Alpine Linux 3.6.0 Released

An anonymous reader quotes DistroWatch:
Natanael Copa has announced the release of Alpine Linux 3.6.0. Alpine Linux is an independent, minimal operating system that is well suited to running servers, routers and firewalls. Version 3.6.0 introduces support for 64-bit POWER machines, 64-bit IBM z Systems computers and features many up to date packages, including PHP 7.1, LLVM 4.0 and version 6.3 of the GNU Compiler.

“Noteworthy new packages” include Rust 1.17.0 and Cargo 0.18.0, as well as Julia 0.5.2, as we ll as “significant updates” like Go 1.8, Python 3.6, and Ruby 2.4. And in addition, “MD5 and SHA-1 hashes have been removed from APKBUILDs, being obsoleted by SHA-512.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Alpine Linux 3.6.0 Released

Strangest Computer Designs of the '70s

Lazy Game Reviews has a new video for the nostalgics out there. One of the more noteworthy mentions include the Xerox Alto, which was the first system to flaunt the concept of a GUI. This decade was pretty historic for computing in general, as computers became affordable for the general public due to the mass production of the microprocessor in 1971.



The 1970s. As the personal computer concept was still being defined, many of these machines appeared “strange” at the time simply because they were the first of their kind! Let’s take a look at some that stand out the most for their design and significance.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Strangest Computer Designs of the ’70s

Apple's MacBooks: Still the Most Reliable

The latest survey out of Consumer Reports suggests that Apple desktops and laptops have the best reliability and tech support: the trouble rates are considerably low at 15 percent and 17 percent, respectively. The reader score for the company’s tech support is also admirable at 82 percent. Based on the dependability of the company’s products, the writer believes that the so-called Apple Tax is perfectly justifiable, assuming the mythical premium truly exists.



Among the top laptop brands, Apple’s “broken or not working as well” percentage is 17. Other brand percentages: Samsung 27; Dell 29; HP 30; Lenovo 31; and Asus 33. Among desktops Apple’s trouble rate is 15 percent. Other brands: Lenovo 24; Samsung 25; Dell 27; HP 27; and Asus 29. CR cautions that differences of 5 percentage points are not significant. Essentially, there’s Apple and then everybody else. The differences are even more stark on tech support. The reader score for Apple was 82, while number 2 Microsoft earned a 68, with Dell at 56. A reader score of 80, means respondents are very satisfied on average; 60, fairly well-satisfied; and 40, somewhat dissatisfied.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Apple’s MacBooks: Still the Most Reliable

Reid Hoffman, Bill Gates, Others Ante Up Another $30 Million To Change.org the World

theodp writes: Fortune reports that LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman is “leading a $30 million funding round in Change.org, a for-profit petition and fundraising website focused on social and political change.” Joining Hoffman in this round, as well as an earlier $25 million round in 2014, is Bill Gates. Change.org, Hoffman explained in a Friday LinkedIn post, “helps enable a world where you don’t need to hire a lobbyist to have real impact on the issues and policies that matter to you.” He added, “In its decade of existence, Change.org petitions have resulted in more than 21,000 victories, i.e., instances in which a government agency, corporation, or other entity has changed a regulation or a policy in the face of a Change.org petition urging it to do so.” Last year, Hoffman joined Gates and some of the biggest names in tech and corporate America who threw their weight behind a Change.org petition that tried to get Congress to fund K-12 Computer Science education. The Change.org petition fell short of its 150,000-signature goal despite claims of support from 90% of the parents of the nation’s 58 million K-12 schoolchildren (based on a Google-funded survey of 1,685 parents), widespread press coverage (including a full-page ad in petition signer Jeff Bezos’s Washington Post), lobbying efforts by the tech coalition that organized the petition (which counts LinkedIn and Microsoft among its members), and even some free PR from Change.org.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Reid Hoffman, Bill Gates, Others Ante Up Another Million To Change.org the World

How to Abandon iOS and Switch to Android

Having guided you through the not-all-that-straightforward process of switching from Android to iOS, we’re back to tell you how to go in the opposite direction. (Make your mind up will you?) Going from Apple-powered devices to Google’s platform is either ridiculously easy or rather taxing, depending on your current…

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Source: Gizmodo – How to Abandon iOS and Switch to Android

Musk Calls Himself an "Idiot" for Complicating Model X Configurations

Tesla’s Model X is missing the American SUV craze due to its complicated design, and the CEO is blaming himself for not starting out with a more basic configuration like the company did with the Model S and upcoming Model 3. While the X is a beautiful vehicle with unique features such as Falcon Wing doors, the car has been criticized for not being much of an actual SUV due to a lack of utility. Many owners have also reported repeating technology issues.



