Tag Archives: Released

Pandora now lets you listen to albums before they’re released

The Pandora Premieres channel will refresh every week with new artists, such as John Fogerty. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Mageia 3 Released

Freshly Exhumed writes “Forked from Mandriva Linux back in 2010, Mageia Linux has hit a new release milestone. Trish at the Mageia blog announces: ‘All grown up and ready to go dancing: Mageia 3′s out! We still can’t believe how much fun it is to make Mageia together, and we’ve been doing it for two and a half years. For people who can’t wait, get it here; release notes are here. To upgrade from Mageia 2, see here.’” Adds reader hduff: “It offers cutting edge and stable versions of your favorite applications and desktop environments as well as a version of the STEAM gaming software.”

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iTunes 11.0.3 released with enhanced MiniPlayer, multi-disc albums

DNP  iTunes 1103 released with enhanced MiniPlayer, multidisc albums

Cutting through all the Google I/O news is this update from Apple: today, Cupertino released iTunes version 11.0.3. This isn’t just an incremental refresh, as several new features are on board, including an improved Songs View and the ability to view multi-disc albums as a single album. The update also brings enhancements to the MiniPlayer, such as a new album artwork view and a progress bar. Of course, those changes are accompanied by the usual performance improvements and bug fixes. You can get iTunes 11.0.3 now through Software Update.

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Via: 9to5Mac

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Microsoft Windows 8.1 ‘Blue’ public preview will be released at Build in June

On the fence about heading to Build? Microsoft’s annual conference is scheduled from June 26-28, and developers in attendance will likely hear quite a bit more about the latest version of the company’s OS. MS will also make a public preview available during the event, Julie Larson-Green shared at the Wired Business Conference in New York City today. A final version of Windows 8.1 “Blue” is expected by the end of the year, bringing cosmetic updates and other features, such as a new side-by-side app view and Internet Explorer 11. In March, we managed to dig through pre-release build 9364 — it sounds like we’ll be able to take a much closer look at the new operating system this summer, but you can click through our gallery of screenshots for an early preview, right now.

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Source: Microsoft

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Debian 7.0 (“Wheezy”) Released

First time accepted submitter anarcat writes “After two years since the last Debian release (6.0, nicknamed “squeeze”), the Debian release team has finally published Debian 7.0 (nicknamed “Wheezy”). A newly created blog has details on the release, which features multi-arch support (e.g. you can now install packages for both i386 and amd64 on the same install), improvements to multimedia support (no need for third party repositories!) and improved security through hardening flags. Debian 7.0 also ships with the controversial Gnome 3 release, and the release notes explicitly mention how to revert to the more familiar ‘Gnome classic’ interface. Finally, we can also mention the improved support for virtualization infrastructure with pre-built images available for Amazon EC2, Windows Azure and Google Compute Engine. Debian 7.0 also ships with the OpenStack suite and the Xen Cloud Platform. More details on the improvements can be found in the release notes and the Debian wiki.” An anonymous reader points out (from the announcement) that “[t]he installation process has been greatly improved: Debian can now be installed using software speech, above all by visually impaired people who do not use a Braille device. Thanks to the combined efforts of a huge number of translators, the installation system is available in 73 languages, and more than a dozen of them are available for speech synthesis too. In addition, for the first time, Debian supports installation and booting using UEFI for new 64-bit PCs (amd64), although there is no support for Secure Boot yet.”

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KDevelop 4.5 Released

jrepin writes “KDE’s integrated development environment KDevelop has just reached version 4.5. ‘In this new version you will find brand new integration for Unit Tests, so that you can easily run and debug them while working on your projects. Furthermore, you’ll find an iteration of our New Class wizard, many changes regarding polishing the UI in different places, better support for C++11 features and some other things you’ll find along the way.’”

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Fedora 19 Alpha Released

hypnosec writes “Following delays due to UEFI, the alpha version of Fedora 19 ‘Schrödinger’s Cat’ has been released. The alpha version brings with it all the features of Fedora 19, including the updated desktop options – GNOME 3.8, KDE Plasma 4.10 and MATE 1.6. Other new features include Developer’s Assistant – a tool that would allow developers to code easily with ready templates, samples and more; OpenShift Origin – through which users will be able to deploy their own Platform-as-a-Service infrastructure; Ruby 2.0.0; Scratch; Syslinux – provides for simplified booting of Fedora; systemd Resource Control – which allows for modification of service settings without requiring a reboot; and Checkpoint & Restore. Downloads and release notes available at the Fedora Project site.”

