Tag Archives: Distro

Distro Issue 89: With Google Glass, is the future of wearable computing finally in sight?

Distro Issue 89 With Google Glass, is the future of wearable computing finally in sight

Google has begun shipping the Explorer Edition of its high-tech headset to a select few over the past week. In a brand new edition of our e-magazine, Tim Stevens gives Google Glass the full review treatment, chronicles life behind the lens for a week and sits down with Google Ventures’ Bill Maris for a chat on the device. We also get cozy with Google Now for iOS in Hands-On, ogle more of Mission Workshop’s goods in Eyes-On and PlayJam CEO Jasper Smith tackles the Q&A. You can probably take it from here, but just in case, all of the download sources are down below for snatchin’ up a copy.

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Distro Issue 88: TechShop makes its mark on American manufacturing

Distro Issue 88: TechShop makes its mark on American manufacturing

There’s a hackerspace in San Francisco that is equipping hardware startups with the tools they need to get up and running for a mere $ 125 per month. A brand new issue of our weekly visits TechShop to take a gander at the industrial revolution that includes the likes of Square among its successes. On the review front, the Nokia Lumia 720, ASUS Cube and Samsung Galaxy S 4 all get put through their respective paces. In the first installment of Eyes-On: Classic Edition, we take a peek back at a dapper handset from 2009. All of this and more awaits your swipes via any of the download libraries below.

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Red Hat Launching Its Own Community Distro of OpenStack

darthcamaro writes “Red Hat still doesn’t have a fully supported commercial version of OpenStack in the market yet (coming this summer) as it lags behind Ubuntu and SUSE. But Red Hat is doing something no other distro vendor has done, they are launching a brand new bleeding edge build of OpenStack that will update weekly (or faster). The best part? this isn’t a fork it’s all upstream work, meaning everyone in the OpenStack Community benefits. From the article: ‘”Our developers will continue to work in the upstream OpenStack, and “whenever we find we need to make changes to make RDO work, we get that work done upstream first,” Red Hat CTO Brian Stevens said. “RDO won’t change in any way our active involvement in the upstream OpenStack development.”‘

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Slashdot

Distro Issue 86: The return of Roku’s simple set-top box

Distro Issue 86 The return of Roku's simple settop box

Prior to the company’s recent milestone announcement, Roku released its latest streaming effort. In a smokin’ hot issue of our weekly, the Roku 3 gets put through the full review treatment to see just how it stacks up against other set-top boxes. We also spend some quality time with OUYA’s Founding Backer’s Edition and the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 before offering up detailed analysis for both. Eyes-On gazes on the Joey Roth Ceramic Speaker System and Elon Musk discusses service and the Tesla Model X. Go on and swipe to that weekly download spot because this issue is certainly one you won’t want to miss.

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Ask Slashdot: New To Linux; Which Distro?

An anonymous reader writes “I’m a very new user to Linux looking for a distro that allows me to control and customize, but I’m not sure where to start. I had a friend install Ubuntu 12.04 on my computer, with the E17 window manager and somehow I managed to crash it during the copying of some non-important files and now my computer won’t boot (the hardware’s fine though). I’ve found descriptions of Arch Linux to be spot on to what I’m looking for and want (Slashdot user serviscope_minor mentioned Arch a couple weeks ago and it caught my attention), but my experience in the terminal is literally about an hour. That said, I really want to learn more, don’t mind hard work, enjoy challenges, and am perfectly willing to spend hours and hours for months on end to learn command line. Any suggestions, projects to start with, books to read, or tutorials to do to try would be appreciated.”

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Slashdot

Distro Issue 82: A closer look at the inaugural Insert Coin: New Challengers competition

Distro Issue 82 A closer look at the finalists for Engadget's inaugural Insert Coin competition

This weekend at Expand in San Francisco, a handful of emerging startups will compete for $ 25,000 and the proper Engadget review treatment. In the latest installment of our e-publication, we have a peek at the finalists of the first-ever Insert Coin: New Challengers crowdfunded battle royal. In addition to those gadget hopefuls, we but both the TiVo Mini and HTC One through their respective paces while we relive the week that was SXSW Interactive in a collection of snapshots. All of the usual features and columns are here as well, filled to the brim with goodness that awaits via your favorite weekly download link.

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Alan Cox: Fedora 18 “The Worst Red Hat Distro,” Switches To Ubuntu

An anonymous reader writes “Linux kernel developer veteran Alan Cox has lashed out at Red Hat’s recent release of Fedora 18. Cox posted comments to his Google+ page saying ‘Fedora 18 seems to be the worst Red Hat distro I’ve ever seen.’ He encountered numerous problems with Fedora 18 and then decided to switch to Ubuntu.”

