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Coming up in this episode 1. The History of ~~Raspbian~~ Raspberry Pi OS 2. What we've been doing with Pi's 3. And we run something over the break Watch the video for this episode on Youtube (https://youtu.be/nLPuojqJbK4) https://youtu.be/nLPuojqJbK4 0:00 Cold Open 1:36 SBC, One, Two, Three 17:24 Raspberry Pi History: The Early Days 19:55 2006 - 2012 22:22 2012 - 2014 26:26 2014 - 2017 33:28 2017 - 2020 37:05 2020 - 2023 43:12 Hot Pis and Hot Takes 1:07:41 Next Season: A Twofer 1:16:36 Stinger Banter ZimaBoard (https://www.zimaboard.com) NanoPi R4S (https://wiki.friendlyelec.com/wiki/index.php/NanoPi_R4S) NanoPi R2S (https://wiki.friendlyelec.com/wiki/index.php/NanoPi_R2S) IPFire (https://www.ipfire.org) OPNsense (https://opnsense.org) OpenWrt (https://openwrt.org) Announcements
On The Cloud Pod this week, AWS Enterprise Support adds incident detection and response, the announcement of Google Cloud Spanner, and Oracle expands to Spain. Thank you to our sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides top notch cloud and DevOps engineers to the world's most innovative companies. Initiatives stalled because you're having trouble hiring? Foghorn can be burning down your DevOps and Cloud backlogs as soon as next week. Episode Highlights ⏰ AWS Enterprise Support adds incident detection and response ⏰ You can now get a 90-day free trial of Google Cloud Spanner ⏰ Oracle opens its newest cloud infrastructure region in Spain Top Quote
In episode 106 of our SAP on Azure video podcast we talk about High availability for SAP NetWeaver on Azure VMs on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications with simple mount architecture and NFS, Simple Mount Structure for SAP Application Platform, SAP Notes relevant for Oracle, SAP, and Azure, upcoming SAP TechEd 2022, Quality Check for SAP workloads on Azure and Episode #3 of the All Things SAP on Azure show covering SAP Deployment Automation Framework. Then we have Pankaj Meshram joining us to provide an update on the Azure Landing Zone Accelerator. https://www.saponazurepodcast.de/episode106 https://youtu.be/RjihsFM511M #SAPonAzure
Bonjour à tous et bienvenue dans le ZDTech, le podcast quotidien de la rédaction de ZDNet. Je m'appelle Guillaume Serries, et aujourd'hui je vous explique pourquoi le langage de programmation Rust, rouille en anglais, pourrait rapidement intégrer le noyau du système d'exploitation Linux. Linus Torvalds, le créateur de Linux, aimerait voir le langage de programmation Rust intégré au noyau du système d'exploitation lors de la prochaine version majeure. Mais ce n'est pas tout à fait gagné. Car cet atterrissage du langage de programmation Rust sur Linux serait tout bonnement révolutionnaire. Depuis plus de trois décennies, Linux est écrit à l'aide du langage de programmation C. Linux est même certainement la réalisation logicielle la plus remarquable écrite en langage C. Mais ces dernières années, de plus en plus de développeurs utilisent le langage de développement Rust pour faire évoluer Linux. Au point que Rust est désormais le deuxième langage de Linux. "J'aimerais que la fusion avec Rust soit lancée dans la prochaine version, mais nous verrons" a confié a ZDNet le père de Linux à l'occasion du tout récent Open Source Summit qui vient de se tenir à Austin, au Texas. Il faut dire que le calendrier est serré. Linus Torvalds et les autres mainteneurs du noyau Linux sont actuellement en train de travailler sur la version Linux 5.19, qui doit être mise à disposition des utilisateurs au début du mois d'août. Et le délai moyen entre les nouvelles versions du noyau principal est de 9 à 10 semaines. Donc Rust pourrait être intégré au noyau dans sa version 5.20, qui devrait arriver fin octobre ou début novembre 2022. Alors à ce moment du podcast vous vous dites, "ok, mais pourquoi est-il si important de passer de C à Rust ?" Et bien le langage de programmation Rust, proposé par Mozilla depuis 2010, se prête plus facilement à l'écriture de logiciels sécurisés. Et par ailleurs, ses performances sont comparables à celles de C en ce qui concerne la vitesse d'exécution. Pour Samartha Chandrashekar, chef de produit AWS, Rust "permet d'assurer la sécurité des threads et d'éviter les erreurs liées à la mémoire, comme les débordements de tampon qui peuvent conduire à des failles de sécurité." Et cet avis semble partagé par un nombre important de développeurs, dont Linus Torvalds. Mais ce qui est clair d'ors et déjà, c'est que personne ne va réécrire la totalité des quelques 30 millions de lignes du noyau Linux en Rust. Seules les évolutions du noyau sont concernées par cette évolution de langage de programmation. Et ces évolutions sont l'utilisation des API existantes dans le noyau, le support de l'architecture et la compatibilité de l'interface binaire d'application entre Rust et C. Donc, si tout se passe bien, vous pouvez vous attendre à voir du Rust dans le noyau Linux avant la fin de l'année. Ensuite, il commencera à apparaître dans les principales distributions Linux telles que Debian, Ubuntu, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server et Red Hat Enterprise Linux, d'ici 2023.
