Hackers
The cybernetic exchange between man, computer and algorithm is like a game of musical chairs: The frantic search for balance always leaves one of the three standing ill at ease
06/07/2016
This image, captured with the NASA/ESA
Hubble Space Telescope, is the largest
and sharpest image ever taken of the
Andromeda galaxy — otherwise known as
M31.
This is a cropped version of the full
image and has 1.5 billion pixels. You
would need more than 600 HD television
screens to display the whole image.
It is the biggest Hubble image ever
released and shows over 100 million
stars and thousands of star clusters
embedded in a section of the galaxy’s
pancake-shaped disc stretching across
over 40 000 light-years.
This image is too large to be easily
displayed at full resolution and is best
appreciated using the zoom tool .
Credit:
NASA, ESA , J. Dalcanton (University of
Washington, USA), B. F. Williams
(University of Washington, USA), L. C.
Johnson (University of Washington,
USA), the PHAT team, and R. Gendler.
YOU CAN NOW INSTALL A GSM NETWORK USING APT-GET
This is great news: You can now install a GSM network using apt-get!
Thanks to the efforts of Debian developer Ruben Undheim, there's now an OpenBSC (with all its flavors like OsmoBSC, OsmoNITB, OsmoSGSN, ...) package in the official Debian repository.
Here is the link to the e-mail indicating acceptance into Debian: https://tracker.debian.org/news/755641
I think for the past many years into the OpenBSC (and wider Osmocom) projects I always assumed that distribution packaging is not really something all that important, as all the people using OpenBSC surely would be technical enough to build it from the source. And in fact, I believe that building from source brings you one step closer to actually modifying the code, and thus contribution.
Nevertheless, the project has matured to a point where it is not used only by developers anymore, and particularly also (god beware) by people with limited experience with Linux in general. That such people still exist is surprisingly hard to realize for somebody like myself who has spent more than 20 years in Linux land by now.
So all in all, today I think that having packages in a Distribution like Debian actually is important for the further adoption of the project - pretty much like I believe that more and better public documentation is.
Looking forward to seeing the first bug reports reported through bugs.debian.org rather than https://projects.osmocom.org/ . Once that happens, we know that people are actually using the official Debian packages.
As an unrelated side note, the Osmocom project now also has nightly builds available for Debian 7.0, Debian 8.0 and Ubunut 14.04 on both i586 and x86_64 architecture from https://build.opensuse.org/project/show/network:osmocom:nightly. The nightly builds are for people who want to stay on the bleeding edge of the code, but who don't want to go through building everything from scratch. See Holgers post on the openbsc mailing list for more information.
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