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Linux News for Dec 19, 2012
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A peek at the geek heading LCA 2013 (Dec 19, 2012, 23:00)
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Evolution 3.7.3 Brings Numerous Fixes (Dec 19, 2012, 19:00)
Softpedia: Evolution 3.7.3 is a development release that brings numerous fixes and improvements
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Parallella Supercomputing for the masses (Dec 19, 2012, 15:00)
LinuxUser: We talk to Andreas Olofsson, founder and chief executive of Adapteva, about his company's project to create a $99 many-core pocket-sized supercomputer: Parallella
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Another Foundation Pops Up - The Krita Foundation (Dec 19, 2012, 14:00)
OStatic: The Krita Foundation has been created to support the development of Krita
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VBoxHeadless - Running Virtual Machines With VirtualBox 4.2 On A Headless Ubuntu 12.10 Server (Dec 19, 2012, 13:00)
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How to harden your RHEL 5 servers (Dec 19, 2012, 12:00)
ITworld: It's not hard to harden RHEL
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Crowdfunding Piwik 2.0 (Dec 19, 2012, 11:00)
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Are Google Chromebooks Selling? Google Apps Partner Has Answers (Dec 19, 2012, 10:00)
The VAR Guy: Amid all the mainstream hype about Windows 8, Surface tablets and Apple iPads, the Google Chromebook strategy quietly marches forward.
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After three years, Slax Linux reborn with Version 7.0 (Dec 19, 2012, 09:00)
Computer World: There's no denying 2012 has been a fruitful year for Linux distributions in general, but something about it has also seemed to favor the rebirth of distros we hadn't heard from in years.
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Chumby developer building open source laptop (Dec 19, 2012, 08:00)
The H Open: Andrew 'bunnie' Huang has announced he is planning to build a DIY laptop from openly documented hardware in an effort currently codenamed "Novena".
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Author Gabriella Coleman Expands on Role of Linux in Hacker Culture (Dec 19, 2012, 05:00)
Linux.com: First a bit of a caveat about hacker culture: when I started fieldwork, it was clear that while hackers tend to be a bit obsessive about computers, open source is just one part of what makes up this diverse culture.
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Android Is Bigger, But Here's Why Apple Is Still the Undisputed App Cash Kin (Dec 19, 2012, 02:00)
Wired: Sure, for Google Play there is still a huge revenue gap to close, but it is gradually closing, and either Apple changes its approval process or Google Play won’t be in second place for long.
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