open source

  • Canonical and Dell launching Ubuntu computers in 1,000+ shops in China

    The Canonical blog reports that Dell and Canonical will be launching Dell machines running Canonical’s Ubuntu Linux operating system in more than 1,000 outlets in China in the next few weeks.

    Dell and Canonical will be jointly extending a range of Dell hardware pre-loaded with the Chinese language version of Ubuntu 12.04 LTS across a swathe of major Chinese cities. Sales in the original stores have proven so successful that the companies have agreed to expand to beyond 1,000 outlets.

    Ubuntu's Chinese store promotional materials
    Ubuntu’s Chinese store promotional materials

    This is the latest of a series of developing partnerships in China for Ubuntu. In March 2013 it was announced that the Chinese Ministry for Industry & Information Technology had selected Ubuntu as the basis for its reference architecture for operating systems (posts passim).

  • LibreOffice 4.1.1 released

    The Document Foundation (TDF) has announced the release of LibreOffice 4.1.1, for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. This is the first minor release of the LibreOffice 4.1 family, which features a large number of improved interoperability features with proprietary and legacy file formats.

    According to the developers, the new release is a step forward in the process of improving the overall quality and stability of LibreOffice 4.1. However, for enterprise adoptions and production environments, The Document Foundation recommends LibreOffice 4.0.5.

    LibreOffice menu screen
    LibreOffice menu screen

    LibreOffice 4.1.1 is available for immediate download from http://www.libreoffice.org/download/. Change logs are available at the following links: https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/4.1.1/RC1 (for bugs fixed in 4.1.1.1) and https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Releases/4.1.1/RC2 (for bug fixes in 4.1.1.2).

  • Ebook manager Calibre reaches version 1.0

    Ebook management software Calibre has now reached version 1.0, seven years after it was first released and a year since the last major release. Lots of new features have been added to calibre in the last year — a grid view of book covers, a new, faster database backend, the ability to convert Microsoft Word files, tools to make changes to ebooks without needing to do a full conversion, full support for font embedding and sub-setting, and many more, which are listed below. However, it should be pointed out that many of the features listed below were actually introduced during the lifetime of Calibre’s 0.9.x series.

    • A grid view of book covers
    • A new, faster database backend
    • Virtual Libraries
    • Conversion of Microsoft Word documents (.docx files)
    • New metadata download sources
    • Full support for font embedding
    • An easy to use tool to edit the Table of Contents in ebooks
    • Rewritten PDF output engine
    • New “Polish books” tool that allows users to carry out various automated clean-up actions on ebooks

    image of calibre interface

    The developers of Calibre also believe now is an appropriate time to express their thanks to all the developers who have contributed many of the major new features listed above. An incomplete list of contributors is available here.

    Calibre 1.0 is now available for download for Linux, MacOS and Windows.

  • Valencia completes move to LibreOffice

    the LibreOffice logoJoinup, the EU’s public sector open source news website, reports that government of Spain’s autonomous region of Valencia has completed its migration from MS Office to LibreOffice, the free and open source office suite.

    Under this initiative, LibreOffice has been installed on a total of 120,000 public sector workstations.

    The initiative forms part of the costs savings and reduction programme undertaken by the autonomous government to reduce current ICT costs, and those of procuring proprietary software in particular. According to the government’s head of ICT, Sofia Bellés, “This action has already enabled us to save €1.3 mn. since the start of the project and will generate annual savings of €1.5 mn. in proprietary software licences starting from next year”.

    Besides the financial benefits, the investment in LibreOffice entails other benefits, such as the availability of applications in Valencian and Spanish, vendor independence and the freedom to modify and adapt the software to the users’ needs.

  • Happy 20th birthday, Debian

    Today, 16th August 2013, marks the 20th birthday of Debian GNU/Linux, one of the Linux world’s most venerable and respected distributions.

    Ian Murdock founded the Debian Project back in 1993 and since then it has turned out to be a truly free community project aiming to build a free Linux operating system – something that would have been impossible without Debian’s strong community of users and developers.

    In the intervening 20 years, Debian has grown to be one of the most influential and largest open source projects, used as a base in many popular Linux operating systems, such as Ubuntu.

    image of cake iced with Debian logo
    A cake with the Debian ‘swoosh’ logo

    Dubbed the “universal operating system” Debian is available in over 70 languages and supports an enormous range of computer types, with over 20,000 software packages for more than 10 different computer architectures.