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GoComics app released for iOS, Android and Windows Phone, digitizes the Sunday funnies

GoComics app released for iOS, Android & Windows Phone, puts Calvin & Hobbes in your palm on the go

If you’re an avid reader of the many comic strips on Universal Uclick’s GoComics website, you’ll be pleased to know the company’s recently released its first app for mobile devices. Optimized for tablets and smartphones running Windows Phone, Android and iOS, the company states that the free app serves as the “official home” on mobile for its syndicated comics. Notably, this includes the likes of the full Calvin & Hobbes archives, along with Universal Uclick citing it as the exclusive portal to Dilbert strips on mobile. We won’t keep you any longer now that you know, so head over to the appropriate source link if you’d like to download it for yourself.

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Source: Univeral Uclick (App Store), (Google Play), (Windows Store)

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Draft IETF Standard for SSH Key Management Released

A few months ago, Tatu Ylonen (creator of SSH 1.x) declared that lax key management was hazardous. Now there’s work being done on a standard for automated key management. hypnosec sent in the news; quoting Parity News on the content of the draft: “It presents a process that would allow for moving of already issued keys to protected location, removal of unused keys, key rotation, providing rights of what can be done with the keys and establishing an approval process for issue of new keys.” There’s a non-WG mailing list; the final version of the standard is expected in October.

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Video Editor Kdenlive 0.9.6 Released

jrepin writes “Version 0.9.6 of free and open source video editor Kdenlive has been announced. This version adds a Reverse clip option to Clip Jobs that creates a backwards clip.The list of audio/video bitrates can now be customized in custom rendering profiles. New release also fixes several bugs and crashes, including a very annoying bug that caused project files to seem corrupted.”

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R 3.0.0 Released

DaBombDotCom writes “R, a popular software environment for statistical computing and graphics, version 3.0.0 codename “Masked Marvel” was released. From the announcement: ‘Major R releases have not previously marked great landslides in terms of new features. Rather, they represent that the codebase has developed to a new level of maturity. This is not going to be an exception to the rule. Version 3.0.0, as of this writing, contains only [one] really major new feature: The inclusion of long vectors (containing more than 2^31-1 elements!). More changes are likely to make it into the final release, but the main reason for having it as a new major release is that R over the last 8.5 years has reached a new level: we now have 64 bit support on all platforms, support for parallel processing, the Matrix package, and much more.’”

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Firefox version 20 released, patches 11 serious flaws

Firefox wasn’t full of vulnerabilities previously, but now users of Mozilla’s customizable Web browser can rest even easier.


FOX News

GNOME2 Fork MATE Desktop 1.6 Released

An anonymous reader writes “Excerpts from the announcement: ‘This release is a giant step forward from the 1.4 release. In this release, we have replaced many deprecated packages and libraries with new technologies available in GLib. We have also added a lot of new features (…) MATE 1.6 is the result of 8 months of intense development and contains 1800 contributions by 39 people, and more than 150 translators.’ See the release notes for a list of changes and new features.” They’ve unforked a number of old GNOME 2 libraries, relying instead of technology from GLib/Gtk+ 3 and other projects where it makes sense. None of the new features really stand out on their own, but it looks like there are dozens of small improvements that should make the desktop experience more pleasant.

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BioShock: Infinite Released

kandelar writes with news that BioShock: Infinite has been released. It’s the third major release in the series of BioShock first-person shooters, and it’s available for Xbox 360, PS3, and Windows. The game is garnering good critical reception, for the most part. Rock, Paper, Shotgun said, “Infinite is a game ruled by artists at least as much as it is by its writers. It’s the ultimate answer to the question of whether art or technology is the most important part of creating a visually excellent game – Crysis 3 might have far more going on under the hood, but its uninspired paintjob makes it seem so dull compared to Infinite’s vaguely Pixar-esque fusion of the photoreal and the colourfully unreal.” Ars’ reviewer wrote, “Infinite’s battle system doesn’t wear out its welcome or weigh down the game’s excellent pacing. Infinite avoids the problem of near-endless waves of identical enemies that plagues so many shooters these days. The bits of shooting action are spaced and timed to serve as gentle punctuation marks that break up the story rather than full stops that bring it to a grinding halt.” However, RPS adds this criticism of the player’s effect the plot: “Infinite’s a triumph in terms of fantasy-architecture spectacle and bringing superb flexibility to the modern rollercoaster shooter, but in other respects it’s a small step down from the player agency and even the singular aesthetic of BioShock.”

