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Da Linux French Page
Grand quizz des 11 ans : connaissez-vous bien LinuxFr.org ? (jour 6)
Conférence SITIS'09 - thématique logiciels libres Riviera JUG - 15 juillet 2009 @ Sophia-Antipolis : soirée Agile Brèves libres Prométhée aux RMLL 2009 Grand quizz des 11 ans : connaissez-vous bien LinuxFr.org ? (jour 5) Python arrive en version 3.1 Interview de Adam Hamsik, développeur NetBSD Grand quizz des 11 ans : connaissez-vous bien LinuxFr.org ? (jour 4) Grand quizz des 11 ans : connaissez-vous bien LinuxFr.org ? (jour 3) Slashdot
Source Code of Several Atari 7800 Games Released
How To Get Your Program Professionally Marketed? Professor Gets 4 Years in Prison for Sharing Drone Plans With Students Copyright Should Encourage Derivative Works Open Source Facing a Difficult Battle For Cloud Relevance Phoenix Lander Discovers Nighttime Snowfall On Mars Seattle Data Center Outage Disrupts E-Commerce Is the Kindle DX Worth the Money? XHTML 2 Cancelled Squeezing a Wikipedia Snapshot Onto an 8GB iPhone Emulated PC Enables Linux Desktop In Your Browser London Stock Exchange To Abandon Windows OS news
AmigaForever 2009 Released
iPhone Hole Found, Getting Patched Thoughts of a Linux Game Porter The Bing Thing *Why Do We Claim Mac OS X Is Subsidised at Retail?* Microsoft To Offer Family Pack for Windows 7 Home Premium Psystar Emerges from Chapter 11, Launches New Mac Clone A Root-less X Server Nears Reality Browser Vendors Force W3C To Scrap HTML 5 Codecs Linux Kernel Patch Works Around Microsoft's FAT Patents 'QtWebKit KPart Is Not the Answer for Konqueror' Security
Vuln: phpMyAdmin SQL bookmark HTML Injection Vulnerability
Vuln: Pidgin OSCAR Protocol Web Message Denial of Service Vulnerability Vuln: Drupal Cross-Site Scripting, Code Injection and Information Disclosure Vulnerabilities Vuln: LibTIFF 'tif_lzw.c' Remote Buffer Underflow Vulnerability Bugtraq: Re: Cross-Site Scripting vulnerabilities in Mozilla, Internet Explorer, Opera and Chrome Bugtraq: [SECURITY] [DSA 1825-1] New nagios2/nagios3 packages fix arbitrary code execution Bugtraq: [oCERT-2009-007] FCKeditor input sanitization errors Bugtraq: One Click Ownage [White Paper and Scripts] |
Le Monde
Treize blessés dans un déraillement de train vers Limoges
Le train assurait la liaison Limoges-Cahors.
En Croatie, une femme nommée premier ministre, une premièreJadranka Kosor aura pour lourde tâche de lutter contre les
problèmes économiques du pays, qui doit faire face à une dette de 94 % du
PIB.
Exxon aurait financé des recherches remettant en cause le réchauffement climatiqueSelon le journal "The Guardian", la compagnie s'était
pourtant engagée à ne plus aller à l'encontre des solutions face au
réchauffement climatique.
La bande dessinée "Persépolis", détournée par les anti-AhmadinejadUn remake de l'uvre de Marjane Satrapi raconte les suites
de l'élection contestée en Iran.
"800 euros par mois pour un trois pièces" aux Sables-d'OlonneMaryvonne Davy, propriétaire d'une agence immobilière dans
le centre-ville des Sables, sourit quand je lui parle de la crise économique.
Oui, la crise, elle connaît : pour elle, il y a même un avant et un après.
«Juillet 2008 a été un très bon mois, août plus difficile et septembre
catastrophique, se souvient cette Sablaise [suite...]
Philippe de Villiers bloque le comité d'entreprise de SKFLe président du conseil général de Vendée réclame un
rendez-vous avec le patron du groupe.
Wimbledon : Federer en finale contre RoddickL'Américain Andy Roddick s'est qualifié en battant Andy
Murray en quatre sets.
Et les Sables inventèrent «l'aspirateur à nuages»«Opération beau temps assuré ou remboursé. Du 2 juin au 10
juillet 2009, si vous souhaitez annuler votre séjour pour cause de mauvais
temps, Les Sables d'Olonne vous rembourse intégralement», vante l'office de de
tourisme sur son site Internet. «L'aspirateur à nuages» : il fallait oser,
l'office de tourisme des Sables d'Olonne l'a fait. ...
Cheb Mami condamné à cinq ans de prison fermeC'est "une peine clémente" dont a écopé Cheb Mami, explique
Patricia Jolly, du service société du "Monde".
A Arras, fin des polémiques, place à la musiqueLa belle voix d'Amy Macdonald a dominé la première soirée
du festival Main Square.
