10 Unknown but Useful Linux Terminal Commands

Before, I have posted here a few basic Linux terminal commands that I think are essential for newbies to know. I've also shared some deadly ones that should be avoided at all costs. This time, I'm going to show you several terminal commands that are perhaps unfamiliar to many new-to-Linux users but could be really handy when used properly.

Here’s a list of 10 rather unknown yet useful Linux terminal commands:

1. Kill a running application by its name:

killall [app_name]

2. Display disk space usage:

df –h

3. Locate the installation directories of a program:

whereis [app]

4. Mount an .iso file:

mount /path/to/file.iso /mnt/cdrom –oloop

5. Record or capture a video of your desktop:

ffmpeg -f x11grab -s wxga -r 25 -i :0.0 -sameq /tmp/out.mpg

6. Find out the Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) of your partitions:

ls /dev/disk/by-uuid/ -alh

7. Show the top ten running processes (sorted by memory usage):

ps aux | sort -nrk 4 | head

8. Make an audible alarm when an IP address goes online:

ping -i 60 -a IP_address

9. Run the last command as root:

sudo !!

10. Make a whole directory tree with one command:

mkdir -p tmp/a/b/c

Forget Windows 7, Linux Mint 7 “Gloria” is here

The latest version of probably the most well known Ubuntu-derived distribution has been unleashed. Based on Jaunty Jackalope, Linux Mint 7 (codenamed Gloria) is loaded with exciting new features and the freshest software applications. To give you a sneak peek of this most recent Mint version, here are some of the features that deserve some attention:

Fresh Theme and Artwork
Linux Mint 7 has a brand new theme. The panel and window border colors are now a bit darker but still look pleasing. It is still using the Murrina engine but with various upstream improvements that make widgets and buttons sleeker than before. I should add that its latest default wallpaper really looks great.


mintMenu Enhancements
mintMenu has been improved with a feature called “Suggestions”. Like when filtering gives no results, the menu now shows a set of suggestions related to what is being searched. It will also offer you to install the package directly from the menu so it’s really very handy.


Beefed-up mintInstall
Linux Mint’s very own software manager is now enhanced with a new GUI layout, and features like pre-filled information; seamless screenshots downloads; and featured applications.

Some of the most popular applications were gathered in a new window named "Featured applications". This window shows the popular applications that are available and not currently installed on the system:


The GUI layout was improved. The main window now shows less information and the once called "Versions" button was replaced with "More info".


These are just a few of the many features that you will find on Linux Mint 7. --I’ve been a Mint user and I've dated Cassandra, Daryna, and Elyssa. So at the moment I’m still downloading Gloria and I’m looking forward to test it, and then hopefully share my views about it.

If you want to download Linux Mint 7, go HERE.

15 Beautiful KDM Themes

KDM (KDE Display Manager) is the default graphical login interface of the K Desktop Environment. Anyone who uses KDE should know that KDM is highly customizable and can be easily configured.

If you are already bored with your simple KDE login screen, you can spice it up a little through theming. To help you, I have collected several user-submitted and ready-to-use KDM themes that I think would stand out above all others. Enjoy!


Pulsar



Asphyxia



WorldKdm



Noir



Earth-abstract



Sweet Darkness



Login-scan 'fusion'



TrueNature



Linux Passion



Toxic



Free your world



Shuttle



Umbrella Corp



Access



Amora


Weekly Ten (5-25-2009)

10 Latest News, Blogs, Tips, and Reviews that I find Interesting and Useful:


1. How sand is transformed into silicon chips
The deserts of Arizona are home to Intel's Fab 32, a $3billion factory that's performing one of the most complicated electrical engineering feats of our time.
More @ TechRadar

2. Billionaire club in bid to curb overpopulation
Some of America’s leading billionaires have met secretly to consider how their wealth could be used to slow the growth of the world’s population and speed up improvements in health and education.
More @ TimesOnline

3. Wine: Can't Live With It, Can't Live Without It
Should the Linux faithful go on the wagon and give up Wine entirely? Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth seemed to imply as much when he said in a recent Q&A that "the free software ecosystem needs to thrive on its own rules." Yet he also said that both Wine and native Linux ports "play an important role."
More @ LinuxInsider

