jueves, 20 de junio de 2013

This Week's Original Content From The Linux Foundation

Linux Foundation Briefing Book: June 17, 2013

by Carla Schroder

awk is a splendid Unix scripting language for processing text files. The version included in most Linux distros is GNU awk, or gawk for short. I like it for pulling data from ordered data sets, such as text lists and CSV exports from spreadsheets. awk sees each line in a file as a separate record, and each item in a line as a separate field, which makes it possible to slice and dice your files in all kinds of flexible ways.

by Eric Brown

If smaller tablets have been in vogue over the last year, thanks to the impact of the Kindle Fire and Nexus tablets, the big slates are back in style in 2013, looking to steal even more market share from PCs. The most prominent new Android tablets on display at Computex last week were not the 7-8 inch tablets dominating sales, but rather 10-inch devices more suitable for the office, many with keyboard docking options.

by Libby Clark

Two weeks ago the Tandy Supercomputing Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma launched as the home to one of the country’s first shared, publicly available supercomputers. It is a model for community collaboration that enables low-cost access to supercomputing resources for researchers, small and medium businesses, enterpreneurs and nonprofits alike.

by Libby Clark

In this Q&A, U-Boot Creator Wolfgang Denk discusses the upcoming U-Boot v2013.04 release; the future of U-Boot; the current state and future of embedded Linux and Android; the role of the Yocto Project in standardizing embedded development; and the best tools for embedded developers.  
by Jennifer Cloer

This is the third article in a new series on kernel developer work spaces -- a new take on the popular 30 Kernel Developers in 30 Days series. Here Shuah Khan, a senior Linux kernel developer at Samsung, describes her work space and the hardware she uses for kernel development. 

Featured Linux.com Video Content

Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems. By spreading the collaborative DNA of the largest collaborative software development project in history, The Linux Foundation provides the essential collaborative and organizational framework so project hosts can focus on innovation and results. This video takes us inside three Collaborative Projects - the Yocto Project, the Xen Project and Code Aurora Forum. We learn about their work and why hosting the projects at The Linux Foundation makes sense to them. For more information about Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects, please visit:http://go.linuxfoundation.org/e/6342/collaborative-projects/qg8d8/474997675.


Other News You Need To Know

Recently Posted Job Opportunities

Lead System Engineer ( SQL/WebLogic/Linux/Oracle)
Visionaire Partners (Norcross, GA)
JAVA Software Engineer-Android Tablet project
WSI Nationwide (New York, NY)
Senior Linux Administrator
GTN Technical Staffing (Dallas, TX)

Upcoming Training Opportunities

August 5-9 - virtual
20% discount with promo code: 20PJ13 (expires 6/20)
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Register by July 19 for the early-bird price of $2500 ($475 off the regular price)
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August 26-29 - virtual
20% discount with promo code: 20PJ13 (expires 6/20)

Events

LinuxCon North America/ CloudOpen
Sept. 16 - 18 - Hyatt New Orleans - New Orleans, LA
LinuxCon Europe/ CloudOpen Europe
Oct. 21 - 23 - Edinburgh International Conference Centre - Edinburgh, Scotland

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