Enterprise Open Source Conference 2016

Enterprise Open Source Conference 2016

Next Tuesday 12th April the second edition of Enterprise Open Source Conference will be held in Madrid, a 100% Open Source enterprise-oriented event, more specifically to TI professionals.

Promoted by Red Hat and Accenture, the conference will feature national and international keynotes about the benefits of enterprise Open Source solutions, its adoption in Spain and its possibilities.

Nutanix Acropolis, OpenStack, UDS Enterprise & Linux

Nutanix Acropolis, OpenStack, UDS Enterprise & Linux

Nutanix Acopolis & OpenStack support in UDS Enterprise upcoming release and a list with come Linux commands you should think twice before executing because they can lead you to wrong operations have been the most read posts in our blog during the last weeks.

Just in case you didn’t have the chance to read them yet, here’re the links to the articles that deal with these topics so that you can keep up to date with the most outstanding info related to virtualization and Open Source:

A big tent to boost Open Source

A big tent to boost Open Source

The annual Linux Foundation collaboration summit kicked off yesterday. The executive director of the Linux Foundation, Jim Zemlin, opened the conference and advocated for a big tent to improve the development of Open Source software.

This big tent can include everyone who believes software openness is essential to freedom, all Open Source developers and users and all companies supporting the creation of Open Source products.

New UDS Enterprise calendar scheduler

New UDS Enterprise calendar scheduler

UDS Enterprise 2.0 features a new calendar scheduler to restrict users access to services by dates and hours.

Admins can now assign calendars to the different services pools in order to optimize the use and availability of resources. They can also automate processes using a calendar.

Guide to Open Source licenses

Guide to Open Source licenses

Not all Open Source licenses are the same. Some of them obligate the software supplier to grant patent licenses to users and developers of the software. Other licenses oblige the developer that uses the licensed product or library to offer the source code of this product or library under the same terms. Others simply give away the code, with no warranty of any kind or any concerns.

This article highlights the main differences between the most used Open Source licenses from the perspective of a software user and of a software developer. First we need to speak about the specific properties that define Open Source software.

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