4. USB GPS

More @ HackaDay

5. Faster is better on Google Suggest
Today, we're introducing more features to Google Suggest to help you make your searches even faster. These features are rolling out gradually, so you should be able to see them soon.
More @ Googleblog

6. Apple said building $1 billion server farm
A "state official" has told the Charlotte Observer that a bill nearing approval that would bend tax rules for a single, unnamed company are actually meant to accommodate a specific Apple project, which might otherwise be located in another state.
More @ AppleInsider

7. YouTube Yanks Thousands of Porn Videos
YouTube has removed thousands of pornographic videos from its servers following a coordinated attack which succeeded in uploading a catalogue of inappropriate clips to the video-sharing site.
More @ PCWorld

8. HTC's Warhawk and Fortress are AT&T's Touch Diamond2 and Pro2

More @ Engadget

9. Wolfram Alpha a Google Killer? Not... Supposed... To... Be
I'm getting tired of reading about whether Alpha is a Google-killer. I've seen Stephen Wolfram's presentations a couple of times; he's quite careful to say that it isn't. There's a fundamental difference that many people out there are just missing. Google is a search engine. Alpha looks like a search engine, but it isn't; it's all about curated data, and the analysis of that data.
More @ OreillyRadar

10. Another 10 Fascinating Facts That Are Wrong
We put a lot of trust in our teachers - as pupils we trust that they know what they are talking about, and as parents we trust that they are educating our children. But unfortunately (and no doubt unintentionally) many of our teachers repeat the same myths that they were taught.
More @ Listverse

Fedora 11 “Leonidas” is Almost Ready to Kick Ass!

A few more days from now, the latest and hopefully the greatest version of one of the most popular Linux distributions will be released. For those of you who loved Fedora 10, then the reasons are plenty for you to like version 11 (codename Leonidas) more.

To get everyone excited, let's take a look at some of the many great features that the upcoming Fedora 11 will incorporate:

Faster Boot Speed
Probably a shot at beating the boot speed of Ubuntu 9.04 "Jaunty Jackaope", Fedora aims to startup or to be at login screen (GNOME) in 20 seconds or less. As they say, a faster boot makes for happy users.

Automatic Fonts & Mime Installer
This new feature will certainly make Fedora much friendlier to Linux newbies. Users will be able to automatically install applications, fonts, multimedia codecs and clipart in just a few clicks. There's also a new popup like when you try to play an unsupported media file, open an unknown file, or use fonts that are not suitable.


Improved Power Management
Laptop and netbook owners will have a good reason to use Fedora 11 since the developers are working hard on conserving battery power consumption. With the use of new measuring tools, they were able to locate power greedy applications that led to tuned daemon, which can automatically set the power saving levels.

Significant RPM Update

RPM 4.7 has notably improved over its previous version in terms of performance. Memory consumption has been reduced a lot. A test-case of "everything install" of Fedora 10 used to top at near 1.5GB memory consumption, now the peak with the same package set is just over 300MB. For users, this means a much faster upgrades and improved handling of failed upgrades.

Flexible and Easy-to-use Volume Control
To make volume control more intuitive and user-friendly, Fedora 11 will ship with a revised volume control and sound user interfaces. The result is an easily understandable and much more flexible volume control model. To somehow let you know what I mean, here are a few screenshots:




Updated Applications
Essential programs and applications like GNOME, KDE, Xfce, Firefox, Thunderbird, and Python are upgraded to their latest versions.


You will find these and more on the latest approaching version of Fedora. So will you be in for one wild night (I mean release)?

8 Essential OpenOffice Extensions

OpenOffice is already a complete desktop office suite that is at par in terms of features with the proprietary Microsoft Office. However, its functionality can still be improved by utilizing useful extensions that are easily available.

Like in Firefox, OpenOffice will let you install or remove extensions without difficulty with the use of an Extension Manager.

Now if you are ready to try out some handy OpenOffice extensions, here are those that I highly recommend:

1. Writer's Tools
This is definitely one of my favorite extensions. Fully loaded with useful utilities, Writer's Tools is truly a must-have for professional and even for non-professional writers. Some of its impressive features are:Multi-format Backup tool saves the currently opened Writer document in the Word, RTF, and TXT formats.

* Email Backup tool can be used to quickly send a backup copy of the currently opened document to a specified email address.

* Lookup Tool lets you look up the currently selected word in several online references, including Cambridge Dictionaries, WordNet, and Google Define.

* Post to Microblog tool can be used to send messages to the Identi.ca and Twitter microblogging services.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD


2. LanguageTool
This extension makes it possible to check for grammatical and language errors since OpenOffice doesn't have a grammar and language checker by default. It supports languages in English, German, Polish, Dutch, and much more. It is rule-based, which means it will find errors for which a rule is defined in its XML configuration files. Rules for more complicated errors can be written in Java. However, it does not include spell checking.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD


3. Professional Template Pack II
If you want to create professional-looking documents and presentations, then you must get this extension. This template pack contains more than 120 templates for Writer, Calc, and Impress. Some of the included templates are:

* Business correspondence templates
* Budget and project plan templates
* Event posters in six different layouts
* Presentation templates
* A dozen formal and personal letter templates
* Business card templates

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD


4. Sun Presentation Minimizer
If you want to efficiently reduce the file size of your presentation, then this extension is for you. It can optimize the image quality size and remove data that is no longer needed in your presentation. The Sun Presentation Minimizer wizard summarizes all of the changes that will be made to your presentation, and then gives you an estimate of the file size reduction.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD


5. OpenOffice.org2GoogleDocs
This extension is essential for those who are always on the go. It makes it possible to export, update, and import your documents to and from Google Docs, Zoho and WebDAV servers. With OOo2GD you may export to Google Docs, Zoho and WebDAV servers:

* Documents: ODT, SXW, DOC, RTF without modification, other known to OO.org after conversion to ODT

* Spreadsheets: ODS, XLS, CSV without modification, other known to OO.org after conversion to ODS

* Presentations: PPT, PPS without modification, other known to OO.org after conversion to PPT

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD



6. Modern Impress Template
This is simply a collection of 30 beautiful templates that you can use for your presentation to impress your teacher or your boss. The graphics by the way are based on open-source art. After installation, you can access the template by going to File -- > New --> Templates and Documents --> Templates --> My Templates.



7. DataForm
To be able to generate a data input form for tables in Calc (reproducing the “Data – Form” feature of Microsoft Office Excel), you will need this extension.

In Calc, create a table with at least one row and the headline, for example:
Name | Surname | Cellphone
John | Smith | 1234455

Then, click on a range or any cell of the newly created table (not on empty cells), and go to Data - Form. That's it. A form will appear letting you insert other records, or edit-delete the old ones.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD


8. Alternative dialog Find & Replace for Writer
This is the enhanced version of Find & Replace function in Writer. Some of its key features are:

* Fast selection preset regular and extended expressions

* Searched or replaced text can contain one or more paragraphs

* Search out block of paragraphs delimited by two text marks

* Multiple search and replacement in one step

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD

Weekly Ten (5-18-2009)

10 Latest News, Blogs, Tips, and Reviews that I find Interesting and Useful:


1. A Web That Speaks Your Language
IN the early years of the Web, nearly all of its content appeared in English. But that is changing quickly. Today, articles on Wikipedia are available in more than 200 languages, for example. And about 36 percent of the seven million blogs running on WordPress, a free software platform, are in languages other than English, according to the founder Matt Mullenweg.
More @ NYTimes.com

2. Is Google's Chrome the New Internet Explorer?
Google's Chrome browser has a market share that rounds down to zero. Yet Microsoft plans to argue to the European Commission that bundling Chrome into Windows -- an anti-trust decree the EC wants to impose -- will potentially give Google a monopoly hold on the Internet.
More @ PCWorld.com

3. Steve Jobs seen returning post-WWDC brandishing new iPhones
While all eyes are on Apple's annual developers conference as a likely forum for new iPhone hardware announcements, one Wall Street analyst is advising clients that better bets may be placed on an event a few weeks later that may also mark the return of Steve Jobs.
More @ AppleInsider

