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  1. What will it take for rpm and deb to merge ? on APT Speed For Incremental Updates Gets a Massive Performance Boost · · Score: 0

    What will it take - money? Linus Torvalds throwing a hissy fit ? Ubuntu Snappy/Click packages ?
    Linux adoption can be 10x what it is today if the package management is unified. Its not just about the format - its the whole ecosystem. One Linux App Store, better tooling to build packages, only one package to publish. Any kind of performance improvment (like this one) benefits both sets of users.
    I mean RPM and DEB each have their advantages.. but what will it take for a single format to emerge ?

  2. CISS (Continuous Ink System) already solves this on Epson Is Trying To Kill the Printer Ink Cartridge · · Score: 1

    CISS system for Workforce-3640 which is a 100$ printer.

  3. Has anybody checked out the VistA help doc !!! on DoD Ditches Open Source Medical Records System In $4.3B Contract · · Score: 1

    Here Jeez, it seems they use the GT.M embedded database and a GUI that connects directly to this database... kind of like PGAdmin3. They use the MUMPS scripting language to build logic into the database (kind of like stored procedures). the deployment doc on Linux is a mess. Wow!

  4. python with psutil on Ask Slashdot: Is C++ the Right Tool For This Project? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    consider using python with py2exe, psutil and mmap. you may find what you are looking for !

  5. Re:a better question on Why Run Linux On Macs? · · Score: 1

    this +1 A Thinkpad is also the only other machine that gets as much respect as a macbook !

  6. ha ha ha... on Extreme Heat Knocks Out Internet In Australia · · Score: 0

    We have normal temperatures of 49 degrees in New Delhi. We did not have a single day of internet outage.

  7. Epson workforce printer - with mobile apps & w on Ask Slashdot: Best Options For a Standalone Offline Printing Station? · · Score: 2

    here's my suggestion: For extra convenience, I recommend the TP-Link WDR 3600 router : this router has 2 USB ports - one to take your 3G dongle and another to connect a USB drive or SD card reader to make these files available. I highly doing this before buying a printer. Note that the USB ports will also be able to drive a printer in case you dont want to spend on a wireless printer.
    My printer recommendation is the Epson WF-2540 printer. This is now connected to the router using a regular ethernet cable or the wifi.
    Your father can now print his stuff from the laptop or from his mobile phones (both android and iphone) on top of the wifi network.

  8. Measuring skill and productivity on Should IT Professionals Be Exempt From Overtime Regulations? · · Score: 1

    It is hard to quantify what should be done in a 40 hour workweek - this is precisely why skilled work is not granted overtime. Usually there are two kinds of skilled labor - one who are very skilled and can get a lot done within a day and others who are not this skilled, but will put in extra time onthe weekends to get the same amount of work done. Both should be paid at par - or else the first category will gravitate towards being the other. this does not apply in highly process oriented or unskilled labor because there is close to zero variance in productivity - think call centres, factory workers, etc.

  9. here's my detailed blog post in support of systemd on Ask Slashdot: Can You Say Something Nice About Systemd? · · Score: 0

    My response is too detailed to post here, so I made a post. http://www.lambdacurry.com/sys...

  10. systemd is nice on Debian's Systemd Adoption Inspires Threat of Fork · · Score: 0

    systemd is a genuine leap of innovation in Linux. Here's my attempt to clear some of the FUD around it - http://www.lambdacurry.com/sys...

  11. Puzzled - isnt N900 rooted Nexus 5 ? on Ask Slashdot: Life After N900? · · Score: 1

    Not trying to flamebait here, but genuinely puzzled - what is possibly so great about the N900 versus something like a rooted Nexus 5? I see comments about cyanogenmod, etc. being a bit unstable - but comparing it to the N900, where very few people actually cared about building the OS ? The next version of the VM - ART - is nothing to sneeze at as well.
    I'm not sure if you know, but when you install cyanogenmod (or one of the hundred different ROMS that people are actively developing on xda-developers), you get a Google free operating system. There is NO integration with Google. It is only if you install the "gapps" package, that you get the whole google shebang - play store, services, etc.
    As a hacker friendly phone, I can develop on the N5 using Python, Golang, Scala, C#/Mono, QT, etc. - is there a usecase at which the N900 blows this out of the water ?
    The only valid point I can think about is the keyboard - yes, it is a paradigm shift. But for daily use, smart keyboards like Swiftkey, Touchpal (pure open source) will serve you very well. For your developer needs, connect a monitor through HDMI/MHL and use a microusb adapter .
    You have a first grade terminal emulator, IRC, low power bluetooth, built-in VPN + tethering - I would argue much more suitable for the developer than the venerable N900. Did I mention quad core processor, GPU and 2 GB of RAM with a brilliant display ?
    If you want, you can install other OSes on the phone.

  12. Re:Epson Workforce 3540/3520 on Ask Slashdot: Best SOHO Printer Choices? · · Score: 1

    actually, it seems like it does from this review here
    The drivers from here are also looking to be fairly compliant and is registered as a SANE backend.

  13. Epson Workforce 3540/3520 on Ask Slashdot: Best SOHO Printer Choices? · · Score: 1

    I would say it is the Epson WF 3540. First of all, it has two sided ADF scan - which is damn useful for getting rid of all those bills by scanning them and also very rare for a printer at this price point. Secondly, you can connect a CISS ink system for bulk printing and refillable ink tanks. You will be able to buy non-OEM refillable ink cartridges anyway, plus the fact that all the different colors have different cartridges means that you want be overpaying for just printing a lot of black and white. It has Android and iPhone apps for the usual wireless printing. It has gotten good reviews for its build quality, particularly its scanner head hinges.

