• Exploring KDE 4.10

    KDE SC 4.10 was released six months after KDE 4.9, adding many new features. In the background, work is in full swing for the next generation, KDE Frameworks 5: a KDE based completely on Qt5 and QML.

  • Coping with the UEFI Boot Process

    The UEFI boot specification offers new capabilities – and new headaches if you aren’t ready for it. Learn how one Linux user came to a truce with the new sheriff.

News and Articles

  • What’s New in Samba 4

    In December 2012, the open source world received the first, and very long awaited, release of the Samba 4.x series.

  • FSF Outs the World Wide Web Consortium over DRM Proposal

    Richard Stallman calls for the W3C to remain independent of vendor interests.

  • Debian 7.0 Debuts

    The  new release supports nine architectures, 73 human languages, and zero non-Free components.

  • Traffic Watch

    Sluggish network connections can be nerve-wracking. Checking live statistics about network traffic can help pinpoint the problem. Iftop is a command-line system monitoring tool that can help you identify bandwidth hogs and keep traffic moving.

  • Effortless Maneuvers

    Blogs have evolved from private diary to professional tool, and if you manage more than one WordPress installation, administration support would be useful. Three tools can help.

  • Under Control

    FlareGet accelerates your downloads and avoids the consequences of disconnections while downloading files.

  • Driving Passion

    maddog considers the benefits of teaching students how to write device drivers.

  • Security Resources

    Great tools and resources are available to help you write secure Ruby on Rails code. Kurt examines some tools and offers some tips.

  • Sound System

    The latest version of Ardour – a full-featured digital audio workstation – offers some major new developments. We take a closer look.

  • Photo Opps

    Sometimes full-blown photo sharing solutions are more than you need. We look at some lightweight alternatives that still get the job done.