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Distro Issue 55: a cautionary tale of the state-supported 38 Studios

Distro Issue 55 the cautionary tale of 38 Studios and state investments

In 2004, Curt Schilling and a badly injured ankle led the Red Sox to their first World Series championship in 86 years. That’s right, he was the ace that helped break the “Curse of the Bambino” from the mound. Fast forward to 2010, where Schilling had hung up his cleats and lobbied for Rhode Island officials to give his video game outfit, 38 Studios, a $ 75 million loan guarantee. Just two years later, the studio filed for Chapter 7, leaving the state’s taxpayers holding the tab. In this week’s issue, Jason Hidalgo takes a look at what went down in New England and examines the risk of public funds being used to support private tech companies. We had folks on the ground in Berlin to monitor the happenings at IFA this week and a few notable gadgets from said event occupy “Hands-on”. As far as full-on reviews go, we put the Archos 101 XS, Motorola Photon Q 4G LTE and Acer Aspire V5 through their paces. “Forum” is chock full of even more reads, eSports commentator John Sargent stops by for the Q&A, “Time Machines” kicks it old school and “Eyes-on” takes on 35mm, retro-style photography. The week is over, so hit the link that you fancy the most to grab your copy and let the relaxation begin.

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Distro Issue 55: a cautionary tale of the state-supported 38 Studios originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Aug 2012 09:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ask Slashdot: Best *nix Distro For a Dynamic File Server?



An anonymous reader (citing “silly workplace security policies”) writes “I’m in charge of developing for my workplace a particular sort of ‘dynamic’ file server for handling scientific data. We have all the hardware in place, but can’t figure out what *nix distro would work best. Can the great minds at Slashdot pool their resources and divine an answer? Some background: We have sensor units scattered across a couple square miles of undeveloped land, which each collect ~500 gigs of data per 24h. When these drives come back from the field each day, they’ll be plugged into a server featuring a dozen removable drive sleds. We need to present the contents of these drives as one unified tree (shared out via Samba), and the best way to go about that appears to be a unioning file system. There’s also requirement that the server has to boot in 30 seconds or less off a mechanical hard drive. We’ve been looking around, but are having trouble finding info for this seemingly simple situation. Can we get FreeNAS to do this? Do we try Greyhole? Is there a distro that can run unionfs/aufs/mhddfs out-of-the-box without messing with manual recompiling? Why is documentation for *nix always so bad?”"

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Ask Slashdot: Should Valve Start Their Own Steam Linux Distro?



Duggeek writes “There’s been a lot of discussion lately about Valve, Steam and the uncertain future of the Windows platform for gaming. While the effect of these events is unmistakably huge, it raises an interesting question: Would Valve consider putting out its own Linux distro? One advantage of such a dedicated distro would be tighter control over kernel drivers, storage, init processes and managing display(s), but would it be worth all the upstream bickering? Would it be better to start anew, or ride on a mature foundation like Fedora or Debian? Might that be a better option than addressing the myriad differences of today’s increasingly fracturing distro-scape?”

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Slashdot

Distro Issue 33 takes on Apple’s new iPad — Now in HD!

Distro Issue 33 takes on Apple's new iPad -- Now in HD!

Late last week, Apple unleashed its new iPad on the world, and in this issue of Distro we’ll let our review of the hi-res tablet loose on you. While the iPad may be out in front in terms of sales today, our Weekly Stat shows that the army of Android competitors may surpass it by 2016. We’ll give one of those soldiers, the Acer Iconia Tab A200, the review treatment in this issue, as well as Wacom’s latest tablet of another sort, the Intuos5 Touch, and Samsung’s rugged handset, the Rugby Smart. Also on offer in our 33rd edition are a host of regular exclusives: Recommended Reading, Switched On, a Q&A with Tekzilla’s Patrick Norton and the comic stylings of Box Brown. So grab the tablet of your choosing and hit the appropriate download link below, but make sure to update your app if you’re sporting Apple’s latest slate — we’ve optimized Distro for high-res viewing.

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Distro Issue 33 takes on Apple’s new iPad — Now in HD! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Mar 2012 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Distro Issue 11 is go! Download it now

You’ve been waiting all week, and the 11th Issue of Engadget Distro is finally here. For those of you experiencing that nasty crash bug overseas, the fix is in. We released version 1.0.2 of the app earlier this week, so if you’ve got an iPad (or a way to view PDFs) go on and download it. Taking center stage this week is the half-phone-half-tablet hybrid with a stylus — pardon, S Pen — the Samsung Galaxy Note. We’ll also take you on a ride with the Grace One City e-motorbike; pick apart HTC’s lady phone, the Rhyme; find out what’s inside the Motorola Atrix 2; and take a couple shots at (and with) the Pentax Q, a tiny ILC with a massive price tag.

But that’s not all, if you’ve been dying to tell us how it is, we’re giving you a soapbox to stand on. Yup, we’re opening our little weekly to your scrutiny, so if you’ve got something to say about Distro send your thoughts to distroletters@engadget.com. Provide your name, city and state / country and you might just make it into Issue 12. So, hit that PDF download link below or pick up your iPad and give Engadget Distro a go.

