the list, and if you wanted more features or support you could just pay 4front for a better driver (and they were always worth the minimal price).
And: Everything. Just. Worked. Always. Hardware settings (back when sound cards still had configurable analog sections(!)) were deterministic and reliable, and getting excellent sound from *random_app* was a foregone conclusion.
Much fun was had, for instance, with "cat /dev/audio > /dev/st0" to dump a radio show (reliably! without problems! in the plain-and-simple way that Unix is supposed to be!) to DDS tape.
Now, this was 17 (or so) years ago. Anything involving further difficulty, at any stage of the game on a user level, on the Linux sound front is a step backward.
Now, get the fuck off my lawn.
[/Old Man mode]
Kid-proof tablet..
I still remember that message, on Oct 1991, from a guy by the name of Linus Benedict Torvalds on comp.os.minix
"Do you pine for the nice days of minix-1.1, when men were men and wrote :-) "
their own device drivers? Are you without a nice project and just dying
to cut your teeth on a OS you can try to modify for your needs? Are you
finding it frustrating when everything works on minix? No more all-
nighters to get a nifty program working? Then this post might be just
for you
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
It took about 4 reads before your post didn't say "titties".
the GNU animal
You mean, a gnu?
Btrfs builds largely on ext2
[citation needed]
Nope, he's quite right. I built btrfs just fine previously, but now after I upgraded to ext4, look what happens:
$ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/btrfs-progs.git
$ cd btrfs-progs
$ make
System going down for HALT now!
Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
No, that would be rms