If you are looking for a Linux toy that really rocks, your search ends here. This is a stringless digital guitar and it's powered by Linux This is what is called a "digital guitar" by it's designer. So it's not a electrical guitar but a device for creating digital music.
Read more »The State Of Mac And GNU/Linux Gaming
It’s ‘common knowledge’ that Mac and Linux gaming are so unimportant that they might as well not exist. Everyone ‘knows’ that Mac games sell a tiny fraction of the amount that Windows games sell, and that Linux games simply don’t exist. But are these ideas based on reality?
Read more »- Login to post comments
Why there is a Market for Linux Games
Linux users are starved for quality games - there is no doubting that. Bring up the topic of a Linux port on most gaming forums and you will typically see responses about the market share of the operating system, that Linux users are cheap.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Why Free Virtualization Won't Necessarily Strike Down VMware
Not long ago, I was talking with a friend of mine who works at VMware, the Palo Alto, Calif.-based irtualization software giant. Many people, even very technology-savvy folks, don't realize how big and powerful VMware really is. This is a software company with a market capitalization of nearly $23 billion, and its market cap was larger than that not long ago.
Read more »10 reasons why the T91MT is better than the iPad
I researched and played with many different devices before deciding on my Asus T91MT. It amazes me how many people do not even know they exist when they released almost a year ago! The iPad on the other hand got more press than you can shake a stick at and everyone under the sun knows what it is after just a few weeks.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Linux needs to do more for programmers
Much as I hate to admit it, Microsoft does some things better, much better, than Linux. Number one with a bullet is how Microsoft helps programmers.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Open source solves the mobile app dev dilemma
Enterprises are still in the early days of mobile application development, but the growing evidence suggests they should focus time and resources on cross-mobile-device applications. The problem is that with so many mobile devices and operating systems in play, IT just can't build for even a sampling, never mind the whole lot.
Read more »Where is the Linux 'smartbook'?
The smartbook has yet to emerge from pre-product purgatory, though a couple of high-profile devices are due soon.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Open source is NASA's next frontier
The challenges to government's adoption and participation in open-source communities is often thought to be a simpe culture clash, but in reality it goes deeper than that, accordning to NASA's newly-appointed chief technology officer.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Motorola releases Android 2.1 for UK Milestones
Motorola has released an Android 2.1 update for its Milestone devices, adding support for Speech to Text, live wallpapers and up to nine home screens
Read more »- Login to post comments
Video: A Peek Inside the HTC Incredible Phone
TechRestore, an electronics repair shop, has taken apart the Incredible and then it put all back together. What's fascinating to watch in the video is how small and compact the components are and how well they pack into the circuit board.
Read more »- Login to post comments
GNU/Linux used to Demonstrate Security Problems in Mac OS and MS Windows
Security guru Joanna Rutkowska says that Apple's and Microsoft's proprietary operating systems are "badly designed from a security standpoint"; her firm uses GNU/Linux to create Qubes OS
Read more »- Login to post comments
CMIS specification 1.0 now OASIS approved
OASIS members give their approval to the final version 1.0 of the CMIS specification, designed to increase interoperability between CMS systems and applications
Read more »- Login to post comments
No More Cheap Supercomputers? Sony Blocks Linux on PS3
The feature, called 'Install Other OS,' has been removed, three years after the console's introduction, "due to security concerns," the company said in a blog post.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Open Source Browsers Continue to Grab Market Share
According to Net Applications' data for browsers in April, Internet Explorer had 59.5 percent share, Firefox had 24.59 percent share, and Google Chrome had 6.73 percent share.
Read more »- Login to post comments