The Register on MSNOpinion
GNOME dev gives fans of Linux's middle-click paste the middle finger
Proposal targets long-standing behavior as 'an X11ism' Opinion Ever since Linux got a graphical desktop, you could ...
Akira Urushibata recently wrote to libreplanet-discuss, which hadn't been active for 2 months ( he was the last person to write to it back in November ). His latest message is a bit like an article ...
In 1991, Unix was an important but secondary x86 operating system. That year, on August 25, a mild-mannered Finnish graduate student named Linus Benedict Torvalds announced on the Usenet group comp.os ...
He likes it: Linux guy gives Windows Home Server a (qualified) thumbs up It seems every time I do a Windows Home Server (WHS) post, the comments end up evolving/devolving into a debate over whether ...
Unix died because of endless incompatibilities between versions. Linux succeeded on servers and everywhere else because it provided a single open operating system that everyone could use. With the ...
The speed at which Linux developers are working on version 5.17 of the popular kernel has gotten the OS’ boss a bit worried. In the weekly State of the kernel post, Linux creator (and the biggest ...
To see a real (non-slop) image one must go about half a year back, only to find some puff piece about slop, i.e. the usual: It is sad to see someone who devoted many years of his life producing ...
In recent years, Microsoft has warmed up to Linux, which it used to see as a rival. Now, there's more use of Linux than Windows on Microsoft Azure.
Free software programmer Miguel de Icaza, co-founder of the Gnome and Mono projects, has revealed that he dumped Linux months ago in favor of Mac OS, citing fragmentation and incompatibilities among ...
Linus Torvalds: “Git proved I could be more than a one-hit wonder.” Your email has been sent Recently some neighbor kids asked me what I do for a living. “I read and write emails,” I told them. They ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results