Have We Won? Is Windows Now an “Also-Ran?”

The headline below has been a “dream headline” of mine for a LONG time! I am not sure I can honestly agree that it is 100% true, but I get where he’s coming from! Now, we just need to get everyone using Linux on real desktop PCs! Ya-ha-ha! (Evil laugh.)

Ubuntu declares bug #1 — ‘Microsoft has a majority market share’ — closed

From ZDnet: “Give major Linux company Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth credit for chutzpah. In the Ubuntu bug-tracking system, LaunchPad, he just announced that bug number one ‘is now closed.’ The bug, which dates from Ubuntu’s first days in 2004, was: ‘Microsoft has a majority market share.’

While Ubuntu has been part of the various factors that have cut Windows down to size, Shuttleworth largely credits the growth of smartphones and tablets for Windows’ comeuppance. ‘Personal computing today is a broader proposition than it was in 2004: phones, tablets, wearables and other devices are all part of the mix for our digital lives. From a competitive perspective, that broader market has healthy competition, with iOS and Android representing a meaningful share.’

He’s not the only one who’s noticed that Windows and Intel (Wintel) are no longer calling the shots in computing. Mary Meeker, former superstar Wall Street analys, and now a well-respected venture capitalist, shows in her latest Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers’ 2013 Internet Trends report that Apple iOS and Android now has the lion’s share of computing devices with 65 percent running one of these operating systems over Windows’ 35 percent.

True, Shuttleworth continued, ‘Android may not be my or your first choice of Linux, but it is without doubt an open source platform that offers both practical and economic benefits to users and industry.’ Considering that Canonical is positioning Ubuntu to be an Android rival in smartphones and tablets, it’s an interesting comment.

Perhaps even more interesting is that Shuttleworth lets go so easily of the old Linux vs. Windows fan-boy fight. Sure, bug number one, which set Windows as Ubuntu’s top enemy, ‘served for many as a sort of declaration of intent. But it’s better for us to focus our intent on excellence in our own right, rather than our impact on someone else’s product.’

Indeed, after noting Ubuntu’s cloud efforts, Shuttleworth wrote, ‘the Microsoft IAAS [Infrastructure as a Service] team are both technically excellent and very focused on having ALL OS’s including Linux guests like Ubuntu run extremely well on Azure, making them a pleasure to work with. Perhaps the market shift has played a role in that. Circumstances have changed, institutions have adapted, so should we.’

Yes, you read that right. Shuttleworth, a top business Linux leader, praised Microsoft for its support of Linux. Things have changed!”

New Version of Opera Browser Launches

I have Opera installed because I need to test web pages on every modern browser. It is nice, but I still use Chrome for most everything!

Opera Launches Chromium-Based ‘Next’ Browser for Windows, Mac

“Opera has totally revamped the desktop version of its browser, which is now available for trial on Windows and Mac.

The all-new browser, dubbed Opera Next 15, was built from scratch with a refreshed design and a slew of new features for a better browsing experience. Opera Next releases, formally known as beta versions, are updated every few weeks, and let you check out the latest enhancements to the browser.

Under the hood, Opera swapped out its own Presto rendering engine for the Chromium engine from Google, which should help webpages load faster ‘even in the toughest of network conditions,’ the Oslo, Norway-based browser maker said in a statement.

‘Completely rethinking a browser in today’s competitive market is a big thing,’ said Krystian Kolondra, Opera’s senior vice president of desktop products. ‘Our new browser is more beautiful and allows users to harness the massive amount of web content they are faced with today.’

Many of the new changes are in line with the browser’s recently released Android version.

For starters, the browser has a new user interface, which gives it a more sleek and modern look. In addition, you can now search directly from a newly combined address and search bar. Simply start typing a webpage address to go directly to a site, or enter a search term to look for suggestions.

The browser also boasts a new Discover feature, which serves up articles from around the Web based on categories you’re interested in — like news, food, and technology.

There’s another new feature called Stash, which lets you mark websites using a heart icon in the address bar. You can use this feature to easily compare items while shopping online, or keep travel research on hotels and flights handy, Opera said.

The popular shortcuts feature Speed Dial has also been revamped, and now allows bookmarks to be gathered in folders and easily filtered. Simply drag and drop one Speed Dial entry on top of another to create a folder, or use the new search field to find a specific webpage you saved.

Meanwhile, based on user feedback, Opera made its mail client a standalone offering so it takes up less memory and space in the browser itself. The company launched a new Opera Mail rerelease candidate, which brings changes to labeling, filtering, threads, and tabs for a ‘faster and sleeker than ever mail experience.'”

WordPress Celebrates 10 Years!

Happy Birthday to the Wordpres blogging platform! It is what all my blogs are based on!

WordPress Is Now 10 Years Old

“Ten years ago today, the first public release of WordPress became available. Initially started as a fork of the little-known blogging platform b2/Cafelog, WordPress has grown to be the largest CMS in the world, powering an astounding 18% of the web.

Nearly 70 million websites run WordPress and it’s hard to understate the impact that the software has had on the world of digital publishing. Hundreds of high-profile websites, including blogs from CNN, The New York Times and Reuters, all use WordPress. Mashable isn’t a pure WordPress site anymore, but we do use it as a place to enter content. Since 2004, I personally have published millions of words using WordPress, most of those on Mashable.

WordPress was started by Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little and the open-source software has grown to include thousands of contributors. Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com and one of the biggest stewards in the development of the platform as a whole, announced last week that it had raised $50 million in a secondary stock transaction.

WordPress started as an easy, free way for users to publish their own content. If you had a web host that supported PHP and MySQL and you knew how to use FTP, getting WordPress installed took, famously, under five minutes. Today, most web hosts have one-click install buttons so that users don’t even have to bother with FTP. Hosted offerings from WordPress.com and others are also abundantly available.

Moreover, WordPress is no longer just about blogging or personal publishing. As recently as 2010, I was reticent to call WordPress a true CMS but that’s clearly no longer true. Full web applications are run on WordPress. Shopping cart systems, Twitter analytics services and even robust WordPress site management solutions can all be built on WordPress.

Plus, the larger ecosystem around WordPress — including plugins, themes, specialized hosting providers and custom solutions builders — is mammoth and still growing. Mullenweg told me earlier this year that his goal for WordPress is for it to be the “platform or operating system” for the web. That goal is coming closer to fruition with every passing month.”

Gotta Love This! The Search for “DeathStar”-like Objects!

Dyson SphereIf the Emperor has one out there, we aim to find it! Or, Dyson spheres, or ringed systems, whatever!

Hunting for Alien Megastructures

“It’s a big galaxy out there. Even the most skeptical scientist has to accept that if a civilisation like our own exists, then there’s a good chance we’re not the only one to have ever done so. When most people think about SETI (the search for extraterrestrial intellgence), they imagine someone like Ellie Arroway searching the skies for radio transmissions. But what about looking in other ways? Perhaps a highly advanced alien civilisation might build structures large enough for us to see.
Vast structures, constructed on astronomical scales by advanced civilisations, is what the field of astroengineering is all about. This, admittedly, sounds audacious – and for the human race right now, it is. For us, astroengineering is still very much the realm of thought experiments, theoretical calculations, and science fiction. So it may be surprising to know that certain astronomers have made some quite serious attempts to look for astroengineered artifacts around other stars. With telescopes becoming ever more sensitive, and images being taken of exoplanets, the idea is starting to captivate imaginations once more.

“In 1960, Freeman Dyson published a paper entitled Search for Artificial Stellar Sources of Infrared Radiation. His suggestion was that any megastructure constructed around a star should show itself by emitting more infrared light than it should. The solution was, simply, to look for any sources of infrared which appeared artificial.

Dyson put forward the ideas that any potentially advanced civilisation may need a tremendous amount of power to sustain itself. A method he proposed was to build a vast array of satellites which would enclose an entire star to harvest its energy – a concept which later came to be known as a Dyson sphere. While the concept wasn’t taken too seriously by Dyson himself, it was a powerful enough notion that it garnered a lot of attention.

Unfortunately, it isn’t as simple as looking for infrared light. Many stars, our own included, are surrounded by a disk of dust, and that dust emits plenty of infrared. To find a Dyson sphere, you need to look for a specific signature of infrared light, emitted at just the right set of wavelengths.
And that’s just what an ongoing project, headed by Dick Carrigan at Fermilab, has been doing. Astronomers regularly survey the sky to see what they might find, and Carrigan has been hunting through infrared data to search for Dyson spheres. To date, the project has a handful of candidates, but nothing definitive. Not yet.

But infrared isn’t the only way to spot Dyson spheres. In 2012 Geoff Marcy, an exoplanet researcher, was given a grant to hunt for evidence of Dyson spheres in data recorded by Kepler. In principle, any large artificial objects in orbit around other stars should be detectable in exactly the same way exoplanets are.”

Google to Deliver WiFi to Developing Countries via Blimps!

Google has a plan to get WiFi to developing countries, and it involves satellites, blimps, and ubiquitous WiFi! Can WE be a developing country too? Sigh.

Report: Google developing fund for wireless networks in emerging markets

“Google has already demonstrated its interest in making high-speed Internet across the United States with through the Fiber project, but it looks like the tech giant has a global plan too.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that the Mountain View, Calif.-based company is working on a monetary fund to build wireless networks in emerging markets.

Google hasn’t commented publicly on the report or the fund yet.

But according to the WSJ story, based on unnamed sources, these are the main points to know.

The fund is expected to fuel wireless infrastructures primarily in rural areas where wired Internet connections aren’t available, especially in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

It still remains to be seen how Google plans to go about this project, either by building the networks itself or partnering with local wireless companies — or some balance of both, depending on the market.

Such an initiative does fall in line with some of Google’s more philanthropic schemes and rhetoric, much of which CEO Larry Page reiterated at Google I/O in San Francisco last week.

But getting more people online and enabling them with wireless connectivity also has possibility to boost the mobile user base in these regions, outfitting them as prime consumers for low-cost Android smartphones, featurephones, and even tablets.”

Copy – A New Service from Barracuda Networks!

This is awesomely cool! Can you believe 15 FREE GIGS of Cloud storage for FREE, I’m telling you! Copy is a new online file syncing, sharing and storage service built on the secure Barracuda Cloud. Since its public debut less than 90 days ago, Copy already is approaching half a million users worldwide. Plus, it is run by Barracuda Networks, a leader in security, so you KNOW it is safe! Sign up at the link below:

FREE CLOUD STORAGE FROM COPY!

A cloud for people, friends, and companies.
Copy is the easiest way to store, protect and share amazing things. It keeps your computers in sync and your files available from anywhere, even on your mobile devices. With Copy, you can also easily share files with anyone publicly or privately. Copy for companies extends the cloud storage and sharing benefits into corporate environments with user and group management and added control of proprietary company data.

Origami is expressive and transformative. We think Copy should be, too.
Other art forms add more paint or cut away clay and marble. Origami, however, remains one single unbroken sheet of paper. Nothing glued on and nothing lost. Total integrity. That is why we embraced the origami crane as the symbol for Copy.

Access your content from any device with Copy…
Any file you save with Copy on your computer, smartphone, or tablet is automatically accessible from any device you use.

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FREE CLOUD STORAGE FROM COPY!

Today is Geek Pride Day!

So, I am ALWAYS proud to be a geek! But, today, we are reminded to indulge in our geekiness!

Wikipedia: “Geek Pride Day (Spanish: Día del orgullo friki ) is an initiative to promote geek culture, celebrated annually on 25 May. The date was chosen as to commemorate the release of the first Star Wars film, A New Hope on 25 May 1977 (see Star Wars Day), but shares the same date as two other similar fan “holidays”: Towel Day, for fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy trilogy by Douglas Adams, and the Glorious 25th of May for fans of Terry Pratchett’s Discworld.

The initiative originated in Spain in 2006 as “Día del Orgullo Friki” and spread around the world via the internet.”

Geek Pride Day Geekstakes on Facebook!

Hooray! Linux Mint 15 is Out!

Linux Mint And… of course, it TOTALLY rocks! Best Linux desktop in existence (in my humble opinion!)

Linux Mint 15 Announcement

Here’s my buddy, Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, take on it!

Mint 15: Today’s best Linux desktop (Review)

“As the years roll-by, every new update of Linux Mint impresses me more. Other desktop operating systems, such as Microsoft’s Windows 8 may abandon the tried-and-true windows, icons, menus, and pointer (WIMP) desktop metaphor. Others, such as Ubuntu with Unity try to keep some of the WIMP interface while expanding it for tablets and smartphones, but the Ubuntu-based Mint, with Cinnamon and MATE, has stayed true to the WIMP interface. As far as I’m concerned the latest version, Linux Mint 15, Olivia, is now not merely the best Linux desktop, it’s the best desktop operating system of all.

That’s not to say that if you’re a Windows 7 or Mac OS X Mountain Lion user you should start downloading Mint now. For desktop users Mint is better than Windows 8 and other new operating systems, such as Fedora 18 with GNOME 3.6, but it doesn’t knock the socks off older WIMP-based desktops. It’s just much better for experienced desktop users than the newer, user-hostile desktop interfaces as such as Windows 8’s Metro.

Why? The main reason is that Cinnamon, which is the Mint interface I chose to review rather than its close GNOME 2.x-based relative MATE, is designed for power-users who already know how to use a WIMP-style desktop. A Windows XP or 7 user who’s never touched Linux in their life will find Mint Cinnamon far more user-friendly than Metro.

You don’t have to take my word for it. You can download Linux Mint 15, which is now is a release candidate, and try it for yourself. Just keep in mind that thanks to Windows 8’s Secure Boot system lock-in, it’s very difficult to install any other operating system on a Windows 8 PC. The easily way of installing Mint, or anything else, on a Windows 8 is to use your PC’s Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) settings to turn Secure Boot off.

With the built-in Secure Boot bug out of the way, I think you’ll find Mint to be an exceptional desktop. In my own case, I tested 64-bit Mint on two systems. The first is a Dell XPS 8300. This powerhouse desktop comes with a 3.4GHz quad-core Intel Core i7 processor. It also has 8GBs of RAM, a 2-Terabyte hard drive, and an AMD/ATI Radeon HD 5770 graphic card. My other test system is my tank of a laptop, a Lenovo ThinkPad T520 laptop. This computer boasts a 2.5GHz Intel Core i5 Processor, 4GBs of RAM, a 500GB hard drive and an integrated Intel HD Graphics 3000 processor.

On both systems, Mint ran flawlessly. This included automatic support for the ATI graphics, a Logitech QuickCam Pro 9000, and various Wi-Fi hardware. The days when Linux had trouble with commonplace PC hardware is history. In the event, you do have exotic hardware, however, Mint now includes a Driver Manager to make it easier to manage which driver to use with your devices.

Under the hood, hardcore Linux users will find the Linux 3.8 kernel. Mint stands on the shoulders of giants. It’s built on top of Ubuntu 13.04, which, in turn, is based on Debian Linux.

