The H Roundup - Linux 3.10, Fedora 19 and Mir raises eyebrows
Welcome to The H Roundup, your review of the week with the most read news on The H, the security alerts and open source releases, and the essential feature articles – all in one quick-to-scan news item. This week: the 3.10 Linux kernel and Fedora 19 are released, Ubuntu's Mir plans raise eyebrows, the first Firefox OS phones arrive in the market, German intelligence services are spying on the country's backbone, a new beta release from Firefox, and LibreOffice plans to boost spreadsheets with GPU acceleration.
Top News
This week saw the release of the latest version of the Linux kernel, the LXDE developers previewed a port of their desktop environment to Qt, and Canonical's roadmap for switching Ubuntu to Mir as soon as possible is raising eyebrows.
Meanwhile, the Fedora developers unveiled Fedora 19 and the first Firefox OS phones hit the market in Spain.
Avira is discontinuing its anti-virus solutions for Linux. In Germany, in the wake of the PRISM scandal, details emerged on the extent of data gathering local intelligence services are engaged in at the country's main internet backbone.
The LibreOffice developers are working to boost the performance of their spreadsheet application with GPU-based processing, the latest Firefox beta gets an a universal share button, and a new programming language targeted at GPUs arrives on the scene.
- LibreOffice and AMD to GPU boost spreadsheet performance
- Universal "share" button for Firefox
- Harlan: A new GPU programming language
Features
Thorsten Leemhuis explains the new features in Linux 3.10 and also looks at the latest Fedora release, proving that Schrödinger's Cat is definitely alive.
Open Source Releases
Open source releases this week include a number of open source RSS readers, a maintenance release of Samba, a new version of systemd, and a new version of the Rust language.
- Open Recall: Open source RSS readers, HiDPI in GNOME, Samba 4.0.7
- Qt 5.1 - more than just a minor update
- Systemd 205 starts conversion process to cgroups usage
- Rust 0.7 never sleeps
- Open Recall: Engelbart, APL, furniture, Korora and VirtualBox
Security Alerts
A bug in Atlassian's Crowd software puts unpatched servers at risk, gaming company Ubisoft had its customer data compromised, and Apple has released a security update for Mac OS X.
- Atlassian Crowd flaw exposes server
- Attackers gain access to Ubisoft customer data
- Apple releases security update for Mac OS X
For everything The H has published in the last week, check out the last seven days of news. To keep up with The H, subscribe to the RSS feed, or follow honlinenews on Twitter. You can follow The H's own tweeting on Twitter as honline.
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