Open-source News

What is a Chromebook? - Android Police

Google News - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 19:30
What is a Chromebook?  Android Police

Wasmer 3.0 Alpha Released With WASIX Implementation, More Improvements For This WebAssembly Stack

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 18:36
Wasmer's goal is to be "the universal WebAssembly runtime" with aiming to "run any code on any client" and with Wasmer 3.0 they are furthering the potential for this multi-language, multi-platform WASM stack...

ARM64 With Linux 5.20 Improves Its Meltdown Mitigation KPTI Code

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 18:18
The 64-bit Arm (ARM64) architecture updates have already been sent in for Linux 5.20 ahead of the merge window formally opening...

LLVM 15.0-rc1 Brings LoongArch, AmpereOne, AMD RDNA3, AMD GFX940 & HTTP Server

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 17:55
The first release candidate of LLVM 15.0 is now available for testing of this growing open-source compiler stack...

Aquacomputer Quadro Fan Controller Support Coming With Linux 5.20

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 17:20
Introduced last year in Linux 5.15 was the Aquacomputer driver that started off as a hardware monitoring "HWMON" sensor driver supporting Aquacomputer's D5 Next water-cooling pump. In Linux 5.19 that driver was extended to support the Aquacomputer OCTO fan controller under Linux and now for v5.20 it's extended to support the company's QUADRO fan controller...

KDE Ends July With More Bug Fixes, Discover Improvements

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 17:00
KDE developers are wrapping up July with more bug fixes and other feature work underway for Plasma 5.26...

Linux Proposal Adding getrandom() To The vDSO For Better Performance

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 04:46
Jason Donenfeld of WireGuard fame who has recently been spending much work on improving Linux's "random" kernel code has sent out a proposal adding getrandom() support to the vDSO for better performance in seeking to better address the needs of user-space developers...

Wine 7.14 Released With More Improvements, 19 Bug Fixes

Phoronix - Sat, 07/30/2022 - 04:28
Wine 7.14 has been released as the newest bi-weekly development release of this open-source software that allows running Windows games and applications on Linux, macOS, and other platforms...

People of Open Source: Neville Spiteri, Wevr

The Linux Foundation - Fri, 07/29/2022 - 23:41

This post originally appeared on the Academy Software Foundation’s (ASWF) blog. The ASWF works to increase the quality and quantity of contributions to the content creation industry’s open source software base. 

Tell us a bit about yourself – how did you get your start in visual effects and/or animation? What was your major in college?

I started experimenting with the BASIC programming language when I was 12 years old on a ZX81 Sinclair home computer, playing a game called “Lunar Lander” which ran on 1K of RAM, and took about 5 minutes to load from cassette tape.

I have a Bachelor’s degree in Cognitive Science and Computer Science.

My first job out of college was a Graphics Engineer at Wavefront Technologies, working on the precursor to Maya 1.0 3D animation system, still used today. Then I took a Digital Artist role at Digital Domain.

What is your current role?

Co-Founder / CEO at Wevr. I’m currently focused on Wevr Virtual Studio – a cloud platform we’re developing for interactive creators and teams to more easily build their projects on game engines.

What was the first film or show you ever worked on? What was your role?

First film credit: True Lies, Digital Artist.

What has been your favorite film or show to work on and why?

TheBlu 1.0 digital ocean platform. Why? We recently celebrated TheBlu 10 year anniversary. TheBlu franchise is still alive today. At the core of TheBlu was/is a creator platform enabling 3D interactive artists/developers around the world to co-create the 3D species and habitats in TheBlu. The app itself was a mostly decentralized peer-to-peer simulation that ran on distributed computers with fish swimming across the Internet. The core tenets of TheBlu 1.0 are still core to me and Wevr today, as we participate more and more in the evolving Metaverse.

How did you first learn about open source software?

Linux and Python were my best friends in 2000.

What do you like about open source software? What do you dislike?

Likes: Transparent, voluntary collaboration.

Dislikes: Nothing.

What is your vision for the Open Source community and the Academy Software Foundation?

Drive international awareness of the Foundation and OSS projects.

Where do you hope to see the Foundation in 5 years?

A global leader in best practices for real-time engine-based production through international training and education.

What do you like to do in your free time?

Read books, listen to podcasts, watch documentaries, meditation, swimming, and efoiling!

Follow Neville on Twitter and connect on LinkedIn.  

The post People of Open Source: Neville Spiteri, Wevr appeared first on Linux Foundation.

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