4. OBD-II Automotive data logging

More @ HackaDay

5. Linux and FOSS: Living A Conscious Life
What is winning? It's not "world domination". Winning is changing the rules of the game so that a dirty convicted monopolist does not control the industry, and Linux/FOSS can thrive without constantly having to fight just for the right to exist.
More @ LinuxToday

6. Top 10 disappointing technologies
Pretty much every new product gets hyped as a potentially disruptive technology these days, and usually nobody outside of the company's marketing department actually believes it.
More @ PCAuthority.com

7. Amherst man famed for Unix – software and his license plate
Jon Hall, of Amherst, has the most celebrated license plate in New Hampshire. The combination of "Live Free or Die" and "UNIX" on his Jeep Wrangler is the most celebrated New Hampshire license plate in the entire world!
More @ NashuaTelegraph.com

8. Home built massage chair strikes inexpugnable fear into aching joints

More @ Engadget

9. Virtualization With KVM On Ubuntu 9.04
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and running virtual machines on an Ubuntu 9.04 server. I will show how to create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.
More @ HowToForge

10. Turning Thoughts Into Things
The most successful people in the world have perfected the craft of turning thoughts into things. Successful people are those who have the skill of making their dreams come true. What they think about becomes reality.
More @ BoSanchez

3 Sample Google Chrome Extensions

Chromium developers have just released three sample extensions for Google Chrome. The extensions are for testing purposes only. To run them, you will need to use a recent trunk build or the Chrome dev channel release, and then add --enable-extensions to your Chrome command line.

Here are the 3 Google Chrome sample extensions (with screenshots):

*Gmail Checker

Displays a toolstrip that shows how many messages are in your Gmail inbox.


*Subscribe in Google Reader

Provides easy access to subscribe to a webpage's feed in Google Reader.


*Build Bot Monitor

Shows the current status of the Chromium Build Bot.


Google Chrome is clearly on its way to steal the show from Firefox. One of the main reasons why I'm using Firefox is because of its useful add-ons, so if Chrome can flawlessly provide me those then I might make the switch.

How about you? What will make you switch from Firefox to Chrome?

R.I.P. Fravia

This is just an update on my Fravia post. I learned through Katherine Noyes of TechNewsWorld (just now since I’m still busy moving to a new house and fixing things up) that the legendary reverse engineer have passed away at the age of 56. Fravia's sister posted the sad announcement including some touching message for his brother.

"Fravia passed away on Sunday, 3rd May 2009"

"I wish the world's surface could shrink
and I would suddenly find you by my side. Imprinted by your broad and lively mind, and by your even broader and generous heart, I am most lucky - I had the luck to be Your Sister"

Indeed Fravia was very generous in sharing to the whole world a great wealth of information. He has been a huge motivation for those of us who seek for deep knowledge in computing. According to Jon Lech Johansen, another well-known hacker, Fravia’s site was a goldmine during his education as a reverse engineer.

Although Fravia is gone, his selfless dedication in teaching both the art and science of reverse engineering will never be forgotten, and his legacy will live forever.

Make Your Own Cola Using the OpenCola Formula

If you don't like the taste of Free Beer, then you may try OpenCola, the Free and Open Source cola. This cola is so unique in the sense that the full instructions for making it are completely available and modifiable. So anyone can create the drink and change the recipe as long as it is licensed under GNU GPL.

OpenCola was originally intended as a promotional tool for explaining the free and open source software. However, the drink made its own name after having sold 150, 000 cans.

Although the company behind OpenCola soft drink is long gone, the recipe lives on. To those who are interested or to those who are willing to create their own cola using the OpenCola formula, here are the ingredients:

7X (Top SeekrutTM) flavoring formula:
3.50 ml orange oil
1.00 ml lemon oil
1.00 ml nutmeg oil
1.25 ml cassia oil
0.25 ml coriander oil
0.25 ml neroli oil
2.75 ml lime oil
0.25 ml lavender oil
10.0 g gum arabic
3.00 ml water

OpenCola syrup:
2.00 tsp. 7X formula
3.50 tsp. 75% phosphoric acid or citric acid
2.28 l water
2.36 kg plain granulated white table sugar
0.50 tsp. caffeine (optional)
30.0 ml caramel color

For complete instructions on making the OpenCola and for other details, you may visit their main web site HERE.

Weekly Ten (5-11-2009)

10 Latest News, Blogs, Tips, and Reviews that I find Interesting and Useful:


1. Last Dance with the Shuttle: What's in Store for the Final Hubble Servicing Mission
Last month marked the 19th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, an orbiting observatory that has become a household name and a lichpin of astronomical science. The telescope has proved remarkably resilient, enduring numerous glitches over the years—from a flawed primary mirror at deployment to a serious electronic failure this past September.
More @ ScientificAmerican

2. We need both engineers and artists in programming
Uncle Bob delivered a compelling keynote at RailsConf last week that put forth the argument that what we need most in programming is more professionalism. I loved the delivery, but I disagree with the conclusion.
More @ LoudThinking.com

3. 1% Linux Market Share = 100% Dishonesty
A PC desktop market share analysis of questionable reliability is being eagerly swallowed by Redmond's tame battalions of "tech journalists." Folks, if you're getting paid to be gasbags who are not required to publish anything of substance you're doing fine. If you're being paid to be real journalists, you're not succeeding.
More @ LinuxToday

4. GPS logger with wireless trigger

More @ HackaDay

5. The 2008 Founders' Letter
Since 2004, when Google began to have annual reports, Larry and I have taken turns writing an annual letter. I never imagined I would be writing one in the midst of an economic crisis unlike any we have seen in decades. As I write this, search queries are reflecting economic hardship, the major market indexes are one half of what they were less than 18 months ago, and unemployment is at record levels.
More @ Googleblog

6. Apple requires iPhone OS 3.0 support for all new mobile apps
The release of iPhone OS 3.0 beta 5 has been accompanied by an e-mail notice to all registered developers that their code "must be compatible" with 3.0 from here on out if they expect the software to be published. While Apple believes many current apps will run without a hitch, it cautions bluntly that programmers shouldn't assume apps built for 2.x will carry over smoothly.
More @ AppleInsider

7. Do Social Networks Invite Hackers into the Office?
As more workers spend a greater part of their days on social networks like Facebook and Twitter, hackers have turned their energies toward spreading their malware across those services, harming workstations and company networks.
More @ PCWorld.com

8. Boeing developing Phantom Ray fighter-sized combat UAV

More @ Engadget

9. Goodreads vs Twitter: The Benefits of Asymmetric Follow
I am never more painfully reminded of the limits of symmetric “friend”-based social networks than I am when I post a book review on Goodreads. I love books, and I love spreading the word about ones I enjoy (as well as ones I expected to enjoy, but didn’t quite). Most of the time, my reviews go out quietly to a small group of friends, whose book recommendations I also follow. It’s a lovely social network.
More @ OreillyRadar

10. How To Climb Your Mountains And Live With Great Abundance
How did the frog jump out of the well? Before he saw the lake with his eyes, he already saw the lake within him. He felt it in his heart.
More @ BoSanchez

10 Awesome Icon Sets for Ubuntu/GNOME Desktop

Since our list of cool icon sets for Ubuntu/GNOME desktop was pretty much in demand, I decided to give you some more. This time, we have collected some of the finest and freshest icon sets that will surely enhance the look of your Linux desktop.

So get ready and take your pick from these awesome icon sets for Ubuntu, and of course for other GNOME-based distros:

1. Feel of Japan


2. SudUbuntu


3. Vibrant


4. Gartoon Redux


5. Circle Starts


6. Meliae (White)


7. Nostromo


8. Oxygen Refit


9. Jungle


10. Lynx (Black)


Why Your Mother Wants You to Use Linux

As the saying goes, mother knows best. So if moms were given a chance to pick an operating system that would be right for their children, they will surely choose Linux. Here’s why:

1. Since Linux is free, you have no more reason to ask her for money every time you install, upgrade, and get new software applications. Now instead of buying you a Windows Vista Ultimate Edition, she now has extra money to spare for a spa.

