El Software y el conocimiento debe ser Libre
Posts tagged Distribuciones
WebOS se pasa al OpenSource
Jan 26th
Os dejo el mensaje que Fred Patton ha publicado en su blog:
Editor’s note: Today’s blog post comes from Sam Greenblatt, the chief technology officer and head of technical strategy for the open webOS project. He guides the project’s strategy around open collaboration and is responsible for technical engineering. His focus is on the practice of developing webOS with the community, and his approach is founded on the belief that the open source development model produces great software and web technology. Sam has many years of open source experience, including being on the board of OSDL (Linux Foundation). His long career in software development includes being a CTO at HP, Chief Innovation Officer at CA Technology, and CTO at Candle Corporation (IBM).
In December, HP announced that webOS would be made available under an open source license, with continued support from HP. We’re proud of webOS and its potential to harness web standards to improve the next generation of applications, web services, and devices.
Today, we’re taking the next step on this journey by releasing Enyo, our JavaScript app framework, under open source licensing, allowing developers to distribute their Enyo-based webOS apps across other platforms. In this post, we’ll also provide a first look at our open source release roadmap.
In any large project, it’s imperative to communicate the plan for achieving the project’s goals. This plan is usually presented in the form of a roadmap, which outlines the steps necessary to achieve project goals and shows the path forward. For an open source project to be a success, that roadmap must be public so all contributors have a sense of where the project is headed.
In subsequent posts, and on the new Enyo website, we will share more details about our roadmap for webOS, including our plans for release phases, governance, tools, documentation, and more. So with that in mind, let’s step into an overview of some of the pieces of the release plan.
Our first contribution is Enyo, our lightweight, cross-platform framework aimed at mobile devices and web browsers.
This initial open source release includes Enyo 1.0, which allows current developers of Enyo apps for webOS devices to distribute their apps to other platforms. While this release is not intended to be expanded any further, there is considerable utility for our current developer base in releasing it.
Today’s release also includes the core of Enyo 2.0, which will be the foundation for Enyo going forward. It expands Enyo’s “write once, run anywhere” capability to even more platforms, from mobile devices to desktop web browsers. It works on many of the most popular web browsers, including Chrome, IE 9, Firefox, and Safari.
While 2.0 does not yet include any UI widgets, the core will support a wide variety of libraries and add-ons. A UI widget set for 2.0 will be released in the near future.
Upcoming releases include our distribution of WebKit, which will support not only HTML5, but also Silverlight and Flash through the use of plug-ins. It will enable the rendering of webpages to HTML Canvas and 3-D textures, and will support a wide range of application interfaces, including multi-touch.
We will also release a new kernel based on the Linux Foundation’s standard kernel. As we continue through the roadmap, you will see enhanced integration with JavaScript through register callbacks and custom multi-process architecture for security, load balancing, and recovery availability.
Look for us to introduce LevelDB to replace our prior database.
Along the way, we will also share our tool sets, and we expect that many of you will want to share yours as well.
In closing, I want to thank the great engineers who have worked with me on creating the open webOS roadmap and let you all know that we look forward to collaborating with the community. As my friend Eric Raymond stated as I embarked on the open source adventure, “It takes a village to create a complete solution.”
FreeBSD 9.0 Beta ya disponible
Aug 3rd
Parece que ya van apareciendo en los distintos mirros FTP las imagenes ISO de la primera beta de FreeBSD 9.0. Esta es la primera actualización dramatica en el sistema operativo FreeBSD en casi dos años desde la liberación de FreeBSD 8.0. FreeBSD se espera que sea oficialmente lanzado en septiembre de este año.
El proceso de liberación de FreeBSD 9.0, la instantánea de la primera beta se lanzo a finales de julio. Poco después se lanzaran las imágenes ISO de las diversas arquitecturas, que podemos encontrar en los mirrors. Aunque no hay anuncio oficial de este lanzamiento, podemos descargarla desde aquí.
No he tenido tiempo todavía para tratar de FreeBSD 9.0-beta1 o las instantáneas anteriores del FreeBSD actual, pero entre el trabajo previsto para FreeBSD 9.0 incluye ZFS como sistema de archivos por defecto, soporte TRIM SSD, 802.11n de apoyo de alto rendimiento, más ATA / CAM con mejoras, PCI de conexión en caliente, soporte de hibernación S4, apoyo a Xen Dom0, Linux de 64 bits binarios en FreeBSD/amd64, adecuado soporte EFI de arranque, soporte para LLVM (máquina virtual de bajo nivel) al lado de GCC, soporte user-land D-Trace, mejor soporte de Oracle VM VirtualBox, soporta el reinicio más rápido, y mucho más.
Algunos de los trabajos de FreeBSD 9.0 se habla en esta página WikiFreeBSD.org.
Versión de CentOS-6.0 LiveCD i386 y x86_64
Jul 27th
Acaba de ser anunciado la disponibilidad inmediata de la versión LiveCD de CentOS 6.0 para las arquitecturas i386 y x86_64.
Los detalles de esta versión esta versión están disponibles aquí: http://wiki.centos.org/
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Overview
The CentOS-6.0 LiveCD is meant to be a Linux environment suited to be run directly from either CD media or USB storage devices. It does not need any persistent storage on a machine, which also makes it a suitable recovery environment.
Due to space constraints, it was not possible to include all the traditional desktop applications on the LiveCD. You can though enjoy a Gnome basic desktop, view and modify pictures with gthumb and the Gimp, browsing the web with Firefox, send emails with Thunderbird and connect to your favorite Instant Messaging network with Pidgin.
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Download
SHA256SUMs :
CentOS-6.0-x86_64-LiveCD.iso:
f7239593e425ea4c26c5292e23b5e2
CentOS-6.0-i386-LiveCD.iso:
c4e09a2152a8e1b17dc6704eb8d745
The CentOS-6.0 LiveCD is released to all external mirrors and available for download now. List of mirrors is available at these urls :
http://isoredirect.centos.org/
http://isoredirect.centos.org/
There are no torrent files for these LiveCD images since the overall size of download is small enough that it can be easily downloaded via http and ftp mirrors. Given the very large and diverse CentOS Mirror network, we expect most people to get fairly good download rates for these iso images.
Once you download the images, its important to verify contents using the sha256sum utility, against the published sums here.
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Notes
You can now install the Live environment to your hard disk (which wasn’t possible with the 5.x Live medias). Please note that you need more that 512Mb of ram to be able to use that ‘install to hard drive’ feature (If you have less than 512Mb of ram, you can install to disk but in text-mode, meaning that instead of clicking on the desktop icon, you have to launch a gnome-terminal and launch the ‘liveinst’ command from within the terminal).
There is no upstream Live media product. The Live media produced within the CentOS Project is based on and around the livemedia tools from the Fedora Project.
These LiveCD’s only contains content found within the primary CentOS-6.0 distribution. No package from outside the distribution was included and no package has been changed from whats included in the base distribution.
We appreciate all forms of feedback about these LiveCD, including specific application inclusion requests or feature changes in future releases. The best place to provide this feedback is via the centos-devel mailing list ( http://lists.centos.org/ ) and feature
requests via the issue tracker ( http://bugs.centos.org/ ).
Special thanks to Fabian Arrotin for taking up the LiveCD and LiveDVD efforts, and to everyone on the QA team who worked through the issues and helped build, test and release these images.