Cross Browser Compatibility Checking http://ow.ly/1pLcPm
March 5, 2010 Posted by sathis | Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
About
I am not a native English Speaker.If you find any mistakes please comment them..
It will help me to improve further..
-
Flickr Photos



More Photos
Linux news- Too Much Information: Monitoring Becomes a Big Data ProblemAs data center resource pools grow, it becomes nearly impossible for humans to track and monitor. Paul Maritz, CEO at VMware, says we are going to require systems that are self-monitoring and that report to us about significant issues.Ron Miller
- Has Ubuntu One Lost The Personal Cloud Market? Google recently announced its Google Drive which is clearly positioned as a competitor to iCloud, SkyDrive or alternative to services like Dropbox or semi-open source Spider-Oak. A lot of Linux users are upset as there is no client for Linux at the moment. The good news is Google Drive will be coming to Linux soon. That doesn't mean that Linux users wer […]Swapnil Bhartiya
- Set up qemu-kvm-1.0+noroms as spice enabled qemu server vs qemu-kvm-spice on Ubuntu PreciseThis post follows up [url=https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/998435]Bug #998435 [i]qemu[/i]-[i]kvm[/i]-[i]spice[/i] doesn't support spice/qxl installs[/url]Build bellow is based on upstream (vs linaro) version of qemu-kvm 1.0 on Ubuntu Precise. View bug description above regarding details of qemu-kvm-spice misbehavior.Boris Derzhavets
- Short Linux and Open Source news overview for week 21 of 2012 This is the short linux and open-source news overview for week 21 of 2012. It features small articles bundeling (important) open source related news in one page. This week includes NMAP 6, Mandriva/Mageia, Kernel 3.4, Simon Phipps, Google Drive and more.Relst
- Installing BackTrack 5 R2 GNOMEBackTrack 5 is a Linux distribution designed for penetration testers and other security professionals, or those who want to mess with all the best security and penetration testing applications the free software community has to offer.
- QuiEdit: An Editor for Anyone Who wants a Quiet LifeEditors, like file managers and browsers, are legion. To carve out a niche for itself an editor needs to have some compelling or unique feature(s). QuiEdit is unique. No, really. It is. If you want to write, unplugged from the distractions of the digital world, it has to be a contender. How?Read the article at [url=http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/article […]Gary Richmond
- CIsco Kills Cius, Google Android TabletCisco Systems has killed its Cius tablet, which runs Google Android. I'm hardly surprised. Cisco didn’t offer any Cius updates during Cisco Partner Summit 2012. And Cisco executives had rarely, if ever, been seen using the Cisco Cius tablet. So what went wrong with the Cisco Cius tablet strategy? Competition from Apple’s iPad? Not exactly. The real Cius […]
- Interview with the Sage Mathematics Software ProjectToday we have for you an interview with the developers of the Sage mathematics system project. Note that the answers were given as a team. Sage is an open source project that provides an environment very similar to Matlab, Maple and other proprietary well known mathematics systems. It is widely used in academia and scientific research. Version 5.0 was releas […]eocasio
- How to: iOS 5.1.1 Untethered Jailbreak on LinuxThe following tutorial will teach all Linux users how to jailbreak their Apple iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, iPad 1, iPad 2, iPad 3, iPod Touch 3G and iPod Touch 4G devices.Marius Nestor
- What’s that sound? Linux Audio PlayersYou may not be aware that Linux supports many different audio architecture sets. The most commonly installed on mainstream Linux distributions is Pulse Audio. But ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) is also another popular framework. And there are of course others. OSS (Open-Source Sound) is probably the third most common framework set that you may or m […]
- Too Much Information: Monitoring Becomes a Big Data Problem
-
Archives
- March 2010 (2)
- March 2009 (1)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS