New Products
Donald E. Knuth's monumental book series The Art of Computer Programming has deep roots. When the distinguished Stanford Professor Emeritus Knuth began putting his ideas to paper, John F. Kennedy was president, Don Draper was Madison Avenue's hottest ad man, and most of us were merely potential zygotes. Publisher Addison-Wesley says that the first three volumes of Art of Computer Programming are “widely recognized as the definitive description of classical computer science”. Practicing programmers have long applied his “cookbook” solutions to their day-to-day problems. Now comes the long-awaited fourth volume to compose a new four-volume set. The new volume 4 brings together definitive new coverage of broadword computation, combinatorial generation, fundamental combinatorial objects and other topics. Bill Gates has said that people who read the entire set should send him their résumé. If you get that far, we imagine Linus would love to see it too!
The OpenERP open-source suite of comprehensive business applications recently bounded up to version 6.0. OpenERP's eponymous developer noted that a number of factors warranted the release's designation, including advancement in simplicity and ease of deployment, the ability to build an ERP system at one's own pace, greatly improved affordability and accessibility for companies of all sizes, and more than 800 contributions from its global community of open-source developers. Further, OpenERP v6 now is available not only as an on-site version, but also as an SaaS platform, which the firm says “radically reduces the cost and complexity of an ERP deployment”. Some of the hundreds of additional new features include extended multicompany functionality marketing campaign management, simplified accounting interface, tracking of tickets for support and after-sales services, push and pulled logistics flows, talent acquisition and manufacturing scrap management.
The developers at GrammaTech have released a fresh new version 3.6 of CodeSonar, a source code analysis tool that performs a whole-program, interprocedural analysis on code and identifies complex programming bugs. Version 3.6 adds two significant improvements, namely a significantly improved GUI, which streamlines developer interaction and boosts productivity, as well as a more efficient analysis engine, which can reduce analysis time on large code bases, says GrammaTech, by up to a third. GrammaTech also says that CodeSonar's unique strength is “its ability to identify far more program-crashing defects and security vulnerabilities than competing static-analysis tools”. Another advantage is CodeSonar's new GUI that “enables developers to quickly digest key information, understand and identify the most important issues and prioritize fixes”. CodeSonar runs on Linux, Solaris, Windows and Mac OS X operating systems and supports most compilers.
The developers over at The Document Foundation are giddy about their new LibreOffice 3.3, the first stable release of this free, power-packed and open-source personal productivity suite for Linux, Windows and Macintosh. Based on and containing all features of OpenOffice.org, LibreOffice contains the Writer, Calc, Impress, Draw, Math and Base applications. Some of the many new features include compatibility with SVG files, improved ergonomics in Calc, and Microsoft Works and Lotus Word Pro document import filters. The Document Foundation says it now has more than 100 developers working on LibreOffice.
Bibble Labs' bills its new Bibble Pro and Bibble Lite, both nudging up to version 5.2, as “an ambitious project to revolutionize digital photographic workflow”, streamlining it to run “at the speed of light”. The applications, according to Bibble Labs, offer tools for photographic editing and organizing capabilities all at “blazing speed in a sleek, modern interface”. Version 5.2 adds, among other things, support for 14 new RAW formats, including Nikon D3100, D7000, P7000 and Panasonic LX5, GF2 and GH2, and includes significant improvements to the application's selective editing capability. Both Bibble 5.2 Pro and Bibble 5.2 Lite are available for Linux, Windows and Mac OS.
James Gray is Products Editor for Linux Journal
Today’s modular x86 servers are compute-centric, designed as a least common denominator to support a wide range of IT workloads. Those generic, virtualized IT workloads have much different resource optimization requirements than hyperscale and cloud applications. They have resulted in a “one size fits all” enterprise IT architecture that is not optimized for a specific set of IT workloads, and especially not emerging hyperscale workloads, such as web applications, big data, and object storage. In this report, you will learn how shifting the focus from traditional compute-centric IT architectures to an innovative disaggregated fabric-based architecture can optimize and scale your data center.
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| Making Linux and Android Get Along (It's Not as Hard as It Sounds) | May 16, 2013 |
| Drupal Is a Framework: Why Everyone Needs to Understand This | May 15, 2013 |
| Home, My Backup Data Center | May 13, 2013 |
| Non-Linux FOSS: Seashore | May 10, 2013 |
| Trying to Tame the Tablet | May 08, 2013 |
| Dart: a New Web Programming Experience | May 07, 2013 |
- New Products
- Making Linux and Android Get Along (It's Not as Hard as It Sounds)
- Drupal Is a Framework: Why Everyone Needs to Understand This
- A Topic for Discussion - Open Source Feature-Richness?
- Home, My Backup Data Center
- New Products
- RSS Feeds
- Trying to Tame the Tablet
- What's the tweeting protocol?
- Dart: a New Web Programming Experience
Enter to Win an Adafruit Prototyping Pi Plate Kit for Raspberry Pi

It's Raspberry Pi month at Linux Journal. Each week in May, Adafruit will be giving away a Pi-related prize to a lucky, randomly drawn LJ reader. Winners will be announced weekly.
Fill out the fields below to enter to win this week's prize-- a Prototyping Pi Plate Kit for Raspberry Pi.
Congratulations to our winners so far:
- 5-8-13, Pi Starter Pack: Jack Davis
- 5-15-13, Pi Model B 512MB RAM: Patrick Dunn
- Next winner announced on 5-21-13!
Free Webinar: Linux Backup and Recovery
Most companies incorporate backup procedures for critical data, which can be restored quickly if a loss occurs. However, fewer companies are prepared for catastrophic system failures, in which they lose all data, the entire operating system, applications, settings, patches and more, reducing their system(s) to “bare metal.” After all, before data can be restored to a system, there must be a system to restore it to.
In this one hour webinar, learn how to enhance your existing backup strategies for better disaster recovery preparedness using Storix System Backup Administrator (SBAdmin), a highly flexible bare-metal recovery solution for UNIX and Linux systems.




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