New Products
In an effort to expand the reach of the newly open Symbian platform, Open Kernel Labs has released OK:Symbian, an open-source, ready-to-run, paravirtualized version of Symbian. OK:Symbian enables the Symbian platform to be used as a guest operating system running in a secure hypercell on top of the OK Labs OKL4 microvisor. Open Kernel Labs says that its HyperCell Architecture allows for higher levels of security and robustness and enables the use of the Symbian platform in new lower-cost devices and in new ways. OK:Symbian also lets handset OEMs, MNOs and mobile-phone users benefit from the tens of thousands of existing Symbian applications and the global developer community for the platform. In related news, Open Kernel Labs announced its joining of the Symbian Foundation, as well as its contribution of OK:Symbian to the Symbian Open Source community.
The new Openbravo ERP 2.50 was recently released by its eponymous parent company. In the new 2.50 version, the Web-based, open-source Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and Point of Sale (POS) solution for businesses is now available as a professional subscription service. The new release also introduces a modular architecture and adds a host of new features and functions, such as support for right-to-left languages (such as Arabic and Chinese), additional smart-build processes, autosave, more user alerts and enhanced support for complex organizations. Furthermore, Openbravo states that it is easier than ever before for the community and third parties to customize and create their own new features and functions. One can browse and use shared functionality created by other users or deploy third-party modules shared on the new Openbravo Forge.
The Marketcetera open-source platform for automated trading recently announced a significantly upgraded version 1.5. According to Marketcetera, stock-market data volumes are exploding and “automated trading is becoming more prevalent on the buy side and across more asset classes, not just equities”. The company also says that its application helps investment firms make fast, intelligent trading decisions at lower costs per transaction. New features in the latest release include real-time intraday position and profit-and-loss monitoring; simplicity and security for multiuser installations; Level 2 and depth-of-book market data and strategy agent integration via the new Strategy Studio.
The news out of LinMin is its upgraded version 5.4 of LinMin Bare Metal Provisioning, a system provisioning and imaging solution that can be implemented by IT organizations of any size with limited budgets. Combining server provisioning and disk imaging in a single product, LinMin is a solution for deploying, repurposing and recovering the commodity hardware infrastructure layer used in hosting, corporate, cloud and other data-center environments. LinMin says that the new release adds the “Turbo-Imaging” high-performance disk imaging subsystem for disaster recovery, new operating system media management, updated Linux and Windows Server provisioning, extensive logging and others. The firm also adds that Turbo-Imaging adds automatic filesystem detection, intelligent compression and other capabilities to ease the rollback of systems back to a known good state.
The good folks at Talend have released the Talend Integration Suite MPx, a new enterprise data-integration platform that the company says “is designed to help organizations attain the highest levels of performance and shatter the limits typically associated with traditional data integration processes”. The solution is based on the Talend Integration Suite while adding the new FileScale technology, a breakthrough that allows organizations to conduct highly parallelized processing and reduce limitations inherent in traditional data-integration architectures. It further allows integration processes to sort, filter and merge data, perform aggregation and arithmetic functions, and transform and ensure the compliance of data. Finally, the new package features multiple levels of massive parallelization, allowing the execution of separate subprocesses in parallel, breakdown of data sets into many parallel streams and the ability to leverage parallel database loaders.
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 |
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- May 2013 Issue of Linux Journal: Raspberry Pi
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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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