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Archos Gamepad Released In the USA

An anonymous reader writes “Archos have finally released their much anticipated touchscreen gamepad in the USA. The console boasts a Arm Cortex Dual-core A9 1.6GHz cpu, 1024MB Ram, 8GB internal storage and uses the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean OS. The Gamepad has 14 physical buttons and dual analog thumb-sticks as well as a touchscreen which means the latest 3D Android games should work great and for fans of emulation the traditional gamepad design and buttons will make N64/PS1 emulators work great on the gamepad.” CNET UK was unimpressed, calling it “a bitter disappointment”; IGN was more optimistic, especially at its sub-$ 200 price.

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KDE’s Calligra Office Suite For Android Released

jrepin writes “Coffice is a new project that tries to make KDE’s Calligra office suite available on mobile platforms like Android, Blackberry 10, Jolla SailfishOS and Ubuntu Phone. Calligra already has some presence on smartphones, since document viewer on Nokia N9 is based on it. The first release brings Calligra Words viewer for OpenDocument Text documents and is currently available for Android only. Plans for later releases include viewers for spredsheets and presentations. Editing and saving as well as support for proprietary Microsoft Office formats are coming later.”

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Temporary fixes released for Samsung Android lock-screen glitch

Two security vendors have released temporary fixes for a flaw in some Samsung Android phones that could allow an attacker to bypass a locked screen.
Computerworld News

Swype beta update released, offers several fixes and features

The folks over at Swype have rolled out version 1.4.9.13905, a beta release for those who like to try the newest iteration of software and aren’t afraid of taking on a bit of risk. This feature brings with it a variety of new features and fixes, including Advanced Language Models for more languages and improved

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Minecraft 1.5 Redstone to be released in a couple of weeks

Minecraft developer, Jens Bergensten, has just tweeted that the next update for Minecraft, Minecraft 1.5 Redstone, will be released in a couple of weeks. The update will be a major update that brings various optimizations to the game, as well as some great added features. Development for the update began around late November 2012 right

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Minix 3.2.1 Released

kthreadd writes “Minix, originally designed as an example for teaching operating system theory which was both inspiration and cause for the creation of Linux has just been released as version 3.2.1. Major new features include full support for shared libraries and improved support for USB devices such as keyboards, mice and mass storage devices. The system has received many performance improvements and several userland tools have been imported from NetBSD.”

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GNU Texinfo 5.0 Released

Four years after the last release, version 5.0 of Texinfo, the GNU documentation language, has been released. The primary highlight is a new implementation of makeinfo info in Perl rather than C. Although slower, the new version offers several advantages: cleaner code using a structured representation of the input document, Unicode support, and saner support for multiple output backends. There are over a dozen other improvements including better formatting of URLs, improved cross-manual references, and a program to convert Perl POD documentation to Texinfo.

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Linux Foundation’s Secure Boot Pre-Bootloader Released

hypnosec writes “The Linux Foundation’s UEFI Secure Boot pre-bootloader for independent Linux distros and software developers has finally been released. Announcing the release of the secure boot system James Bottomley noted that the signed pre-bootloader was delivered by Microsoft on February 6th. Bottomley has released two validated files PreLoader.efi and HashTool.efi. Bottomley has also created a bootable mini-USB image that provides “an EFI shell where the kernel should be and uses Gummiboot to boot.” Just last week the pre-bootloader had to be rewritten to accommodate booting of all versions of Linux.”

