Monday, December 28, 2020

New Era of Linux

Linux is the best-known and most-used open source operating system. As an operating system, Linux is software that sits underneath all of the other software on a computer, receiving requests from those programs and relaying these requests to the computer’s hardware.

What is Linux?

In many ways, Linux is similar to other operating systems you may have used before, such as Windows, macOS (formerly OS X), or iOS. Like other operating systems, Linux has a graphical interface, and the same types of software you are accustomed to, such as word processors, photo editors, video editors, and so on. In many cases, a software’s creator may have made a Linux version of the same program you use on other systems. In short: if you can use a computer or other electronic device, you can use Linux.

But Linux also is different from other operating systems in many important ways. First, and perhaps most importantly, Linux is open source software. The code used to create Linux is free and available to the public to view, edit, and—for users with the appropriate skills—to contribute to.

You probably already use Linux, whether you know it or not. Depending on which user survey you look at, between one- and two-thirds of the webpages on the Internet are generated by servers running Linux.

Companies and individuals choose Linux for their servers because it's secure, flexible, and you can receive excellent support from a large community of users, in addition to companies like Canonical, SUSE, and Red Hat, each of which offer commercial support.

Many devices you probably own, such as Android phones and tablets and Chromebooks, digital storage devices, personal video recorders, cameras, wearables, and more, also run Linux. Your car has Linux running under the hood. Even Microsoft Windows features Linux components, as part of the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).

Linux on TV

Despite some evidence last year that smart TVs were losing ground to streaming boxes, Strategy Analytics has released a Global Connected TV Device report that shows a resurgence in smart TV sales. In 4Q 2018, the global market for Internet connected Smart TVs had a “strong quarter,” with shipments up 18 percent year over year, representing 72 percent of total TV shipments, says the market research firm. Some 157 million smart TVs sold in 2018, representing 67 percent of the total TV market, says the report.

The report primarily focuses on software, breaking out the leading smart TV stacks that represent half of all shipments. They are all based on Linux kernels, in some cases via Android. The percentage is likely much higher since the report suggests that the other 50 percent of sales are mostly Linux-based, as well.

Linux on Cloud

Now, Linux rules the computing world. Don't believe me? The Linux Foundation reports that Linux runs 90 percent of the public cloud workload, 82 percent of the world's smartphones, 62 percent of the embedded market, oh and a mere 99 percent of the supercomputer market. All that rests on the Linux kernel.

In its 2017 Linux Kernel Development Report, Jonathan Corbet, Linux kernel developer and editor of LWN.net, and Greg Kroah-Hartman, stable Linux kernel maintainer, report on Linux's recent evolution.

Linux on Car

Linux is everywhere including your car. While some companies, like Tesla, run their own homebrew Linux distros, most rely on Automotive Grade Linux (AGL). AGL is a collaborative cross-industry effort developing an open platform for connected cars with over 140 members.

This Linux Foundation-based organization is a who's who of Linux-friendly car manufacturers. Its membership includes Audi, Ford, Honda, Mazda, Nissan, Mercedes, Suzuki, and the world's biggest automobile company: Toyota.

Why? "Automakers are becoming software companies, and just like in the tech industry, they are realizing that open source is the way forward," said Dan Cauchy, AGL's executive director, in a statement. Car companies know that while horsepower sells, customers also want smart infotainment systems, automated safe drive features, and, eventually, self-driving cars. Linux and open-source company can give them all of that

Linux Era

And, this is the end. With all your device with Linux, it's not too late for learn something about basic Linux for better life.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

IDC: Android Market Share Reached 75% Worldwide In Q3 2012

According to new figures released from analyst firm IDC, Android shipments reached 136 million units in Q3 2012, which accounts for 75% of the 181.1 million shipments during the quarter. Or, as IDC puts it, “the Android operating system was found on three out of every four smartphones shipped during the third quarter of 2012.” Of course, remember that we’re looking at shipped figures, not sold here. Still, it’s indicative of the traction Android is having in the worldwide market. A good part of Android’s recent growth has been influenced by the numbers coming out of Samsung over the past quarter. According to figures several analyst firms released earlier in the week, Samsung now has somewhere around 31%- 35% of smartphone market share. (Specifically, ABI pegged it at 35%, Strategy Analytics at 35.2%, and IDC at 31.3%). Samsung’s market share actually saw a slight decline due to numerous smaller vendors increasing production, says IDC, but it shipped 56.3 million units thanks to the popularity of its flagship phone, the Galaxy S III. Apple sold 26.9 million iPhones during the period, for comparison’s sake.
Combined, Android smartphones shipments in Q3 reached a record level of 136 million units, up from 100 million units in the previous quarter. IDC, clearly with a flair for the dramatic in this release, noted that Android’s total volumes in Q3 were greater than the total number of smartphones shipped in 2007, the year that Android was officially announced. (Feel free to oooh and ahh, now.)
iOS came in second place, but was the only other mobile operating system to claim double-digit market share in the quarter with 14.9%. Note, however, that the iPhone 5 was released late in the quarter, and the full impact of its sales aren’t felt yet. Among the also-rans: BlackBerry’s share fell to just over 4%, and Symbian posted its largest year-over-year decline (-77.3%) to date, reaching a market share of just 2.3%. If there’s any wonder where Android is finding all its new users, well, there you go. In fact, IDC senior analyst Kevin Restivo spells this out for those who didn’t make the correlation, saying “The share decline of smartphone operating systems not named iOS since Android’s introduction isn’t a coincidence. The smartphone operating system isn’t an isolated product, it’s a crucial part of a larger technology ecosystem. Google has a thriving, multi-faceted product portfolio. Many of its competitors, with weaker tie-ins to the mobile OS, do not. This factor and others have led to loss of share for competitors with few exceptions.” Meanwhile, newer player Windows Phone shipped just 3.6 million units worldwide, in Q3, fewer than Symbian’s 4.1 million. Its market share is now 2%, just a bit ahead of “Linux’s” 1.5% during Q3. There’s still hope for Windows Phone, however, with the launch of Windows Phone 8. Taken From : TechCrunch

Monday, January 4, 2010

Slackware go to Libata

Now slackware development use libata for maintain hardisk. It's follow Zenwalk the fork, that use libata by default from beginning.

It's not wrong at all. This is a Open Source world.

So we can follow each others to build a better systems.


This is the changelog.