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Imagenes de Nuestro Primer Curso de Blender Intro, la mayoria son del primer dia.

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

Matt Chapman

Open Source Platforms Engineer with CARD.com

Back Dev

The PHP Renaissance

How to back up a Debian system using backupninja

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

O aparelho é super estiloso, a tampinha acrílica dá um charme a mais, mas não gostei muito da traseira espelhada onde tem a câmera. A canetinha stylus fica na parte de trás também.

Daniel Abadie

CTO for Buenos Aires City Government

Open Gov/Data

Buenos Aires: Open by Default

Steven Vaughan-Nichols

Contributing Editor with ComputerWorld and Columnist CBS/ZDNet

Business

Open Source, Marketing, and Using the Press

Presentazione della piattaforma Wikifactory con ospite EJTech

Imagenes de Nuestro Primer Curso de Blender Intro, la mayoria son del primer dia.

Bill Shelton

Software Development Team Lead for Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Open Gov/Data

Out in the Open – A Case Study of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Open Source Program

David Stokes

MySQL Community Manager with Oracle

Databases

MySQL 5.7 - Everything You Need to Know

OpenTechSummit Berlin 2015, 14. Mai Kalkscheune

Ross Mason

Founder & VP Product Strategy Mulesoft

MidDay Keynote

The Second Digital Revolution is Here. Are You Ready for Hyperconnectivity?

David Stokes

MySQL Community Manager with Oracle

Databases

MySQL 5.7 - Everything You Need to Know

Steven Vaughan-Nichols

Contributing Editor with ComputerWorld and Columnist CBS/ZDNet

Business

Open Source, Marketing, and Using the Press

How to back up a Debian system using backupninja

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

I love these Norwegian oat biscuits, and that is partly because they have freed the recipe on the packet. Think of the possibilities for product development the company can draw from its consumers. A shame they haven't opened for a rich conversation.

Pamela Vickers

Software Developer with Big Nerd Ranch, Atlanta Rails Girls

Business

Your Company Culture is Awesome (But is Company Culture a Lie?)

Thanks to Sarah Pullman for helping us pull our recycling program together. We plan to do a better job of walking the walk in 2006. Also look for move towards becoming a Carbon Neutral company by later this year.

OSAS Open Standards Panel

Moderated by Jim Jagielski

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

AJ is presenting on cartography for the web and mobiles, with an emphasis on using open source tools, at the North American Cartographic Information Society's annual meeting. More details here: developmentseed.org/blog/2011/oct/11/presenting-cartograp...

Thanks to Open source and wordpress many many people uses my code!.

Women in Technology Panel

Moderated by DeLisa Alexander

Featuring Dr. Megan Squire, Elizabeth Joseph, Erica Stanley, Estelle Weyl, Karen Sandler

How to back up a Debian system using backupninja

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

Raleigh, NC

Thursday, October 23rd, 2014

Estelle Weyl

Senior UI Engineer for Standardista

Mobile

Mobile Performance Optimization

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

Catalyst Open Source Academy, 6-15 January 2015; catalyst.net.nz/academy

How to monitor online prices on Linux

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Imagenes de Nuestro Primer Curso de Blender Intro, la mayoria son del primer dia.

Women in Technology Panel

Moderated by DeLisa Alexander

Featuring Dr. Megan Squire, Elizabeth Joseph, Erica Stanley, Estelle Weyl, Karen Sandler

Pamela Vickers

Software Developer with Big Nerd Ranch, Atlanta Rails Girls

Business

Your Company Culture is Awesome (But is Company Culture a Lie?)

虽然通过折行,可以将很长的行打断并连续显示在屏幕上。但使用j命令,仍将移动到下一行;而如果希望在折行内移动,则需要使用gj命令。

yyq123.blogspot.com/2010/07/vim-wrap.html

Women in Technology Panel

Moderated by DeLisa Alexander

Featuring Dr. Megan Squire, Elizabeth Joseph, Erica Stanley, Estelle Weyl, Karen Sandler

Panel featuring Yehuda Katz, Steve Klabnik, Sean Massa & Erin Ritchie

Back Dev

The Culture of Open Source

Over the holiday (fifteen glorious days off) I found myself on a TAADD (Technology assisted attention deficit disorder) binge. It started with one PC that I wanted to format and gift to a less fortunate family, it then moved to gathering and setting up four more, this led to Open Source software experimentation. I am now sitting in bed with my trusty hound at my feet, writing in OpenOffice Writer in place of MS Word. I am not even sure why, perhaps I was infected with an OpenSource virus or something.

 

In setting up the gift PC's I decided that I should give Ubuntu a shot. I had read here and there that it was a well built interface that was a good crossover for Linux noobs. Wow, I am impressed. This isn't a first timers reaction either. As an IT provisional I do my yearly(ish) visit to OpenSource land to check out the growth and try to assess it's place in my world. I guess it has been too long.

 

The installation

The two machines that I set up were old HP Pavilion's running inadequate RAM and tired 1.3 GHZ Celeron processors. They were machines that have been shelved for about 5 years and were slated for the recycling center. I downloaded the latest ISO (8.10) from ubuntu.com and burned it to a CD. I popped it in and the installer took me through a few painless steps before launching into a long unattended process. The most difficult part for a beginner or non-nerd would be making the right choices in the partition module. For these installs it was an easy choice to delete all and carry out a clean installation. After about forty minutes, I was asked to reboot and the system was ready for some action.

 

The Interface

I found Ubuntu to be intuitive, stylish and surprisingly quick given the crap hardware that it was running on. For an avid windows user there were two notable distractions. The first was the taskbar being located across the top. This was easily corrected (or ruined depending on your perspective) by clicking-dragging it to the bottom of the screen. The second distraction was the single-click execution with the mouse. Users who have never experienced Mac or Linux desktops might be a bit confused about this. I knew about it from previous experiences and still found myself double-clicking everything. I am sure that in time this would become a learned adjustment.

 

The Software

This was one part that I was sincerely impressed with. When I traversed the options in the applications menu I found the OpenOffice 2.4 suite (all comparable with MS Office), Firefox, Evolution Email, a slick note taking / cataloging tool called TomBoy, F-Stop and Gimp for the digital photography buff, and RythymBox for digital media. This was all right out of the default install. Because I was set up in the “batcave” where I only have wireless access, I was not able to really kick the tires on the web software (no wifi card available).

 

Conclusion

All in all, this OS has got to be the best OpenSource solution that I have seen. It's out of the box functionality and intuitive interface make it a great choice for use on recycled or re-purposed hardware. I have been planning on adding a lunch-room PC at work for our warehouse staff, I think that I will be using Ubuntu to see what kinds of “average user” reactions I get.

Detail of the computational part of an installation by Paul Webb. Check this picture out for the physical part.

This is a screenshot of how to update a status with identica-mode for Emacs

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