  14. why not a kindle ? on Melbourne College May Give iPad To Every Student · · Score: 1

    Much cheaper - at scale I daresay you could get it below 100 USD given that it's price is already heading down. For reading purposes, the epaper display is simply unbeatable. On the other hand if you wanted to use it for various other (note taking, spreadsheets,etc.) purposes, then why not an Android tablet ? Australia has the Millenius Android tablet for about 200 USD. The specific advantage of this approach is that, if the school wants to develop custom apps (which in high likelihood it will), it is much cheaper and less cumbersome (app store policies) than the Apple SDK.

  15. specialized/indie music services on Last.FM To Require Subscription For Mobiles and Home Devices · · Score: 1

    I have noticed that rather than using last.fm, I get better quality in using niche music services. A good example is di.fm for electronic/dance/trance music. It's premium streams are a bit more expensive than last.fm (4.99$ p.m.) but I get about 70 channels and multi-format (which includes an android app)

  16. A scripting/domain-specific language for LTTng ? on Kernel Tracing With LTTng On Ubuntu Maverick · · Score: 1

    One of the biggest selling points for DTrace is its scripting language. It is extremely powerful and you can find dtrace scripts shared by others that allow you to do very powerful system stats gathering (e.g. here) How about doing something similar for LTTng - you could even do something simple like Lua hooks for LTTng

  17. Oh man... Haiku is so there on Canonical Bringing an Instant-On Ubuntu · · Score: 1

    Have you guys tried Haiku (the BeOS remake ) ? Yesterday, was incidentally their Alpha2 release and it was what an instant-on OS should be like. Booting was under 5 seconds and it was beautiful.

    The install zip file was just 196 mb.

  18. Re:More like a battle between IE and Firefox on Google to Open Source the VP8 Codec · · Score: 1

    You are talking about the slowest growing mobile market - America - and not the fastest growing mobile market: India and the rest of Asia.

    Today, in India, we have $90 contract-free cellphones with qwerty, 3G and Opera Mobile (which is the key to all of this really, with its browsing experience). A lot of them bundle document viewers, calendars and cameras. For the majority of Asia, this is the most affordable way to access the internet.

    Not to mention built in apps for Twitter and Facebook. I dont want to give free links to some of these manufacturers, but a lot of them are chinese-made mobiles with local after-sales.

    Just wait till these cheap phone makers take up android, and you'll figure out why it is that India and China are hollering for IPV6 at the top of their voices.

  19. Re:The GNOME community is fragmenting. on Ask Matt Asay About Ubuntu and Canonical · · Score: 1

    For a very long time, the network manager in KDE did'nt work very well - it is in KDE 4.4 that the networkmanager Plasmoid was even included ... and I do not know whether it is enabled by default.

    I want to love KDE but there are exactly two things that hinder me:
    1. basic usability - network manager, desktop look configuration (Cashew... really ? Desktop Plasmoid for icons ?)
    2. Native browser - move to Webkit already. Who uses KHTML seriously ? QT Chromium and I'm in...

  20. Re:Adoption Stories and Influences on Ask Matt Asay About Ubuntu and Canonical · · Score: 1

    That is because the wrong countries are being targetted - economies with the cash to spend on Macs and Office 2010 and you try to sell Ubuntu ? For all its charm, one has to admit the relative lack of polish of Ubuntu vs Win7 or OSX.

    The countries to be targetted actively are countries like India which has a highly active open source user base, has a exchange rate which works against proprietary software and has the highest growth of mobile and internet technologies.

    And has Ubuntu, KDE or Gnome foundation based even one of their conferences in India ? Why, when i daresay there would be hundreds of universities ready to host them for free.

    The positioning is wrong.

  21. Re:Benoit Schillings is the Chuck Norris of code. on Swiss Firm Claims Boost In Android App Performance · · Score: 1

    http://www.birdhouse.org/beos/bible/bos/int_schillings.html
    Benoit wrote, what is referred to by Wikipedia, as OFS (Old Be File System) which was then replaced by BFS.

  22. Re:I installed the latest OO, definitely not a thr on Is OpenOffice.org a Threat? Microsoft Thinks So · · Score: 1

    +1 Though I would still *advocate* for OpenOffice (since Softmaker's ODF support is flaky), but the reality is that most of the world's business information is locked in DOC/XLS/PPT. And the excellent compatibility of Softmaker to MS formats (especially XLS) , makes it a transition path towards Linux.

  23. no 3g based? on Open Source Hardware Projects, 2009 · · Score: 1

    I couldnt help but notice that there are no 3g based projects. I know that many (not all) of the 3g chipsets that you need to build any product are covered under extremely restrictive NDA.

    However, I had really hoped that there would be atleast one

    Note: OpenMoko does not disclose its 3g firmware (http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/GTA01_gsm_modem) Upgrading the modem's firmware is technically possible but no proper software is currently legally available to users outside Openmoko staff

  24. Re:Tiling on Multiple-Display Power Tools For Linux? · · Score: 1

    very cool!
    thanks... However, I am not too keen on hacking window-managers.

    I just wish stuff like this could be packaged into a "bells-and-whistles-included" distro - like say Stubuntu (!) and made it so that it is inherently click-and-configurable.

  25. Re:Btrfs: kill off ext# please! on Linux Kernel 2.6.32 Released · · Score: 1

    Do check out ZFS-Fuse . Development has accelerated over the past couple of months and it is very usable with decent performance.

    Atleast one commercial offering is using ZFS-FUSE in its products - however, no idea whether it is using a custom non-community build.

    I am using ZFS-Fuse on Ubuntu Hardy with 2 hard disks in a mirrored configuration, serving its files over Samba. We do incremental backups everyday (which the filesystem supports) and are quite happy with it.