Leftovers: OSS
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LinkedIn open-sources PalDB, a key-value store for handling ‘side data’
LinkedIn today announced that it is releasing a new key-value store — which is a category of database — under an open-source license. The software, which goes by the name PalDB, was designed to store what LinkedIn calls “side data” — essentially, data that’s needed for a certain very small piece of an entire application.
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Open Help Conference 2015 Hackfest Wrap Up Notes
Big thanks to Shaun & Kat for organizing the hackfest, and the GNOME Foundation for sponsoring me!
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Attunity Expands Big Data Management Platform to Support PostgeSQL
Attunity Ltd., a provider of data management software solutions, has introduced the latest version of its data replication and loading solution. Designed to accelerate enterprise big data analytics initiatives, Attunity Replicate 5.0 automates big data movement to, from and between databases, data warehouses, Hadoop and the cloud, reducing the time and labor, and ultimately the cost of making big data analytics available in real time.
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Open source biometric system takes big leap forward thanks to help from major software company
The proposal was suggested to Redgate by Tristram Norman, the CTO of SimPrints, who saw an opportunity for the technology to take a big leap forward. “Our scanner uses SourceAFIS, the best open source automatic fingerprint identification system available,” he explains. “The codebase behind it is written in C#, but we want to rewrite it in C so that it works better with native Android which runs most of the mobile tools used by health workers around the world.”
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Leading Internet Company in Japan Runs Its Cloud Infrastructure with Nexenta Open Source-driven Software-Defined Storage Platform
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GMO Internet to Showcase Nexenta’s Open Source-driven Software-Defined Storage Platform at OpenStack Summit Tokyo
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Nexenta Continues Asia Pacific Market Expansion via Partnership With the Leading Systems Integrator
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LLVM Developers Discuss Relicensing Code To Apache License
However, shifting the license would break compatibility with the GPLv2 and could make this compiler less interesting to the BSD developers from contributing. LLVM Founder Chris Lattner issued the request for comments over possibly changing the license. The current licensing situation is also problematic for not being able to easily move code from LLVM to their Compiler-RT sub-project, since that's licensed under both the UIUC and MIT licenses.
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Dilution and Misuse of the "Linux" Brand
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