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Engadget Distro Issue 11 is go! Download it now originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Nov 2011 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Distro Issue 10: It’s alive! And ready for download

They’re creepy, they’re kooky, they’re your favorite Frankengadgets and they’ve invaded the latest issue of Engadget Distro. But fear not, this edition of our fine weekly isn’t all about chopping and screwing the devices you love, we’ve got plenty of other real-life gadgets on hand as well. See that tiny silver sliver on the cover? That’s ASUS’ Zenbook UX31, perhaps the most viable candidate for the Ultrabook throne. It may not be as thin and light, but we’re also bringing you a review of Dell’s lightweight XPS 14z, an ergonomically sound laptop with a sizable asking price. On the mobile front, Myriam Joire says hello and goodbye to Nokia’s N9 MeeGo phone and Zach Honig gets his hands on its brother from another operating system, the Lumia 800. Nokia’s claiming its latest is the “first real Windows Phone,” but Sharif Sakr’s review of the HTC Titan might just prove otherwise. We’ll also bring you a look into Tech News Today host Iyaz Akhtar’s geeky upbringing, our latest installation of In Real Life and an exclusive comic from Ed Piskor. So what are you waiting for? Hop on that iPad or hit the PDF download link below, and soak up all that Distro goodness.

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Engadget Distro Issue 10: It’s alive! And ready for download originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Distro is ready for download!

You’ve been waiting patiently, we’ve been waiting impatiently, but now all that waiting is over. Engadget Distro is live and we can’t wait another moment for you to download and give it a try. If you missed our introduction a few weeks back, Distro is a distilled version of the best feature content each week at Engadget. We know your life is crazy. We know you don’t always have time to read everything good that comes through our feed. That’s why we’ve created this. Now, every Friday morning, you can download a new issue to your device and then kick back, take your time and enjoy the best reviews, previews and other long-form content that slipped through your fingers during the week, all reformatted and redesigned in beautiful, magazine-like layout that we think you’re going to love.

We’re also mixing in some exclusive content found only in Distro, like an editor’s letter from yours truly to get you up to speed on the week’s news. Don’t miss the weekly comic, hand-crafted by a selection of some of the most talented artists in the industry. And, every now and again, we’ll be surprising you with a special edition issue just to keep you on your toes.

Now, this first release is iPad only, but trust me when I say we’re already working to get this out on other platforms. That doesn’t mean you sweet Honeycomb users, playful PlayBook owners and bargain-hunting TouchPad touchers can’t get in on the fun sooner. We’ll be offering PDF downloads on Friday with each new issue, meaning you can read along on just about any platform you like.

So, we’re hugely excited to be offering up Distro. It’s a beautiful new way to read Engadget and it’s been a massive project, the culmination of many late nights by a team of talented designers, developers and editors, all of whom I personally owe a great deal of gratitude. Their names are listed in the masthead after the break so, before you go download, take a moment and check that out. Then, get your d/l on and enjoy the selection of back-issues (six!) we’ve provided for you. On Friday, get ready for a fresh edition. They’re all free and they all come with love, from Engadget.

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Engadget Distro is ready for download! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Oct 2011 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Introducing Engadget Distro!

Say hello to Engadget Distro. At its most molecular level, it’s nothing more than a series of ones and zeros, cobbled together in a compiler and made to look like words and images on Apple’s iPad. But in reality, it’s something far greater — something that the entire Engadget staff couldn’t be more proud to have their names on. Distro is the week in technology news, distilled down and reformatted into a beautiful, offline view that can be enjoyed anywhere. You know, like one of those regional jets still awaiting their rightful Gogo injection. We’ve got a team of designers and editors toiling around the clock to assemble our best long-form feature content and reviews, re-wrapping it in a fashion that takes full advantage of a little thing called “multitouch.”

As of now, we’ve got plans to launch Distro on the iPad soon (as in, super soon!), but you can bet we’re already hammering away on versions for the other major tablet platforms. Rest assured, we’re as eager to finish them as anyone. For those who find themselves a touch overwhelmed with the sheer torrent of news that occurs in this space each and every day, Distro offers a relaxing, peaceful alternative. Sort of like morphine, but available sans a prescription. We’ll be showing off a sneak peek during tonight’s live Engadget Show (tune in here!), and we’ll be sure to keep you abreast of our launch date as it draws closer. For now, have a look at what Distro will bring in the video after the break. We hope you enjoy.

Gallery: Engadget Distro

Continue reading Introducing Engadget Distro!

Introducing Engadget Distro! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 17:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Debian 6.0 Xfce Review – Linux Distro Reviews

A review of the latest Debian Stable, or Debian 6.0 Squeeze with the Xfce desktop environment. A surprisingly lightweight distro with the stability and reliability that Debian is renowned for. Definitely worth giving it a try if you know your way around Linux and want a fast and stable workhorse. Apologies for the extremely tight (possibly rough) edit of this video, you’ll notice a few times where I cut myself off from the end of the sentence. I was pressed for time as college has gone back and I was trying to get this rather long video to under 15 min. I didn’t succeed…Never mind. My apologies. Also I said “Xfce” when I was actually referring to “VLC” @ 8:05. Ohhh dear…wasn’t concentrating.