Libération
Bennahmias : «le Modem doit passer de l’entreprise familiale à la PME»
Bernard Zekri aux «Inrockuptibles» Le disque d'or dévalué La Lorraine ne paiera pas plus de 130 millions d'euros pour le TGV Est Fox News fait de la pub pour «L'Insurrection qui vient» Yemenia: l'épave introuvable, les Comoriens accusent la France de discrimination Pôle emploi et les faux papiers : «on applique la loi» Sarkozy va bien Francofolies: Orelsan déprogrammé, «un acte de censure» ? Londres s'inquiète du sort des employés de son ambassade à Téhéran La colère comorienne annule les vols Louise Bourgoin sera "Adèle Blanc-Sec" Federer en route vers l'Histoire La foudre immobilise le tramway à Strasbourg Sarkozy dans l'Obs: la société des rédacteurs marque son désaccord Cheb Mami condamné à cinq ans de prison ferme Ban ki-moon demande une entrevue avec Aung San Suu Kyi Boutin refuse l’ambassade du Vatican Boonen sur les rails pour le Tour Villiers-le-Bel: jusqu'à trois ans de prison requis Linux Weekly News
Tiemann: Open Source Incentives
Michael Tiemann reports on his recent trip to Brazil for
FISL 10. He notes that free software adoption is growing rapidly within the
Brazilian government. He also describes an effort by the Malaysian government
to reward use of free software, rather than the development of it, because that
can lead to multiple, competing solutions that don't necessarily solve the
users' problems. In addition, he also noted a barrier to free software
adoption: "On the alarm front, I heard specific confirmation of a storyline I've
been following, which is that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is basically
telling governments: if you want contributions/investments from us, then you'll
give Microsoft cabinet-level access to inform policy, and you'll use Microsoft
products. For example, donations to educational initiatives require installing
and teaching Microsoft products."
Would You Like Linux With Your Jello? (Linux Journal)Linux Journal takes a look at a hospital with Linux thin
clients for patients. "The happy healers at Glendale Adventist Medical Center,
in conjunction with Linux luminaries IBM and Novell, as well as the networkers
at NoMachine, have found a way to insert Linux into the lives of its patients.
Rather than blank walls and bad TV to stare at, patients in the new West Tower
at Glendale Adventist have access to the outside world, via Linux-based thin
clients available right in the patient's room. The setup utilizes servers from
IBM, the networking and compression expertise of NoMachine, and SUSE Linux
Enterprise Desktop to provide patients with access to the internet, where they
can do everything from learning about their condition and treatment to keeping
family and friends abreast of their progress via the standard cast of internet
characters: Twitter, Facebook, and the omnipresent blogs."
Security advisories for FridayCentOS has updated openswan (input validation flaws),
pidgin (denial of service), ruby (denial of service).
Milepost GCC releasedDebian has updated nagios (arbitrary program execution). Gentoo has updated libwmf (pointer use-after-free flaw), modsecurity (denial of service). Red Hat has updated ruby (denial of service). SUSE has updated java (multiple vulnerabilities), optipng, cups, quagga, pango, strongswan, perl-DBD-Pg, irssi, openssl /libopenssl-devel, net-snmp, ImageMagick/GraphicsMagick, perl, ipsec-tools /novell-ipsec-tools, poppler/libpoppler3/libpoppler4, yast2-ldap-server, tomcat6, gstreamer-plugins/gstreamer010-plugins-bad, apache2-mod_php5 (various issues). Ubuntu has updated perl (buffer overflow), nagios (arbitrary program execution). IBM has announced the release of Milepost GCC, an extension
to the GCC compiler which uses machine learning techniques to improve
application performance on embedded processors. "'Our technology automatically
learns how to get the best performance from the hardware -- whether mobile
phones, desktops, or entire systems -- the software will run faster and use less
energy,' noted Dr. Bilha Mendelson, Manager of Code Optimization Technologies at
IBM Research - Haifa. 'We opened the compiler environment so it can access
artificial intelligence and machine learning guidance to automatically determine
exactly what specific optimizations should be used and when to apply them to
ramp-up performance.'" The code can be downloaded from the Milepost site.
Stable kernels 2.6.30.1, 2.6.29.6, and 2.6.27.26Stable kernels 2.6.30.1, 2.6.29.6, and 2.6.27.26 have been
released by the stable team. Each contains quite a number of patches (111, 35,
and 32 respectively) all over the tree, some with security implications. The
2.6.29.6 release comes with an important note: "This is the last release of the
2.6.29 kernel series. All users are strongly suggested to move to the 2.6.30
release series at this time."
Pianoteq3 For Linux: A Product Review (Linux Journal)Dave Philips reviews the Linux version of Pianoteq
(commercial software) on Linux Journal.
Fellowship interview with Smári McCarthy (FSFE)"On the 15th of May 2009 the Modartt company announced the release of version 3.0.3 of their award-winning Pianoteq, a professional-quality digital keyboard instrument created by an audio synthesis method known as physical modeling. The program is vastly praised by its users, but in order to feel the love you've had to run a Windows machine or a Mac box. Until now, that is. The latest release introduces various new attractions, and the one that interests me the most is support for a native Linux version." The Free Software Foundation Europe presents an interview
with Smári McCarthy.
GNOME Journal Issue 15"Stian Rødven Eide: One of the most profiled projects you have been involved with is the Fab Lab, having headed the Icelandic branch for over a year now. While best known for its use of 3D printers, the Fab Lab is actually a much broader concept that goes far beyond technical innovation. Can you tell us a bit about your work there, and what you hope to achieve? Smári McCarthy: There are two sides to the Fab Lab story. On the one hand, theres the research side, which is all about developing the universal constructors, figuring out the hard science of digital fabrication. In that realm I think our work is done when we can download chicken sandwiches off the Internet." The July, 2009 edition of the GNOME Journal has been
published. Contents include: "a review of Project Hamster by Les Harris, an
interview on working with upstream with Laszlo Peter by Stormy Peters, using git
for GNOME translators by Og Maciel, an introduction to GNOME Zeitgeist by Natan
Yellin, a look at some of GNOME Do's advanced features by Jorge Castro, and
lastly, the Behind the Scenes feature continues with Owen Taylor by Paul
Cutler."
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