Miscellaneous Tech News
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@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Microsoft Turning On Teams for Office 365 Business, ProPlus Subscribers as Early as July
Microsoft plans to activate its Teams collaboration app for organizations with existing Office 365 Business or Office 365 ProPlus subscriptions starting as early as July 9, according to a Friday announcement.
Unless IT pros take advance action to block the arrival of Teams, the application will get turned on automatically by Microsoft with the arrival of next Office update.
There has been a switch (for a couple of months) in the admin portal to disable the automatic adding of Teams for SFB users, but it got turned on by default. I had to go in and disable it, as we left SFB/Teams for Slack.
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The Document Foundation announces LibreOffice 6.2.5
The Document Foundation announces LibreOffice 6.2.5, the fifth bug and regression fixing release of the LibreOffice 6.2 family, targeted at tech-savvy individuals: early adopters, technology enthusiasts and power users.
Users in production environments can start evaluating LibreOffice 6.2.5. -
Eternal Terminal – A Remote Shell That Automatically Reconnects Without Interrupting The Session
Eternal Terminal (ET) is a remote shell that automatically reconnects without interrupting the session.
Unlike the normal SSH session, ET session will survive even after the network outages or IP changes. -
Ubuntu 19.10 Indeed Working On "Experimental ZFS Option" In Ubiquity Installer
It looks like in July we could finally see an "experimental ZFS" option within Ubuntu 19.10 and its daily images for those wanting an easy-to-use ZFS On Linux based installation of Ubuntu.
We've been anticipating Canonical to add this easy-to-use option for setting up a ZoL (ZFS on Linux) root file-system configuration when installing Ubuntu. -
FreeBSD turns 26
The FreeBSD operating system is continuing to make progress, 26 years after it got its name.
Among the areas where work is being done is on improved support for RISC-V, FUSE filesystem updates, C runtime changes, and security improvements. FreeBSD Day is celebrated on June 19, in recognition of the date in 1993 when the name FreeBSD was coined for a fork of the 386BSD project. -
ENDEAVOUR OS – READY TO BE RELEASED
One of our favorite Arch based Linux distros Antergos discontinued recently. All those using Antergos – here is another distro ready to take place as a user-friendly arch Linux distro, EndeavourOS.
EndeavourOS promises to provide an easier way to install and use Arch Linux just as Antergos did. -
New memory chip could make data transfer 1,000 times faster
A Cambridge-based startup believes it has a prototype that could potentially solve the von Neumann bottleneck
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@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I am trying to figure out why choose Azure over AWS or any others if doing Linux Systems?
Why exactly wouldn't you? What specific reasons?
I would think it 100% depends on one's particular needs.
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@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Ubuntu 19.10 Indeed Working On "Experimental ZFS Option" In Ubiquity Installer
It looks like in July we could finally see an "experimental ZFS" option within Ubuntu 19.10 and its daily images for those wanting an easy-to-use ZFS On Linux based installation of Ubuntu.
We've been anticipating Canonical to add this easy-to-use option for setting up a ZoL (ZFS on Linux) root file-system configuration when installing Ubuntu.That would be very handy.
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@hobbit666 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
New memory chip could make data transfer 1,000 times faster
A Cambridge-based startup believes it has a prototype that could potentially solve the von Neumann bottleneck
@hobbit666 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
New memory chip could make data transfer 1,000 times faster
A Cambridge-based startup believes it has a prototype that could potentially solve the von Neumann bottleneck
Sounds like they have some cool ideas.
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@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I am trying to figure out why choose Azure over AWS or any others if doing Linux Systems?
Why exactly wouldn't you? What specific reasons?
I would think it 100% depends on one's particular needs.
Pretty much.
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Debian 10 “buster”
https://www.debian.org/News/2019/20190706 -
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Debian 10 “buster”
https://www.debian.org/News/2019/20190706Awesome, download now!
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Canonical GitHub account hacked
https://www.zdnet.com/article/canonical-github-account-hacked-ubuntu-source-code-safe/
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@Danp said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Canonical GitHub account hacked
https://www.zdnet.com/article/canonical-github-account-hacked-ubuntu-source-code-safe/
Looks like 2FA should be on order... I can't understand why that's still not at 100% yet.
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Material Shell Is A New Tiling Shell For Gnome (Beta)
Material Shell is a new tiling shell replacement for Gnome Shell that's currently in beta. It's tagline mentions that this extension proposes "a performant and simple opinionated mouse/keyboard workflow to increase daily productivity and comfort", while also following the Material Design guidelines.
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CISA "news" this morning: U.S. Coast Guard states the obvious for securing networks.
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Desktop Analytics Preview Now Available for Assessing Windows 10 Upgrades
Microsoft announced on Monday that a preview of its Desktop Analytics service is now available for testing.
The preview is currently just of interest to organizations using Microsoft's System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) management solution. -
Amazon plans nationwide broadband—with both home and mobile service
Amazon seeks FCC approval to launch 3,236 low-Earth broadband satellites.
Amazon is seeking government permission to launch 3,236 broadband satellites that would cover nearly all of the United States and much of the rest of the world.