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iOS 6 untethered jailbreak released, Cydia app store flooded

Apple modders can rejoice: The latest jailbreak software for iOS 6 was released on Monday.
Computerworld News

Powertrekk fuel cell charger to be released in Spring

Powertrekk, which uses water and a fuel cell puck to charge your phone in an emergency situation, is scheduled for a U.S. launch in April. [Read more]


CNET News

XBMC 12.0 ‘Frodo’ Released: PVR-Support, HD Audio and More

fluor2 writes “Team XBMC have released XBMC 12 ‘Frodo.’ Features for XBMC 12 include: HD audio support (including DTS-MA and Dolby True-HD) via the new XBMC AudioEngine (OS X/iOS not yet available), live TV and PVR support, h.264 10-bit (aka Hi10P), 64-bit support in OS X to match the 64-bit support in Linux, improved image support, support for the Raspberry Pi, initial support for the Android platform, improved AirPlay support across all platforms, improved controller support in Windows and Linux, advanced filtering in the library, video library tags to complement movie sets, advanced UPnP sharing, and more!”

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New video of ‘Kraken’ in natural habitat released

Discovery Channel has released the first clip from its upcoming documentary about the elusive giant squid, which can grow to a monstrous 26 feet in length and is likely the source of the Nordic legend of the kraken. 


FOX News

LTSI Linux Kernel 3.4 Released

hypnosec writes “The Linux Foundation has announced the release of Linux 3.4 under its Long Term Support Initiative (LTSI), which will be maintained for the next two years with back-ported features from newer Linux kernels. Based on Linux 3.4.25, the LTSI 3.4 is equipped with features such as Contiguous Memory Allocator – which is helpful for embedded devices with limited hardware resource availability; AF_BUS – a kernel-based implementation of the D-Bus protocol; and CoDel (controlled delay) – a transmission algorithm meant for optimization of TCP/IP network buffer control.”

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Ibex Virtual Reality Desktop Beta For Mac Released

New submitter Hesh writes “Ibex, the first cross-platform VR desktop of its kind, was previously released for Linux, and has finally been updated to work on Mac OS X Mountain Lion. Running at a silky smooth 60fps, it is nearing final release and awaiting delivery of the developer Oculus Rift kits for final integration testing. A Windows version may be released in time. The source can be found on bitbucket for the Linux version and iPhone orientation sensor client while the Mac source is to follow soon at the same location.”

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Windows RT Jailbreak Tool Released

An anonymous reader writes “Earlier this week, reports surfaced that the Windows RT operating system had been jailbroken to allow for the execution of unsigned ARM desktop applications. Microsoft quickly issued a statement saying it does not consider the findings to be part of a security vulnerability, and applauded the hacker for his ingenuity. Now, a Windows RT jailbreak tool has been released.”

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Annual “Worst CEO” List Released

angry tapir writes “Zynga’s Mark Pincus made the annual ‘Worst CEOs’ list compiled by Dartmouth College professor Sydney Finkelstein. Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook and Andrew Mason of Groupon received dishonorable mentions. Zuckerberg earned his dishonorable mention on the list partly due to his ‘hoodie mentality.’”

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Ouya Dev Consoles Ship, SDK Released

An anonymous reader writes “Earlier this year, the Android-based Ouya game console project raised over nine times as much funding as they initially asked for in their Kickstarter campaign. Now, Ouya developer consoles are starting to ship, and folks on the Ouya team released a video showing what the developers should expect. As explained in the video, the console currently being shipped is by no means the final hardware, but promises to give developers everything they need to start developing apps and games for Ouya. The only surprise is that they decided to add a micro-USB port to the hardware, making it easy to hook up to a PC. The Ouya team has also released an SDK for the device (which they call the ODK — Ouya Development Kit), and have provided most of the source under the Apache 2.0 license. They wrote, ‘We think we’ve got a great team of developers here at OUYA, but there’s strength in numbers and a wealth of passionate, talented people out there. We want you, the developers of the world, to work alongside us to continually improve our platform. It’s our hope that releasing a more open ODK will help foster such innovation.’”

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iPad 5 to be released in March?

The Apple news blog 9to5Mac reports that a “new iPad 5″ is planned for March, incorporating design elements of the recently-released iPad mini.