    I use the latest version of Debian – codenamed ‘wheezy’ – on my laptop, whilst my main desktop machine runs Mepis, a Debian derivative featuring the KDE desktop. Over the years, I’ve found Debian (and derivatives) very stable, reliable and secure.

    Why not treat yourself on Debian’s birthday? Go and grab a disk image and install it! 🙂

  • Linux banking trojan spotted in the wild

    malware symbolUntil now, Linux users could sit back and relax when the talk turned to viruses, trojans and other malware: they weren’t a problem. As a result of the small numbers of Linux desktop users and the positive flipside of the the lack of Photoshop, iTunes et al., malicious software in the Linux world has been limited to two classes: demonstrations for exploits that have never been seen “in the wild” and targeted attacks on server software vulnerabilities.

    This golden age for Linux users could now be drawing to a close. Security specialist Limor Kessem from RSA has written on her blog about the “Hand of Thief” banking trojan, which only attacks Linux machines and is currently being offered for sale in underground forums for U.S. $ 2,000 with free updates. It has been developed by a cybercrime team based in Russia.

    The trojan’s developer claims it has been tested on 15 different Linux desktop distributions, including Ubuntu, Fedora and Debian. It includes a form grabber for both HTTP and HTTPS sessions; supported browsers include Firefox, Google Chrome and several other Linux-only browsers, such as Chromium, Aurora and Iceweasel. As for desktops, the malware supports 8 different environments, including Gnome and KDE.

    The malicious code also incorporates virtual machine detection designed to make it more difficult for security researchers to unpick its secrets, as well as routines to block access to security updates or access to the websites of anti-virus vendors..

    “Hand of Thief” exploits no special Linux security holes; the user has to install him/herself it by e.g. by opening an email attachment without checking it first or installing it from sources other than the recommended repositories of his/her Linux distribution.

  • FSFE objects to claims of free software’s ‘predatory pricing’

    FSFE logoIn a recent anti-trust submission to the European Commission, a coalition led by Microsoft falsely claimed that the distribution of free software free of charge hurts competition. FSFE has written a letter to the European Commission’s competition authorities to refute this claim and point out that free software is critical for an open, competitive IT market.

    In its letter, FSFE urges the Commission to consider the facts properly before accepting these allegations at face value. “Free software is a boon for humankind. The only thing that it is dangerous to is Microsoft’s hopelessly outdated, restrictive business model,” says FSFE president Karsten Gerloff.

    In essence,the so-called “FairSearch” coalition is asking the European Commission to favour a restrictive business model over a liberal one – exactly the opposite of what competition regulators should do to achieve a fair and open market.

    “Free software is not about price, it’s about liberty, a guarantee of competition and vendor independence. Asking to cripple free software in order to allow proprietary vendors to sell their locked-down systems is just absurd” says Carlo Piana, FSFE’s General Counsel. “The most substantial threat to competition in the mobile space today are software patents, and we have repeatedly urged anti-trust authorities to address this problem,” he adds.

    FSFE is asking the European Commission to dismiss the “FairSearch” coalition’s unfounded claims on predatory pricing and not make them part of whatever steps it decides to take in response to the group’s filing.

  • GNOME raises $20,000 to enhance security and privacy

    Gnome logoThe GNOME project, one of the purveyors of the 2 main desktops and software for Linux, has announced that it reached its goal last weekend of raising $20,000 to help make its software even more secure and privacy aware.

    Individual software projects will now be invited to bid to secure some funding to make their products more secure and private. Areas that the GNOME project is interested in pursuing include the following:

    • application containment;
    • enhanced disk encryption support;
    • Tor integration;
    • user control over diagnostic reporting features;
    • robust VPN routing;
    • application integration with system-wide privacy settings;
    • controls for how GNOME devices are identified on local networks; and
    • anti-phishing features for Web, the GNOME browser.
  • LibreOffice 4.1.0 release candidate 3 ready for download

    The third release candidate (RC) for LibreOffice 4.1.0 is now available for download for all platforms – Linux, Mac OSX and Windows – for evaluation, QA testing, etc.

    Potential users are warned that this build is in a release configuration and will replace any existing LibreOffice install.

    image of LibreOffice Mime type icons
    LibreOffice for all your office suite needs: word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, database, drawing and formulas

    Users are also advised to read the release notes.

    Furthermore, it’s a pre-release build, which the developers do not recommend for ‘mission critical’ purposes.

    There are some major improvements in LibreOffice 4.1.0, including lots of bug fixes, news features and better interoperabilty; a full list of these can be found in the LibreOffice 4.1 release notes.

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