Cisco Exits The Consumer Market As It Sells Linksys To Belkin

This should be a relatively smooth transition that won’t affect current customers: Belkin says it will honor all valid warranties for current and future Linksys products. After the transaction closes, Belkin will account for approximately 30 percent of the US retail home and small business networking market.

via Cisco Exits The Consumer Market As It Sells Linksys To Belkin.

These cheap home routers have become commodities.  As far as I know Belkin makes a decent product.  Cisco tried to require its home router users to be managed by its cloud platform and after that debacle it seemed all downhill from there for them.   If possible I prefer to use a real Linux box running real iptables as a gateway  using these wifi home routers as access points.

An Open-Source exFAT Implementation Reaches v1.0

Linus Torvalds and others in the past have characterized FUSE file-systems as being for toys and misguided people, but FUSE has been used before for bringing Sun/Oracle’s ZFS to Linux, various other creative file-system implementations, and now exFAT. ExFAT support for Linux has been talked about going back to early 2009 but the support has been crap on Linux.

via [Phoronix] An Open-Source exFAT Implementation Reaches v1.0.

I always find filesystem debates fascinating.

Fedora Looks To Replace MySQL With MariaDB

Out of fears that Oracle is making MySQL a more closed software project and not being happy with the overall direction of this widely-used database software, Fedora developers are looking at replacing MySQL with MariaDB in  Fedora 19.

via [Phoronix] Fedora Looks To Replace MySQL With MariaDB.

MySQL would still be available in the Fedora repository for at least one release as the more conservative users make the migration from MySQL to MariaDB.

Microsoft won’t release study that challenged success of Munich’s Linux migration

By switching from Windows to its own Linux distribution, LiMux, Munich has saved over ¬11 million (US$14.3 million) so far, the city announced in November. But a Microsoft-commissioned Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) study conducted by HP suggests that the city’s numbers are wrong, and claims that Munich would have saved ¬43.7 million if it had stuck with Microsoft, German weekly Focus reported earlier this week.

via Microsoft won’t release study that challenged success of Munich’s Linux migration | ITworld.

I find it funny watching numbers being fudged.

As Obama heads back to office, a battle rages over the tech that got him reelected

Ryan and others argue, because the Obama tech team built on top of open source code — code that has been shared publicly and can be “forked,” essentially edited, by anyone. “The things we built off of open source should go back to the public,” says Manik Rathee, who worked as a user experience engineer with OFA. The team relied on open source frameworks like Rails, Flask, Jekyll and Django. “We wouldn’t have been able to accomplish what we did in one year if we hadn’t been working off open source projects,” says Rathee.

via As Obama heads back to office, a battle rages over the tech that got him reelected | The Verge.

I think this is all kind of silly.  The code is probably not that novel.  I’d be more interested in simply learning more how they did it and I might be interested in their development process more than the actual code itself.  Although this team seemed to have done a good job, it was Obama who won the election — not the programmers or the program.  I find it funny that the non techie politicians want to keep all of this proprietary like the code itself has some sort of value.  I’m sure in 4 years this program will be so obsolete no one would think of using it.

Line, The Messaging App That Took Japan By Storm, Crosses 100M Users And Enters The U.S.

Line gives you free voice calls (like Skype or Facebook’s new overhauled app). Then there’s basic messaging, but Line is a bit goofier with sillier emojis and stickers. There are teddy bears juggling eggplants, bunnies with flames of anger in their eyes, and a shy balding man surrounded by little sparkles and flowers. (Yes.)

via Line, The Messaging App That Took Japan By Storm, Crosses 100M Users And Enters The U.S. | TechCrunch.

Japanese trends do sometime take off here in the US.  100M is quite a large set of users.  Facebook has about 1000M users.

Internet TV Startup Aereo Could Help Cord-Cutting Catch On

Aereo began a year ago in New York City and is now expanding into 22 markets. It is going after the growing contingent of TV “cord-cutters” who would rather watch on-demand content online than pay for cable or satellite packages. Aereo charges a minimum of $8 a month for a subscription.

via Internet TV Startup Aereo Could Help Cord-Cutting Catch On | MIT Technology Review.

The interesting thing about this idea is that they somehow figured out how to associate a single antenna to each subscriber.   Content delivery networks, which this seems to be, are difficult to implement on a large scale.

Yammer Competitor Jostle.me Raises $3.1M For Enterprise Sharing Platform Anchored By Pictures, Not Text

Visualization is what binds Jostle.me. You can view activities that are popular across the organization and how people relate to each other.

via Yammer Competitor Jostle.me Raises $3.1M For Enterprise Sharing Platform Anchored By Pictures, Not Text | TechCrunch.

I find it interesting the different ideas people come up with.  This might be useful in certain situations.