FOX News

Qt 5.0 Released

sfcrazy writes “The Qt project and Digia, the company behind Qt framework, have released the most awaited C++ framework for developers, Qt 5.0. The company claims that it’s one of the best releases till date and has invested a significant amount of time behind this release. It’s an overhaul of the Qt 4.x series and makes Qt fit for the future.”

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Blender 2.65 Released

skade88 writes “Blender 2.65 has been released. Here is a quote from the Blender team: ‘The Blender Foundation and online developer community is proud to present Blender 2.65. We focused on making this the most stable release in the 2.6 cycle yet, fixing over 200 bugs. Fire simulation was added along with many improvements in smoke simulation. In Cycles, motion blur, open shading language and anisotropic shading support was added. For mesh modeling, the bevel tool was much improved, a new symmetrize mesh tool was added, and new Laplacian smooth, decimate, and triangulate modifiers are available.’”

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iTunes 11.0.1 released, resurrects duplicate song tool and solves other performance bugs

iTunes 1101 released, readding duplicate song tool and solving other performance bugs

Barely a fortnight after Apple unleashed iTunes 11 into the wild, the software’s first notable update is making its way into OS X’s Software Update. While only bumping it to v11.0.1, the refresh adds the ability to easily weed out duplicate items in one’s iTunes library — a feature that was mysteriously removed in the original move from iTunes 10 to iTunes 11. We’re also told that it solves an issue where “purchases in iCloud may not appear in one’s library if iTunes Match is turned on,” makes the program as a whole more responsive when sifting through a vast music library, and solves a quirk where the AirPlay button may not “appear as expected.” For those eager enough, a simple refresh of Software Update should have you on your way to a little newness.

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Via: 9to5Mac

Source: Apple Support

Engadget

Antivirus pioneer McAfee may be released from detention in Guatemala

Antivirus pioneer John McAfee could soon be released from detention in Guatemala where he is being held on charges that he entered the country illegally in an attempt to escape authorities in Belize where he is wanted for questioning in a murder case.
Computerworld News

Pirate Bay Founder Released From Solitary Confinement

TrueSatan writes “Pirate bay founder Gottfrid Svartholm is set to be released from solitary confinement but is still to serve the remainder of a 1 year sentence relating to Pirate Bay activities. 5 months remain of that sentence and they are to be served in a normal prison with far less restrictions on his confinement…assuming no new charges are brought against him. He had been accused of involvement in the hacking of Swedish IT firm Logica but no charges have been substantiated in this case. He was later implicated in a second case but, once more, no charges have been substantiated against him.”

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PressureNET 2.1 Released: the Distributed Barometer Network For Android



cryptoz writes “Cumulonimbus has released a new version of their open source, global barometer network. The network is built around an Android app called pressureNET which uses barometric sensors in new phones (such as the Nexus 4, Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy S3, Note, and others) in order to build the comprehensive network. They plan to use the data to improve short-term weather prediction, and the gives a teaser of the new data visualization tool they are building.”

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KDE 4.10 Beta1 Released



sfcrazy writes “The KDE team has released the first beta for its renewed Workspaces, Applications, and Development Platform. ‘With API, dependency and feature freezes in place, the KDE team’s focus is now on fixing bugs and further polishing new and old functionality.’ QtQuick in Plasma Workspaces has received a lot of work: ‘Plasma Quick, KDE’s extensions on top of QtQuick allow deeper integration with the system and more powerful apps and Plasma components. Plasma Containments can now be written in QtQuick. Various Plasma widgets have been rewritten in QtQuick, notably the system tray, pager, notifications, lock & logout, weather and weather station, comic strip and calculator plasmoids. Many performance, quality and usability improvements make Plasma Desktop and Netbook workspaces easier to use.’ Here’s the Feature Plan for 4.10.”