Learn about SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, the leading Linux platform for hosting SAP workloads, including SAP HANA, SAP NetWeaver and SAP S/4HANA.
Ein neuer Monat, ein neues CVE! Dirty Pipe beschäftigt uns am Anfang des Monats, bevor zwei Jubiläen für Freude sorgen. Der Raspberry Pi wurde 10 Jahre alt - und - haben wir euch eigentlich schon erzählt, dass wir seit 20 Jahren ArchLinux nutzen? Uyuni führt lang ersehnte Ubuntu-Errata ein, während sich Red Hat für Automotive einsetzt. Die brandneuen openSUSE-, SLE- und Fedora-Betas stehen vor der Tür und Oracle unternimmt nach langer Zeit einen Schritt um Solaris wiederzubeleben. Asahi Linux präsentiert ein erstes Alpha-Image für Apple M1-Geräte und setzt damit einen beachtlichen Meilenstein. Links zur Episode: Ubuntu 20.04.4 unterstützt Framework-Notebook offiziell: https://community.frame.work/t/ubuntu-20-04-4-lts-on-the-framework-laptop/5702SVA Focus On auf Twitter: https://twitter.com/sva_focusonCVE-2022-0847: https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2022-0847Dirty Pipe: https://www.heise.de/news/Linux-Dirty-Pipe-beschert-Root-Rechte-6541556.htmlWeiterführende Dirty Pipe-Details: https://dirtypipe.cm4all.com/Intel kauft Linutronix: https://www.linux-magazin.de/news/linutronix-intel-uebernimmt-x86-maintainer-des-linux-kernel/Intel investiert in der EU: https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/intel-magdeburg-101.htmlSVA Podcast-Episode zum 30.Linux-Jubliäum mit Linutronix-CTO Thomas Gleixner: https://ageofdevops.de/index.php/podcast/e22/Uyuni 2022.02: https://www.uyuni-project.org/doc/2022.02/release-notes-uyuni-server.htmlRaspberry Pi wird 10 Jahre alt: https://projects-raspberry.com/raspberry-pi-celebrates-its-10th-birthday/Astro Pi: https://astro-pi.org/CentOS AutoSD: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=CentOS-AutoSD-AnnouncedAlmaLinux 8.5 nun auf POWER stabil: https://almalinux.org/blog/almalinux-for-powerpc-85-stable-now-available/AlmaLinux auf Azure: https://dev.to/almalinux/almalinux-now-available-on-microsoft-azure-azure-sponsors-almalinux-2895AMD unterstützt AlmaLinux: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=AMD-Joins-AlmaLinuxNavy Linux macht doch weiter: https://twitter.com/navylinux/status/1497988150907576320RPM Fusion für EL9: https://twitter.com/rpmfusion_team/status/1497136341045460992EPEL Office Hours: https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/join-us-for-the-epel-office-hours-every-month/37235Oracle Solaris 11.4 CBE-Ankündigung: https://blogs.oracle.com/solaris/post/announcing-the-first-oracle-solaris-114-cbeOracle Solaris 12 verschwindet von der Roadmap (2017): https://www.theregister.com/2017/01/18/solaris_12_disappears_from_oracles_roadmap/OpenIndiana-Projekt: https://www.openindiana.org/Oracle Solaris 11.4 CBE-Repositoriy: http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/en/index.shtmlopenSUSE Leap 15 SP4-Beta: https://get.opensuse.org/testing/SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4 Public Beta: https://www.suse.com/c/suse-linux-enterprise-15-service-pack-4-public-beta-is-out/openSUSE Leap 15 SP4-Roadmap: https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Roadmap#Schedule_for_openSUSE_Leap_15.4SUSE Tick-Tock-Modell: https://www.suse.com/c/how-suse-builds-its-enterprise-linux-distribution-part-4/SUSE-Musikvideos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6sYHytyKN2-X93TurF3JptW8qSVm0DzASUSECON digital: https://susecon.com/NVIDIA-Leak: https://www.computerbase.de/2022-03/lapsuss-nvidia-ransom-hack/NVIDIA-Zertifikate werden missbraucht: https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-driver-code-signing-malwareFedora 36-Changeset: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/36/ChangeSetOpen Source-Treiber für PowerVR Rogue: https://twitter.com/alyssarzg/status/1499777071186391043Asahi Linux Alpha-Image: https://asahilinux.org/2022/03/asahi-linux-alpha-release/Asahi Linux für Apple M1 Ultra: https://twitter.com/marcan42/status/1501271229763706882Pine QuartzPro64: https://www.pine64.org/2022/03/15/march-update-introducing-
Ein neuer Monat, ein neues CVE! Dirty Pipe beschäftigt uns am Anfang des Monats, bevor zwei Jubiläen für Freude sorgen. Der Raspberry Pi wurde 10 Jahre alt - und - haben wir euch eigentlich schon erzählt, dass wir seit 20 Jahren ArchLinux nutzen? Uyuni führt lang ersehnte Ubuntu-Errata ein, während sich Red Hat für Automotive einsetzt. Die brandneuen openSUSE-, SLE- und Fedora-Betas stehen vor der Tür und Oracle unternimmt nach langer Zeit einen Schritt um Solaris wiederzubeleben. Asahi Linux präsentiert ein erstes Alpha-Image für Apple M1-Geräte und setzt damit einen beachtlichen Meilenstein. Links zur Episode: Ubuntu 20.04.4 unterstützt Framework-Notebook offiziell: https://community.frame.work/t/ubuntu-20-04-4-lts-on-the-framework-laptop/5702SVA Focus On auf Twitter: https://twitter.com/sva_focusonCVE-2022-0847: https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2022-0847Dirty Pipe: https://www.heise.de/news/Linux-Dirty-Pipe-beschert-Root-Rechte-6541556.htmlWeiterführende Dirty Pipe-Details: https://dirtypipe.cm4all.com/Intel kauft Linutronix: https://www.linux-magazin.de/news/linutronix-intel-uebernimmt-x86-maintainer-des-linux-kernel/Intel investiert in der EU: https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/intel-magdeburg-101.htmlSVA Podcast-Episode zum 30.Linux-Jubliäum mit Linutronix-CTO Thomas Gleixner: https://ageofdevops.de/index.php/podcast/e22/Uyuni 2022.02: https://www.uyuni-project.org/doc/2022.02/release-notes-uyuni-server.htmlRaspberry Pi wird 10 Jahre alt: https://projects-raspberry.com/raspberry-pi-celebrates-its-10th-birthday/Astro Pi: https://astro-pi.org/CentOS AutoSD: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=CentOS-AutoSD-AnnouncedAlmaLinux 8.5 nun auf POWER stabil: https://almalinux.org/blog/almalinux-for-powerpc-85-stable-now-available/AlmaLinux auf Azure: https://dev.to/almalinux/almalinux-now-available-on-microsoft-azure-azure-sponsors-almalinux-2895AMD unterstützt AlmaLinux: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=AMD-Joins-AlmaLinuxNavy Linux macht doch weiter: https://twitter.com/navylinux/status/1497988150907576320RPM Fusion für EL9: https://twitter.com/rpmfusion_team/status/1497136341045460992EPEL Office Hours: https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/join-us-for-the-epel-office-hours-every-month/37235Oracle Solaris 11.4 CBE-Ankündigung: https://blogs.oracle.com/solaris/post/announcing-the-first-oracle-solaris-114-cbeOracle Solaris 12 verschwindet von der Roadmap (2017): https://www.theregister.com/2017/01/18/solaris_12_disappears_from_oracles_roadmap/OpenIndiana-Projekt: https://www.openindiana.org/Oracle Solaris 11.4 CBE-Repositoriy: http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/en/index.shtmlopenSUSE Leap 15 SP4-Beta: https://get.opensuse.org/testing/SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4 Public Beta: https://www.suse.com/c/suse-linux-enterprise-15-service-pack-4-public-beta-is-out/openSUSE Leap 15 SP4-Roadmap: https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Roadmap#Schedule_for_openSUSE_Leap_15.4SUSE Tick-Tock-Modell: https://www.suse.com/c/how-suse-builds-its-enterprise-linux-distribution-part-4/SUSE-Musikvideos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6sYHytyKN2-X93TurF3JptW8qSVm0DzASUSECON digital: https://susecon.com/NVIDIA-Leak: https://www.computerbase.de/2022-03/lapsuss-nvidia-ransom-hack/NVIDIA-Zertifikate werden missbraucht: https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-driver-code-signing-malwareFedora 36-Changeset: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/36/ChangeSetOpen Source-Treiber für PowerVR Rogue: https://twitter.com/alyssarzg/status/1499777071186391043Asahi Linux Alpha-Image: https://asahilinux.org/2022/03/asahi-linux-alpha-release/Asahi Linux für Apple M1 Ultra: https://twitter.com/marcan42/status/1501271229763706882Pine QuartzPro64: https://www.pine64.org/2022/03/15/march-update-introducing-the-quartzpro64/Linuxnews - Jolla erneut in misslicher Lage: https://linuxnews.de/2022/03/jolla-erneut-in-misslicher-lage/Jolla sucht dringend neuen Besitzer/Investor: https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/jolla-urgently-looking-for-new-ownership/10522/3Vodafone und Canonical arbeiten an "Cloud Smarpthone": https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Canonical-Vodafone-CSAnbox Cloud-Projekt: https://anbox-cloud.io/Ubuntu-Blog über Vodafone-Projekt: https://ubuntu.com/blog/vodafone-cloud-smartphone-based-on-anbox-cloud
TechCentral — SUSE South Africa open-source specialist Johann Els joins the podcast for a discussion on why SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) makes SAP enterprise applications faster and more responsive, and how this can save companies money through reliability uptime and live patching. Els provides a brief introduction to SUSE, offers an overview of the open-source software market and the company's place in it, and its strategic partnership with SAP. He talks about how SUSE and SAP work together when dealing with clients and approaching prospective clients, why companies should consider SLES for SAP applications, including for SAP/Hana deployments and environments where high availability is essential. * This promoted content was paid for by the party concerned
openSUSE plans for major changes in its Leap distribution, and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation admits Dragonfly into its incubator.
Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because by understanding the past, we're able to be prepared for the innovations of the future! Todays episode is on the history of Novell. To understand Novell, we'll go to BYU in 1980. As an honors grad in math and computer science, Drew Major might have been listening to the new wave tunes of Blondie or Deve who released Call Me and Whip it respectively that year. But it's more likely he was playing with the Rubik's Cube or Pac-Man, released that year or tuned in to find out Who Shot JR? On Dallas. He probably joined the rest of the world in mourning the loss of John Lennon who was murdered in 1980. He went to work at Eyring Research Institute (ERI) where he, Dale Neibaur and Kyle Powell decided to take some of their work from BYU and started working on the IPX and SPX network protocols and the NetWare operating system using the company name SuperSet Software. Meanwhile, George Canova, Darin Field, and Jack Davis had started a company called Novell a couple of years before, building microcomputers, or the equivalent of the PCs we use today. They weren't doing so well and Novell Data Systems decided they might be able to sell more computers by hooking them up together - so they hired the SuperSet team to help. The team Superset had worked on ARPANET projects while at the Eyring Research Institute The bankers stepped in and Jack Davis left, then Canova - and Raymond Noorda stepped in as CEO in 1982. In 1983 they released Novell NetWare. NetWare had the first real Network Operating System called ShareNet, which was based on a license to a Unix kernel they bought. While initially based on the Xerox Network System developed at Xerox PARC, they created Internetwork Packet Exchange, or IPX, and Sequenced Packet Exchange, or SPX, creating standards that would become common in most businesses in the subsequent decades. They joined Novell in 1983 and Major later became Chief Scientist. The 1980s were good to Novell. They released Netware 2 in 1986, becoming independent of the hardware and more modular. Servers could be connected through ARCNET, Ethernet, and Token Ring. They added fault tolerance options to remap bad blocks, added RAID support, and used a key card inserted in the ISA bus to license the software. And they immediately started working on Netware 3, which wouldn't be complete until 1990, with 3.11 setting the standard in network file sharing and when I first worked with Netware. Netware 3 was easier to install. It was 32-bit, allowed volumes up to a terabyte, and I remember this being cool at the time, you could add volume segments on the fly while the volume was mounted. Although growing the volume was always… in need of checking backups first. They didn't worry a lot about the GUI. Dealers didn't mind that. HP, DEC, and Data General all licensed OEM versions of the software. This was also my first experience with clustering, as NetWare SFT-III allowed a mirror an a different machine. All of this led to patents and the founding of new concepts that would, whether intentionally or accidentally, be copied by other vendors over the coming years. They grew, they sold hardware, like otherwise expensive ethernet cards, at cost to grab market share, and they had a lot of dealers who were loyal, in part due to great margins they had been earning but also because Netware wasn't simple to run and so required support contracts with those dealers. By 1990, most businesses used Novell if they needed to network computers. And NetWare 3.x seemed to cement that. They worked with larger and larger customers, becoming the Enterprise standard. Once upon a time, no one ever got fired for buying Netware. But Microsoft had been growing into the powerhouse standard of the day. They opened discussions to merge with Novell but Ray Noorda, then CEO, soon discovered that Bill Gates was working behind his back, a common theme of the era. This is when Novell got aggressive, likely realizing Microsoft was about to eat their lunch. Novell then bought Digital Research in 1991, with a version of DOS called DR DOS, and working with Apple on a project to bring Novell to Mac OS. They bought Univel to get their own Unix for UnixWare, and wrote Novell Directory Services which would later become eDirectory to establish a directory services play. They bought WordPerfect and Quattro Pro, early Office-type tools. By the end of this brisk acquisition time, the company didn't look like they did just a few years earlier. Microsoft had released Windows NT 3.1 Advanced Server in 1993 as the hate-spat between Noorda and Gates intensified. Noorda supported the first FTC antitrust investigations against Microsoft. It didn't work. Noorda was replaced by Robert Frankenberg in 1994. And then Windows 95 was released. Novell ended up selling Novell DOS to Caldera, handing over part of the Unix assets to Santa Cruz Operation, selling Integrated Systems, scrapping the Embedded Systems technology they'd been working on, and even selling WordPerfect and Quattro Pro too Corel. Windows of course supported Netware servers in addition to their own offering, having moved to NT 4 in 1996. NT 4 server would become the de facto standard in businesses. Frankenberg didn't last long and Eric Schmidt was hired as CEO in 1997. NetWare 5 was released in 1998 and I can still remember building zap packages to remove IPX/SPX in favor of TCP/IP. But the company was alienating the channel by squeezing margin out of them while simultaneously losing the war in the small business then the larger businesses to Microsoft, who kept making Windows Server better, and by 1999 I was trading my CNA (or Certified Novell Administrator) out for my first MCSE. After seeing the turnaround at IBM, Novell bought a consulting firm called Cambridge Technology Partners in 2001, replacing Schmidt with their CEO, Jack Messmen - and moving their corporate headquarters to Massachusetts. Drew Major finally left that year. The advancements he's overseen at Novell are legendary and resulted in technology research and patents that rival any other team in the industry. But the suits had a new idea. They pivoted to Linux, buying Ximian and SuSE in 2003, releasing Suse Linux Enterprise Server and then Novell Linux Desktop in 2004 and finally Open Enterprise Server in 2005. Does all of this seem like a rudderless ship? Yes, they wanted to pivot to Linux and compete with Microsoft, but they'd been through this before. Stop slapping yourself… Microsoft finally settled the competition by buying them off. They gave Novell $348 Million dollars in 2006 for “patent cooperation” and then spent $6M more on Novell products than Novell spent on theirs over the next 5 years (keep in mind that technology spats are multi-front wars). Novell was acquired by Attachmate for $2.2 billion dollars. Because Novell engineers had been creating so much amazing technology all those years, 882 patents from Novell went to CPTN Holdings, a consortium of companies that included Apple, EMC, Microsoft, and Oracle - this consortium the likely architect of the whole deal. SUSE was spun off, Attachmate laid off a lot of the workforce, Attachmate was bought, much word salad was said. You can't go back in time and do things over. But if he could, I bet Noorda would go back in time and do the deal with Bill Gates instead of going to war. Think about that next time someone goes low. Don't let your emotions get the best of you. You're above that. This has been The History of Novell. Thank you for listening we hope you have a great day!
SAP HANA User mit SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications erhalten Zugriff auf die neue Intel Optane DC Persistant Memory Technologie; Daten näher an den Prozessor bringen und Latenzen reduzieren...
Ricky Branner, Director of High Performance Scale and Emerging Business for Intel, joins us to discuss the new Intel® Xeon® Scalable and Intel Xeon W processors for workstations. An engineer at heart with more than 30 years in the technology industry, Branner helps to drive Intel's workstation business segment -- in his words, to "enable creators to really make a difference." In this interview, Branner outlines the capabilities of Intel's new workstation processors, talks about the heavyweight workloads for which customers are turning to workstations, and gives a preview of what's coming up next from Intel's workstation team. For more information on Intel Xeon Scalable and Intel Xeon W processors for workstations, please visit http://intel.com/xeonworkstations. Configurations: Intel Xeon Scalable processor: Up to 2.71X performance versus a 4 year old workstation. Config: Based on best-published two-socket SPECfp*_rate_base2006 result submitted to/published at http://www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/ as of 11 July 2017. New configuration: 1-Node, 2 x Intel® Xeon® Platinum 8180 Processor on Huawei 2288H V5 with 384 GB total memory on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP2 (x86_64) Kernel 4.4.21-69-default, using C/C++ and Fortran: Version 17.0.0.098 of Intel C/C++ and Intel Fortran Compiler for Linux. Source: submitted to www.spec.org, SPECfp*_rate_base2006 Score: 1850 compared to 1-Node, 1 node, 2x Intel® Xeon® E5-2697 v2 on Cisco Systems Cisco UCS C220 M3 using 128 GB total memory on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.4 (Santiago) 2.6.32-358.el6.x86_64 C/C++: Version 14.0.0.080 of Intel C++ Studio XE for Linux; Fortran: Version 4.0.0.080 of Intel Fortran Studio XE for Linux. Source: https://www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/res2013q4/cpu2006-20130923-26455.html SPECfp*_rate_base2006 Score: 682 Intel Xeon W processor: Up to 1.87X performance versus a 4 year old workstation. Config: 1-Node, 1 x Intel® Xeon® Processor E5-1680 v2 on Romley-EP with 64 GB Total Memory on CentOS release 6.9 2.6.32-431.el6.x86_64 using C/C++: Version 14.0.0.080 of Intel C/C++ studio XE for Linux, AVX Data Source: Request Number: 3822, Benchmark: SPECint*_rate_base2006, Score: 332 Higher is better; vs 1-Node, 1 x Intel® Xeon® W-2155 Processor on Basin Falls RVP with 128 GB Total Memory on Red Hat Enterprise Linux* 7.3 using CPU2006-1.2-ic17.0u3-lin-binaries-20170411. Data Source: Request Number: 3821, Benchmark: SPECint*_rate_base2006, Score: 622 Higher is better Results have been estimated based on internal Intel analysis and are provided for informational purposes only. Any difference in system hardware or software design or configuration may affect actual performance. Software and workloads used in performance tests may have been optimized for performance only on Intel microprocessors. Performance tests, such as SYSmark and MobileMark, are measured using specific computer systems, components, software, operations and functions. Any change to any of those factors may cause the results to vary. You should consult other information and performance tests to assist you in fully evaluating your contemplated purchases, including the performance of that product when combined with other products. For more information go to http://www.intel.com/performance/datacenter.
Está no ar mais um episódio do Opencast. Neste episódio Ivan, Diego e Og Maciel falam mais uma vez sobre notícias do mundo das tecnologias abertas. Neste primeiro episódio de 2017 era para termos a participação do Tiago mas a internet dele só funcionou direito antes de começarmos a gravação e após a mesma ter encerrado, mas não faltarão oportunidades para voltarmos a tentar sua participação. Links do episódio Vídeo sobre nosso financiamento coletivo Seja nosso Padrinho no Padrim.com.br Colabore conosco via pagseguro ou paypal Canal Tecnologia Aberta Tv no Youtube Comentários do episódio 69 Episódio 68 – Libreboot Deixa o GNU Richard Stallman: Goodbye to GNU Libreboot Lenovo adiciona compatibilidade com Linux no Yoga 900 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server é o primeiro sistema a suportar oficialmente 64 bits no Raspberry Pi Microsoft é membro platinum da Linux Foundation Liberado código do Word para Windows 1.1a Terminal Retrô Script Hollywood Android things --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/opencast/message
In this podcast we are joined by Jason Phippen, Head of Global Product and Solutions Marketing at SUSE to discuss software defined storage and how open source has transformed the computing landscape. Jason explains that SUSE is a Linux OS pioneer and successful software vendor with thousands of installations. He talks about some of the new technologies that SUSE is bringing to the industry including SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, which provides the most advanced foundation for mission critical workloads and SUSE Enterprise Storage 3.0 based on Ceph Jewel. SUSE’s mission is to provide customers with flexibility when it comes to choosing software and believe storage should be open and non-proprietary. Jason talks about how Intel and SUSE have worked closely to offer reliable, efficient and high-performance solutions for mission-critical applications powered by Intel® Xeon® processors. To learn more go to www.suse.com/storage or follow SUSE on twitter at https://twitter.com/SUSE.
Rich talks with Gianni Sambiasi about how ENI, an Italian energy company, is migrating their SAP environment from Solaris to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server on x86 servers.
Erin and Ron talk to Don Vosburg about convincing a large customer to implement a trial Linux deployment on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
Rich and Shane Day discuss how Colt Technologies reduce their operating costs by migrating from Red Hat Enterprise Linux to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server with Expanded Support.
Rich talks to Carlo Baffe about how the RCS Media Group in Italy migrated their SAP workloads from AIX UNIX to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
Erin, Ron and a group of SUSE and System z experts discuss the benefits of running workloads on SUSE Linux Enterprise for System z.
Erin and Ron talk to Doug Jarvis about SUSE Manager. SUSE Manager ensures consistent and effective management of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and related extensions, across all key hardware architectures and form factors. It also advances our WorkloadIQ strategy by managing servers across physical, virtual and cloud environments. In addition, SUSE Manager can easily replace […]
Erin and Ron talk about the OS behind IBM’s Watson Super Computer as it takes on the two top Jeopardy Contestants. PBS’s Nova http://video.pbs.org/video/1786674622 NPR’s Science Friday http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201102112
Erin and Ron talk about the OS behind IBM’s Watson Super Computer as it takes on the two top Jeopardy Contestants Link for PBS’s Nova http://video.pbs.org/video/1786674622 Link for NPR’s Science Friday http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201102112
From the Open Audio Booth at BrainShare 2010, The Novell Open Audio Team sits down with Mike Friesenegger, Novell Pre-Sales Engineer, part of the Data Center team focusing on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for System z, and Richard Lewis from IBM’s Advanced Technical Skills Organization, to give a technical overview of IBM System z.
