Marius Nestor celebrates Linux’s 30th birthday with a good champagne, a delicious cake and a brief recount of 30 freaking awesome years of the inherently secure and increasingly popular Linux OS - and many more to come! . That’s right, it’s been 30 years since 21-year-old Finnish student Linus Benedict Torvalds made his now-famous announcement on the day of August 25th, 1991, on the comp.os.minix news group, saying that he is working on a free operating system for 386(486) AT clones as a “hobby.” Well, that “hobby” turned into something massive in only 30 years (how time flies), and Linux now powers almost every smart device around you, including your Android smartphone, Amazon Alexa and Google Home smart assistants, big screen TV, smart fridge, smart lights, and especially your Wi-Fi router. The link for this article located at 9 to 5 Linux is no longer available. . Mark the milestone of three decades of Linux's pioneering spirit, collaboration, and contribution to the tech world.. Linux Anniversary, Tech Innovations, Open Source Legacy. . Brittany Day
Have you heard that Linus Torvalds has officially kicked off the development cycle of the upcoming Linux kernel 5.8, which he has dubbed as one of the “biggest releases of all time”? . Two weeks after the release of the Linux 5.7 kernel series, the merge window for the upcoming Linux 5.8 kernel is now officially closed and the first Release Candidate (RC) milestone hit the streets for public testing. And it looks like Linux 5.8 is shaping up to be one of the “biggest releases of all time,” according to Linus Torvalds, who said that it’s almost on par with the Linux 4.9 kernel and could be even bigger due to a lot of development for new features and improvements across all components, including architecture, file systems, drivers, and documentation. The link for this article located at 9 to 5 Linux is no longer available. . Linus Torvalds reveals the beginning of the Linux kernel 6.0 development phase, marking it as a significant update, featuring substantial improvements.. Linux Kernel Development, Major Software Release, Linus Torvalds Announcement. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This was the year when, once and for all, it became clear that the future of technology belongs to Linux and open-source software. Get the details in an interesting ZDNet article: . I've covered Linux and open source since Linus Torvalds was a grad student and before " open source " was a thing or, for that matter, before "free software" was its frenemy. From those very early days when Richard M. Stallman created the GNU General Public License (GPL) , one of the main narratives was small plucky us--open-source and Linux supporters--versus the enormous, proprietary corporate them--with The Evil Empire Microsoft as enemy number one. That story is as out of touch with reality asa Hallmark Christmas movie is with small town economies. People still love that story, but let's look at 2019's biggest Linux and open stories and you'll see what I mean. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . In 2019, Linux and open-source software cemented their role in tech, impacting cloud computing, AI, automotive, and IoT, driving innovation and efficiency. Linux Technology Evolution, Open-Source Community Stories, Software Development Trends. . Brittany Day
The source code of one of the world's most popular free security tools will no longer be available to all, its creator has announced, saying the software's open-source license was fueling competition. . Renaud Deraison, the primary author of the Nessus vulnerability scanner, broke the news in a message to the software's e-mail list Wednesday. "Nessus 3 will be available free of charge...but will not be released under the GPL," or General Public License, Deraison wrote. Nessus, which Deraison says is used by 75,000 organizations worldwide, scans networks for vulnerabilities. The developer, who has been working on the product since at least 1998, said commercial pressures facing Tenable Network Security, the company he started in 2002 around Nessus, was forcing him to stop making the software's source code available. "A number of companies are using the source code against us, by selling or renting appliances, thus exploiting a loophole in the GPL," he wrote in a later e-mail, justifying his decision. "So in that regard, we have been fueling our competition, and we want to put an end to that. Nessus 3 contains an improved engine, and we don't want our competition to claim to have improved 'their' scanner.". Renaud Deraison, the primary author of the Nessus vulnerability scanner, broke the news in a message. source, world's, popular, security, tools, longer. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This can be considered closure to an issue that could have affected the entire open-source community. The idea of making Java the basis of a secure, open-source development platform is simply not viable right now. . . .. Despite urging from competitors and open source advocates, Sun Microsystems Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif., will not open the source to its Java programming language anytime soon, said Sun CEO Scott McNealy during a news conference at the 2004 FOSE conference. "We're trying to understand what problem does it solve that is not already solved," McNealy said. Last month Eric Raymond, noted open source programmer and president of the Open Source Initiative advocacy group, posted an open letter to McNealy calling for Sun to make Java open source. "Sun's insistence on continuing tight control of the Java code has damaged Sun's long-term interests by throttling acceptance of the language in the open-source community, ceding the field (and probably the future) to scripting-language competitors like Python and Perl," Raymond wrote. Java is an object-oriented language developed by Sun. Written originally for embedded devices, Java was designed to allow a single program to be written once and be able to run on multiple platforms without modification, through the use of the software-based Java Virtual Machine. Although Sun maintains Java is an open implementation, allowing other software manufacturers to license the code and build competing Java-based products, the company maintains control over what changes can be made to the language. One advantage of keeping Java under its own control is that competing factions break the language into incompatible versions, McNealy said. He noted that Linux already suffers from this problem. The leading Linux vendor, Red Hat Inc. of Raleigh, N.C., has already introduced features in its own version of Linux that make it incompatible with other versions. Since Linux is open source, Red Hat was free to build its own version of the operating system. In contrast, when MicrosoftCorp. of Redmond, Wash., tried to introduce features into its own version of Java that wouldn't work in non-Windows systems, Sun successfully blocked the changes through legal means, McNealy said. The link for this article located at GovernmentComputerNews is no longer available. . Scott McNealy explains the reasoning for Java's proprietary design, emphasizing its impact on the software development landscape amidst the rising calls for open source options. Java Development, Software Control, Open Source Advocacy. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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