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Nokia Here iOS 6 Maps App Alternative Released For iPhone And iPad

nokia-mainNokia has released Here, its newly rebranded mapping application, for iOS devices. The app is universal, so it works on both iPhone and iPad, and it’s free. Users of Nokia’s Windows Phone devices may find the experience familiar, as it includes similar features like nearby places discovery, but there are also crucial components like transit direction that aren’t present in Apple’s own pre-installed Maps app.
TechCrunch

Gate One 1.1 Released: Run Vim In Your Browser



Riskable writes “Version 1.1 of Gate One (HTML5 terminal emulator/SSH client) was just released (download). New features include security enhancements, major performance improvements, mobile browser support, improved terminal emulation, automatic syntax highlighting of syslog messages, PDFs can now be captured/displayed just like images, Python 3 support, Internet Explorer (10) support, and quite a lot more (full release notes). There’s also a new demo where you can try out vim in your browser, play terminal games (nethack, vitetris, adventure, zangband, battlestar, greed, robotfindskitten, and hangman), surf the web in lynx, and a useful suite of IPv6-enabled network tools (ping, traceroute, nmap, dig, and a domain name checker).” Gate One is dual licensed (AGPLv3/Commercial Licensing); for individuals, it’s pay-as-you-please.

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Dragonfly BSD 3.2 Released



An anonymous reader writes “Dragonfly BSD recently announced the release of version 3.2 of their operating system. Improvements include: USB4BSD, a second-generation USB stack; merging of a GSoC project to provide CPU topology awareness to the scheduler, giving a nice boost for hyperthreading Intel CPUs; and last but not least, a new largely rewritten scheduler. Some background is in order for the last one. PostgreSQL 9.3 will move
from SysV shared memory to mmap for its shared memory needs. It turned
out that the switch much hurts its performance on the BSDs. Matthew Dillon was fast to respond with a search for bottlenecks and got the performance up to par with Linux.”

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OpenBSD 5.2 Released



An anonymous reader writes “OpenBSD 5.2 has been released and is available for download. One of the most significant changes in this release is the replacement of the user-level uthreads by kernel-level rthreads, allowing multithreaded programs to utilize multiple CPUs/cores.”

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Crashed X-51A Test Results Released



cylonlover writes “The United States Air Force (USAF) has released the results of last August’s third test of the X-51a Waverider, which resulted in the crash of the unmanned scramjet demonstrator. At a press teleconference featuring the Program Manager for Air Force Research Laboratory, Charles Brink, it was confirmed that a malfunctioning fin was the cause of the crash. However, engineers are confident of correcting the fault in time for the fourth test flight scheduled for (Northern Hemisphere) late spring or early summer of next year.”

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21st IOCCC Source Code Released



First time accepted submitter johntromp writes “Source code for the 21st International Obfuscated C Code Contest was released last weekend, following announcement of the winners on Sep 30, and just over a month after the submission window closed on Sep 14, a new speed record for the judges. Happy source code browsing!”

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Call of Duty: Black Ops II launch trailer released

We’re just under a month away from the release of Treyarch‘s sequel to Call of Duty: Black Ops. The official launch trailer for Black Ops II has hit the internet airwaves and it’s about as action-packed as you would expect. There’s guns, helicopters, tanks, sentries, and weird attachments that make soldiers fly. The trailer features

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iPad mini Apple event invites released: October 23rd it is

Today it’s time to get busy packing for the next big Apple event, set for October 23rd and quite likely to reveal no larger an iPad than a mini. With the iPad mini on peoples’ lips and in their dreams now for several months (or years, for some), it comes as no surprise that the

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LG Optimus G “product movie” released

LG‘s most anticipated device yet is about to hit the US next month. The Optimus G will be the company’s flagship phone, and they created this four-minute-long “product movie” that showcases some of the more notable features of the Optimus G, like QSlide and the camera’s Live Shot and Time Catch Shot features. The video

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Soon to Be Released CKEditor 4 Features New Skin And Inline Editing



PsxMeUP writes “CKEditor, one of the world’s most popular WYSIWYG HTML editors, is getting a new default skin. The winner, Rafal Bromirski, will also receive $ 1000. The new design is going with the trendy monochrome look. The skin will be used with the soon-to-be-released CKEditor 4, which will feature inline editing.”

I recommend checking out the inline editing demo. Who needs textarea any more?

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Samsung Galaxy Note II Source Code Released



An anonymous reader writes “Samsung has released the source code for the Samsung GALAXY Note II. This clears the way for custom ROM’s for the smartphone. From the article: ‘It’s now been posted for the international GT-N7100 model, giving developers a peek at the 5.5-incher’s inner workings and allowing them to get to work on new mods.’”

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