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
"Hackers" are identified as a specific subgroup of computer workers. The history of the hacker community is told. The explicit and implicit ideologies expressed through hacking is analyzed and presented. Computer artifacts of origin both inside and outside the hacker community are compared and the embedded properties of the resulting artifacts are inferred. Hacking is discussed in the context of being a method for system development. Finally, it is argued that this system development method under certain circumstances may yield superior software artifacts. . The link for this article located at FirstMonday is no longer available. . The link for this article located at FirstMonday is no longer available.. 'hackers', identified, specific, subgroup, computer, workers, history, hacker, commu. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Last week we met with Martin Roesch, the creator of Snort, the de facto standard for intrusion detection/prevention. Presented here is the entire story of Snort in his words that covers seven years of development that made this tool one of the most important security software titles ever developed. . During his talk you'll get all the details on how Snort was initially conceived as well as how it is expected to develop further now after Check Point acquired Sourcefire. You'll discover many technical details related to the development of Snort since its inception in 1998 up to today as well as some details of upcoming features. Among other things Martin talks about all the major Snort releases, the founding of Sourcefire, the enhancements added to the last versions of Snort, new technology that presents a self-tuning engine, and much more. The link for this article located at Net-security.org is no longer available. . During his talk you'll get all the details on how Snort was initially conceived as well as how it is. martin, roesch, creator, snort, facto, standard, intrusion, detec. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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