Ross Brunson tells us why SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is both the Prefect Guest as well as the Perfect Host for your Virtual Environment. http://www.novell.com/linux http://opsamericas.com http://youtube.com/novellvideo
Ross Brunson tells us about Suse Linux Enterprise Server with the Expanded Support Offering http://www.novell.com/linux http://opsamericas.com http://youtube.com/novellvideo
Held on: June 2007. Every year Novell run a conference called "Brainshare". It is the premier conference for all things related to Novell. This year two staff members from ITS Technical Services, Mark Goatley and Kris Evans, attended the conference in Salt Lake City. They will be giving an overview of the conference and the new developments with Novell products, including ZENworks, Netware, and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and Desktop. Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby from Novell will be giving an overview of recent developments in Novell, and a look forward to the future. They will also discuss the recent deal between Novell and Microsoft. Who: * ITS, Technical Services: Mark Goatley and Kris Evans. * Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby, Novell. When: Thursday 7 June,1:00pm. Where: Moot Court, 10th Floor, Richardson Building (Note change of venue).
Held on: June 2007. Every year Novell run a conference called "Brainshare". It is the premier conference for all things related to Novell. This year two staff members from ITS Technical Services, Mark Goatley and Kris Evans, attended the conference in Salt Lake City. They will be giving an overview of the conference and the new developments with Novell products, including ZENworks, Netware, and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and Desktop. Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby from Novell will be giving an overview of recent developments in Novell, and a look forward to the future. They will also discuss the recent deal between Novell and Microsoft. Who: * ITS, Technical Services: Mark Goatley and Kris Evans. * Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby, Novell. When: Thursday 7 June,1:00pm. Where: Moot Court, 10th Floor, Richardson Building (Note change of venue).
Held on: June 2007. Every year Novell run a conference called "Brainshare". It is the premier conference for all things related to Novell. This year two staff members from ITS Technical Services, Mark Goatley and Kris Evans, attended the conference in Salt Lake City. They will be giving an overview of the conference and the new developments with Novell products, including ZENworks, Netware, and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and Desktop. Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby from Novell will be giving an overview of recent developments in Novell, and a look forward to the future. They will also discuss the recent deal between Novell and Microsoft. Who: * ITS, Technical Services: Mark Goatley and Kris Evans. * Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby, Novell. When: Thursday 7 June,1:00pm. Where: Moot Court, 10th Floor, Richardson Building (Note change of venue).
Held on: June 2007. Every year Novell run a conference called "Brainshare". It is the premier conference for all things related to Novell. This year two staff members from ITS Technical Services, Mark Goatley and Kris Evans, attended the conference in Salt Lake City. They will be giving an overview of the conference and the new developments with Novell products, including ZENworks, Netware, and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and Desktop. Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby from Novell will be giving an overview of recent developments in Novell, and a look forward to the future. They will also discuss the recent deal between Novell and Microsoft. Who: * ITS, Technical Services: Mark Goatley and Kris Evans. * Ross McKenzie and Mark Grooby, Novell. When: Thursday 7 June,1:00pm. Where: Moot Court, 10th Floor, Richardson Building (Note change of venue).
Overview The intrepid Randy Goddard explains how you can migrate a physical SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 system to a Xen-hosted virtual system. Time: 7:14 Size: 6.63 MB Notes for this Episode: Xen: Install SLES 9 SP3 domU on SLES 10 XEN dom0
Chris Cooper from partner developer services cohosts and discusses his involvement helping Novell partners get their hardware and software ready for SUSE Linux Enterprise 10. Then, Technical Project Managers Bodo Bauer and Ihno Krumreich explain the processes to enable SUSE Linux Enterprise Server on so many different hardware platforms.
Novell Open Audio brings you backstage at BrainShare to talk with people who did the technology demos in the Monday keynote session. Crispin Cowan comments on his demo of Novell AppArmor. Robert Wipfel and Lars Marowsky talk about the clustering technology they demo'ed. Eric Anderson sums up the demos and how to find more about SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 at BrainShare.
Marketing Manager Clive Bearman is kept honest by SUSE Linux project manager Gerald Pfeifer.