CentOS replacement Rocky Linux 8.4 arrives, and proves instantly popular
Rocky Linux 8.4 is the first general availability release of the new enterprise Linux distribution.
Rocky Linux 8.4 is the first general availability release of the new enterprise Linux distribution.
Notebooks with Transmeta's power-saving Crusoe processor will hit the United States this spring, including one that includes both Windows and Linux.
Here are today’s notable headlines. You can get News To Know via email alert and RSS daily:Sam Diaz: No surprise.
Linux has become commonplace in the enterprise and increasingly takes market share from Unix in data centers. IBM has put a lot of energy into Linux and Red Hat has been a solid performer for years. Another Linux outfit worth watching: Canonical's Ubuntu.
Control-system specialist Verano unwraps a security-enhanced Linux-based package to help utility companies, manufacturers and others protect their key infrastructure.
News to know intro:Sam Diaz: HP announces $2.7 billion acquisition of 3Com; raises outlookLarry Dignan: Cisco vs.
As a long time Linux (and Unix) user, I couldn't let Jesse Berst's 'Gambler' editorial go uncontested. But the problem is I basically agree with his main point, just not how he got there.
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison took the stage for the final keynote at Oracle OpenWorld 2009 today - an afternoon session that followed lunch and got off to a rough start when Infosys CEO Kris Gopalakrishnan (who was scheduled to speak after Ellison) came on stage first and spent 45 minutes delivering a somewhat dry presentation.It probably didn't help that attendees were reminded that there's a big party tonight.
Red Hat took a major step forward today in its goal to establish the open source kernel-based VM hypervisor as a leading virtualization platform for desktops and servers and a core component of its cloud computing strategy -- the release of Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 3.0.
From the Large Hadron Collider to the Tesla Model S, this 25-year-old operating system can be found in some amazing places. But there's one place Windows still has the edge.