Musk has chalked up challenges with the Model X to making the vehicle too complicated. Features including the double-hinged falcon-wing doors have constrained production and contributed to a costly $82,500 starting price. For Tesla, the lack of cheaper and easier to produce configurations has meant missing out on roaring demand amid America’s SUV boom. “Luxury SUVs are really hot right now, and the Model X should have been a big hit and broadened Tesla’s audience,” said Michelle Krebs, an analyst with Autotrader.com. “You don’t hear a lot of buzz about the Model X, and when you do, it’s the negative stuff.”

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Musk Calls Himself an “Idiot” for Complicating Model X Configurations

Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials 'Equel' Gets a Title, New Hero, and Excerpt

Philip Pullman is back with his first addition to the His Dark Materials saga in almost two decades. We now know what the first novel in The Book of Dust trilogy will be called and, roughly, what it’s about. There’s even an excerpt out for fans eager to dive back into Lyra’s world.

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Source: Gizmodo – Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials ‘Equel’ Gets a Title, New Hero, and Excerpt

Save Big On Adidas Socks, Underwear, and More, Courtesy of Amazon

Now that the weather’s nice enough to exercise outdoors (or at least tell yourself that you will), Amazon’s running a pretty solid Memorial Day sale on Adidas athletic accessories. You won’t find any tops or bottoms, but this is a great chance to stock up on socks, underwear, hats, and more.

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Source: Gizmodo – Save Big On Adidas Socks, Underwear, and More, Courtesy of Amazon

Wormable Code-Execution Bug Lurked In Samba For 7 Years

Long-time Slashdot reader williamyf was the first to share news of “a wormable bug [that] has remained undetected for seven years in Samba verions 3.5.0 onwards.” Ars Technica reports:
Researchers with security firm Rapid7…said they detected 110,000 devices exposed on the internet that appeared to run vulnerable versions of Samba. 92,500 of them appeared to run unsupported versions of Samba for which no patch was available… Those who are unable to patch immediately can work around the vulnerability by adding the line nt pipe support = no to their Samba configuration file and restart the network’s SMB daemon. The change will prevent clients from fully accessing some network computers and may disable some expected functions for connected Windows machines.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s CERT group issued an anouncement urging sys-admins to update their systems, though SC Magazine cites a security researcher arguing this attack surface is much smaller than that of the Wannacry ransomware, partly because Samba is just “not as common as Windows architectures.” But the original submission also points out that while the patch came in fast, “the ‘Many eyes’ took seven years to ‘make the bug shallow’.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Wormable Code-Execution Bug Lurked In Samba For 7 Years

Say goodbye to the video store, hello to the non-profit foundation

120,000 movies, six minutes. Ars takes the Scarecrow Video tour. (video link)

Despite fond memories running to Blockbuster as a kid, these days you probably have fewer video-store options while away at a cabin or vacation home this Memorial Day. Another one of the formative shops for our staff—Dallas-based Premiere Video—shutter its doors just this month, in fact. So as a tribute, let Ars remind you of our farewell tour at Seattle’s Scarecrow Video, whose shift to non-profit status managed to infuse new life into the shop. This resurfaced report first ran in August 2014, but the video store continues to endure three years later.

SEATTLE—On a sunny August weeknight, Matt Lynch, a clerk at longtime Seattle rental store Scarecrow Video, grabbed a cup of ice from the shop’s relatively new coffee counter. Cutely named VHS-presso, the counter was one of the shop’s many efforts in recent years to spur interest, attract more renters, and get people to walk into a video store once again.

There’s also the shop’s screening room, opened just over a year ago to host cult and niche movie nights by way of a giant screen, a smattering of speakers, and some comfy chairs. Lynch, among the shop floor’s elder statesmen at 12 years of experience, pulled one of those chairs out to sit and chew on ice while marveling at the room’s walls. The shelves are full of classic VHS tapes. The store prides itself on its vast VHS collection, totaling over 15,000 tapes at this point. But neither that fact, nor the shop’s recent additions, resulted in more rentals or sales as of late.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Say goodbye to the video store, hello to the non-profit foundation

Former Mozilla CTO: "Chrome Won"

Mozilla’s former CTO decided to examine the current state of the browser “war” after reading a blog post by Firefox’s Director of Product Marketing discussing Google’s push for everyone to use Chrome and only Chrome, who found that there isn’t really any kind of battle left: Chrome has basically “obliterated” every browser and competition is futile. He doesn’t think Google has won the web, however, suggesting that the internet is moving beyond the traditional browser.