Cinnamon itself is now up to version 1.8 and contains over a thousand new improvements and fixes since its last major version. The latest version of the Cinnamon file manager, Nemo, makes it simple to switch from multiple viewpoints including the oldie, but goodie, file-tree view. It also now comes with a feature that I’ve never been that much in love with: free-standing desktop applications. KDE users know them as Plasmoids, Android users know them as widgets, and I think they’re a waste of desktop space whatever you call them. But, since every desktop operating system seem to have one version of them or another, I guess a lot of people must like them and now Mint Cinnamon has them under the name of Desklets.

Above this, Mint has the usual selection of end-user software. This includes LibreOffice 4.02 for the office suite: Thunderbird 17.05 for e-mail; Firefox 21 for Web browsing, Pidgin 2.1 for instant-messaging and so on. Say, you have your own favorite applications, as I do, Mint’s Software Manager doubles as an app store and makes finding, downloading, and installing new programs easy. In my case, I switched in Evolution for Thunderbird and Chromium, Google’s pure open-source version of Chrome, for the Web browser. Installing software in Linux now is as trivial as installing a new program on an iPhone.

You can also add Linux programs that aren’t available through the Mint Software Manager. For these, simply download the DEB package version of the program, usually marked as being for Ubuntu and Debian, download it and then open the file. The package manager automatically starts and in a few seconds you’ll have such programs as Google Chrome and the Steam game client. All of these programs, whether they came with the default set or added on, ran as smoothly as silk.

I only have one serious beef about the Mint’s default software choices. They picked Totem, GNOME 3.x’s media player, for video-playback. VLC, to my way of thinking, is simply the best media-player software on any platform. Fortunately, VLC is in the Software Manager so it’s easy to install

The only really annoying thing about Mint is that you still can’t do in-place updates from an older version to Mint 15. That’s by design. Mint’s developers feel that you’ll avoid out of date software incompatibilities by forcing you to do a fresh install. True, but it also means you may need to back up and restore your home directories and files. I did this by restoring them up to an attached USB drive.

Finally, Mint has the same advantage that any Linux distribution has over its competitors: Its design is far more secure than Windows. There are such things as Linux viruses, but there have been only a handful of mostly harmless ones.. Practically speaking, Linux is the safest full desktop operating system you can run.

So, if you were to tell me today that you want a new desktop that works like your old XP Windows 7, or Ubuntu GNOME 2.x desktop, Mint 15 is what I would recommend. Yes, if you have Windows programs that won’t on Linux, or Mac OS X, then you may need to stick with Windows, but for experienced computer users, Mint 15 is now the best desktop operating system out there.”

How strongly do I feel that way? Those two test machines? They’re also my main two production systems. I’ve already made the Mint 15 upgrade and I’m glad I did.

YouTube Adds “Shoppable” Channel Feature

Speaking of YouTube, they are now making the channels on YouTube “shoppable.” By commercializing more, they gain the “eyeballs” that are viewing on YouTube for ad sales. Pretty smart. But, is it going to be pretty annoying as well?

YouTube Makes Video Channels Shoppable

“YouTube is connecting people with products in a new initiative where they can now shop for products while viewing videos on YouTube channels. According to blog post by Google, which owns YouTube, people use the video site for entertainment, learning a new skill, find new information, and shop for products.

According to the blog post, YouTube offers an opportunity for consumer goods brands to reach shoppers in the moment and provide them with an easy way to go from watching a video to purchasing a product.

Google introduced a new channel gadget on YouTube that will enable consumer goods brands to connect consumers directly with retailers throughout the entire YouTube experience, according to the blog post. It will enable shoppers to move from browsing how-to videos and featured products to finding which retailers carry them, check availability, compare prices and make a purchase.

The first to partner with Google was Unilever, which is highlighting TRESemmé as the first brand to use this new YouTube channel gadget to showcase their line of hair care solutions, according to the blog post. TRESemmé has generated more than 2.7 million views on their channel. YouTube can now connect these consumers with products they’re watching in the demonstration videos in a faster more efficient way, shortening the shopping journey.

The new gadget will be available as a premium offering for Google’s consumer goods clients, produced through Gloto, according to the blog post.”

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