Hardware
Wii-Linux + T2 SDE Linux 6.0 + X Server Running XD
August 14th, 2008 by LJ Staff in
This video is from nuvalo who writes: "This is the latest kernel from Wii-Linux, which supports USB, Bluetooth, etc. This video shows how it boots T2 SDE for PowerPC, with its X server and the login. The colors are messed up as the X server writes its colors in RGB format, and the Wii frame buffer only supports yuv2. Anyway, it is possible to run an X server without too much effort."
Linux Makes Phones Even Cheaper
July 29th, 2008 by LJ Staff in
Purple Labs, a company based in France with a multinational management team, is pushing Linux mobile phones outward in capabilities and downward in price.
Man vs. Myth: Greg Kroah-Hartman and the Kernel Driver Project
July 21st, 2008 by LJ Staff in
Don't tell Greg Kroah-Hartman that Linux hurts for device drivers. He's heard too much of that rap, and he's already done plenty to stop it. We should thank him and help pick up the ball. I'm doing both here.
Port Linux onto an iPod
April 14th, 2008 by Carlie Fairchild in
iPodLinux is an open source venture into porting Linux onto the iPod.
Product Review - The EmperorLinux Wasp CF-19
October 18th, 2007 by James Gray in
If you need a battle-ready rugged notebook that runs Linux, the EmperorLinux Wasp CF-19 may be for you.
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Linux Journal Live - Oct 9, 2008
October 9th, 2008 by Shawn Powers
The October 9, 2008 edition of Linux Journal Live! Associate Editor, Shawn Powers, and Kyle Rankin, "Hack and /" columnist and author of Knoppix Hacks, Linux Multimedia Hacks, Knoppix Pocket Reference and others, discuss Linux distributions.
Linux Journal Live - Oct 2, 2008
October 3rd, 2008 by Shawn Powers
The October 2, 2008 edition of Linux Journal Live! Associate Editor, Shawn Powers, and Steven Evatt, Online Development manager for The Houston Chronicle discuss surviving disaster with Linux.
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November 2008, #175
There aren't many numbers that put the US national debt to shame, but here's one: 1,100,000,000,000,000. What's that? That's how many floating-point operations per second the Roadrunner supercomputer at Las Alamos can perform. That's about 100 FLOPS per dollar of US debt (unfortunately, the debt is winning the second derivative race). Read the article about Roadrunner in this month's High Performance Computing issue of LJ.
Along with that, find out how to program the Cell processor and how to use CUDA with your NVIDIA GPU. Also in this issue: Mr HandS (aka Kyle Rankin) gives us a few tips on using Compiz, Chef Marcel shows you how to get blogging off your plate quicker, Mick Bauer talks about Samba security, Dan Sawyer interviews Cory Doctrow and Doc talks about how information technology can affect democracy and fix the national debt (just kidding about that last part). That and more for your reading pleasure in this month's Linux Journal.