I don’t think there will be a new browser war where Firefox or some other competitor re-captures market share from Chrome. It’s like launching a new and improved horse in the year 2017. We all drive cars now. Some people still use horses, and there is value to horses, but technology has moved on when it comes to transportation. Does this mean Google owns the Web if they own Chrome? No. Absolutely not. Browsers are what the Web looked like in the first decades of the Internet. Mobile disrupted the Web, but the Web embraced mobile and at the heart of most apps beats a lot of JavaScript and HTTPS and REST these days. The future Web will look yet again completely different. Much will survive, and some parts of it will get disrupted.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Former Mozilla CTO: “Chrome Won”

Go Greek This Grilling Season With Chicken Souvlaki

Welcome back to Sunday Sustenance, a weekly column where we cook for the laziest day of the week. In our grand debut last week, I highlighted the hot new #trending #cloudeggs. Now that Memorial Day is here, it’s time to get outside and grill — we’re making souvlaki.

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Source: LifeHacker – Go Greek This Grilling Season With Chicken Souvlaki

A Digital Thermometer Makes Cooking Infinitely Easier

Temperature is probably the most important variable in cooking, but it can be hard to control if you don’t know what it is. Sure, there are various tests you can employ to test “doneness” of various foods—the ol’ palm trick for steaks; the toothpick inserted in a cake—but these only give you approximations. If you…

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Source: LifeHacker – A Digital Thermometer Makes Cooking Infinitely Easier

Retro Revival: A-EON Resurrects The Amiga With The AmigaOne X5000 And They Aren't The Only Ones

Retro Revival: A-EON Resurrects The Amiga With The AmigaOne X5000 And They Aren't The Only Ones
Even after more than two decades since the company’s demise, the Commodore Amiga still has loyal fans that refuse to let the innovative platform die. Proof of the Amiga’s cult-like following is evident all over the web, but a review of the A-EON AmigaOne X5000 that just hit over at ArsTechnica has reignited the conversation in modern tech

Source: Hot Hardware – Retro Revival: A-EON Resurrects The Amiga With The AmigaOne X5000 And They Aren’t The Only Ones

New Zealand Joins Space Race With Successful Launch Of Lightweight 'Electron' Rocket

“Rocket Lab: We have lift-off!” wrote long-time Slashdot reader ClarkMills on Wednesday. “History made as Electron launches successfully from Mahia.” The New Zealand Herald reports:

Rocket Lab engineers have started analyzing data from yesterday’s historic launch from the Mahia Peninsula that took the company to space but not able to complete its orbital mission. Lift-off at 4.20 pm was the first orbital-class rocket launched from a private launch site in the world. New Zealand became the 11th country with potential to launch cargo into space, joining superpowers and tech heavyweights. The Government hailed the lift-off as a major milestone for the country’s space industry…
“We didn’t quite reach orbit and we’ll be investigating why, however reaching space in our first test puts us in an incredibly strong position to accelerate the commercial phase of our program,” said founder and chief executive Peter Beck.

Beck added they’d developed their rocket “from scratch” in under four years, and the company’s official Twitter feed is now proudly tweeting photos and videos from the launch.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – New Zealand Joins Space Race With Successful Launch Of Lightweight ‘Electron’ Rocket

Gunman at Phoenix Comicon, Claiming To Be The Punisher, Targeted Jason David Frank

A man was arrested Thursday for sneaking into Phoenix Comicon with a collection of guns and other weapons, saying he wanted to hurt law enforcement. More details have since emerged that paint a disturbing picture about the incident, including a vendetta against one of the Power Rangers.

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Source: Gizmodo – Gunman at Phoenix Comicon, Claiming To Be The Punisher, Targeted Jason David Frank

British Airways Grounds Flights Following Global IT Problems

It’s a holiday weekend, but British Airways passengers aren’t getting the relaxing time off that they’d hoped for. Following a “major IT system failure” that “is causing very severe disruption to our flight operations worldwide,” the airline says that flights will have to be grounded until the problems are resolved.

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Source: Gizmodo – British Airways Grounds Flights Following Global IT Problems