2. Because she loves you so much, she wants you and your computer to be free from virus always. In addition, most mothers want the house to be always clean, and just hearing the words like bacteria, fungi, and virus make them angry.

3. She wants you to learn new things and gain deeper knowledge on how computers work instead of playing Xbox all day. Linux will greatly enhance your computer skills since you are free to explore its inner workings.

4. You don't have to ask her for money to buy new computer hardware to cope up with the latest software since there are lightweight and resource-efficient Linux distros that could make your old computer fly. So another money saved and another spa for your mother.

5. She wants you stop using bad words after a BSOD. Linux rarely crashes so she should be happy hearing you say "Wow" instead of "F*@k!" or "S#%t!" :-)

Happy Mother’s Day to all the Moms out there!

Famous Reverse Engineer Bade Farewell

Fjalar Ravia, famously known for his pseudonym "Fravia", is one most distinguished reverse engineer in the world. He is best known for maintaining a web archive of reverse engineering techniques and for leading people from becoming "crackers" to "reversers".

Fravia has been suffering from cancer for more than two years now, and on his website he recently posted a farewell message entitled “Sour 'n Sweet Swan Song”. Here are some of the most touching parts of his message:

“Ok, so all the cures I had to undergo for almost two years: two complete and quite debilitating chemotherapy cycles, 4 operations, many biopsies, uncounted PET scans and MRIs, months spent inside a clinic... did not work out.”

“The metastases escaped from the throat: my dutch professor managed to stop everything but not the liver tumour, and my liver is now imploding. So it is a matter of weeks, not even months.”


“Anyway if universe and time are really infinite (which I somehow doubt), then an almost "metempsicotically identical" combination of neurons will re-appear again somewhere, e.g. on another galaxy and planet... hopefully one with less imbeciles.”


“Enough messages of doom: to be angry just because you die would be childish. And in fact I am not even angry, just analyzing and rambling aloud.”


“More generally, never underestimate all sciences "in decadence", they are often quite powerful resources, lowballed (or even forbidden) on purpose by those that want you to just work, drool before a TV screen and consume consume consume... wasting your whole life in order to be able to buy slightly sooner a car of a different color.”

“Yet my most cherished advice to all friends is the following: learn to enjoy your contingent present, don't be obsessed by the future. Carpe diem, and enjoy the current emotions: a starry sky, a fresh wind, the shells on the seashore, your love at your side in the night, a long talk in the evening twilight with a friend, the smile of your kids. Substituting *that* with a TV -or a computer screen- is a very poor bargain... that is one of the few things I am now pretty sure of.”


You can read the full post HERE.

On a previous note, Fravia expressed his deep interest in GNU/Linux:

“In fact I don't care much: I read a lot, spend time with my kids, write a lot, and delve more and more into GNU/Linux (a real panacea for seekers). I am also happily working on my searching stuff (at the moment on "linguistic related" seeking techniques), I'm trying to reverse the (nice but heavily commercialized) Microsoft *.lit format (pilfered by the MS-clowns from open source html protocols) in order to port it -as native as possible- to GNU/Linux... and might even open a small "ramblings of mine" section on searchlores, just for the fun and "hubris" of it. Ah, and I also play a lot of nice tactical ans strategic games and simulations (only in order to test the most recent -and amazingly powerful- wine implementations, ça va sans dire :-)”

He also posted this photo of him and Richard M. Stallman:


In October of 2000, Fravia got in touch with RMS at a LinuxDay event in Milan. This meeting inspired him to start exploring and helping free software and free culture.

Thank you Fravia for sharing with us your deep knowledge and skills. You will be missed.

Learn more about Fravia and his works by visiting his web site: HERE.

Weekly Ten (5-04-2009)

10 Latest News, Blogs, Tips, and Reviews that I find Interesting and Useful:


1. Microsoft Mum on Vista Plans After Windows 7 Launch
How long does Microsoft plan to keep selling copies of its Windows Vista operating system after the upcoming launch of Windows 7? The company isn't saying.
More @ PCWorld

2. Walking the Cyberbeat
It's just before lunchtime in the sunny, high-tech headquarters of Facebook in Palo Alto, Calif., and Simon Axten is cuing up some porn. A photo of a young couple sloppily making out pops onscreen. It's gross, but not against the rules, so Axten punches a key to judge the image appropriate.
More @ NewsWeek

3. Don't Cry For Disappearing Newspapers
As more print newspapers and magazines go out of business, there are articles and blogs bemoaning the loss of paper-and-ink journalism. Citizens will not be informed and democracy itself will fall.
More @ LinuxToday

4. Ipod GPS

More @ HackaDay

5. Top ten worst viruses
All this panic over a simple strain of flu got us thinking about some of the more virulent computer pandemics that have hit in recent years. While a computer virus pales in seriousness to a human outbreak, malware attacks can still take a huge toll on businesses throughout the world.
More @ PCAuthority

6. The Perfect Desktop - Ubuntu Studio 9.04
This tutorial shows how you can set up an Ubuntu Studio 9.04 desktop that is a full-fledged replacement for a Windows desktop, i.e. that has all the software that people need to do the things they do on their Windows desktops. The advantages are clear: you get a secure system without DRM restrictions that works even on old hardware, and the best thing is: all software comes free of charge.
More @ HowToForge

7. Corporate Tweets and the SEC: Sometimes It’s Better To Keep Your Mouth Shut
Last year, I covered the landmark SEC decision to recognize corporate blogs and potentially other forms of Social Media as a recognized form of meeting public disclosure requirements under Regulation FD (Fair Disclosure) – in some cases. It was a significant validation of a widely recognized medium for sharing information between publicly-traded companies and stakeholders.
More @ TechCrunch

8. NYT: Big-screen Kindle coming from Amazon "as early as this week"

More @ Engadget

9. The Tower of Techno-Babel: What Languages Do Devs Love Now?
What languages are enterprise IT developers falling in and out of love with? Your answer depends on whom you ask and whose figures they're looking at. Business needs, the rise of Web 2.0 and even economic factors can all impact the popularity of one language over another.
More @ LinuxInsider

10. Top 10 Renewable Energy Sources
There are many sources of energy that are renewable and considered to be environmentally friendly and harness natural processes. These sources of energy provide an alternate ‘cleaner’ source of energy, helping to negate the effects of certain forms of pollution. All of these power generation techniques can be described as renewable since they are not depleting any resource to create the energy.
More @ ListVerse

Manny “Pac-Man” Pacquiao: Easily Every Geek’s Favorite Athlete

To computer geeks, Pac-Man is known as the immensely popular and iconic arcade game developed by Namco during the 80’s. To boxing enthusiasts, Pac-Man is now synonymous with the world’s number one pound for pound fighter and perhaps the greatest boxer of all time.

In the Pac-Man video game, the lead character eats a bunch of dots and villains named Blinky, Pinky, Inky and Clyde. In boxing, Pac-Man has conquered some of the legends like Morales, Barrera, Marquez, and De La Hoya.

The most recent win by Pac-Man came yesterday against the British brawler named Ricky “Hitman” Hatton. In two very exciting rounds, Pac-Man has virtually eaten Hitman alive winning by TKO.

Having seen the mega fight between Pacquiao and Hatton at a local cinema, I feel so proud being a Filipino. In this lifetime, I know I will never ever witness any boxer who can achieve what Pacquiao has. --But what amazes me most is his decency and humility despite his remarkable accomplishments.


With his latest stunning victory and with a bright future still ahead, Pac-Man “the boxer” will further be known in every corner of the world. Although computer geeks are not noted to be sports fans, this could change. --Because there exist an awesome athlete with a moniker that we are already familiar with.

Congratulations Manny “Pac-Man” Pacquiao. You are truly an inspiration.

11 Interesting Short Films about Google Chrome

Google just released several short films to promote their very own Chrome web browser. A few talented artists and illustrators were invited to create these videos to simply show the importance of a web browser and at the same time introduce Chrome to a much a wider audience.

The videos are really fun to watch so I would like to share some of them here:
















More short films can be found at Chrome's YouTube page.

Several months ago, I remembered posting here a collection of cool Firefox video ads. I think they are a bit old already, so it's probably time for Firefox fans to create some fresh videos to beat those Google Chrome short films.