Wednesday, February 23, 2011

PHP IDEs in Linux for Web Programming – Fedora and Ubuntu

Amplify’d from ranjith.zfs.in

The common problem of a linux web developer is there is no good IDE like Adobe Dreamweaver or PHP Designer or any other is not available in lInux. There is no good Graphics editor like Adobe Photoshop. Not Programming Environment like Microsoft visual studio etc …

PHP IDES in Linux – Ubuntu and Fedora

  • Netbeans
  • Eclipse
  • Komodo Edit
  • Geany
  • Bluefish
  • CSSED
  • Gvim
  • gedit
  • Quanta Plus
  • NVU
  • Kompozer

If you are looking for a Good HTML editor for KDE/Gnome? . Here I am reviewing some IDEs for PHP Editing in Linux and how they are powerfull. Also How you can use GIMP as a good Graphics Editor for web graphics designing.

Read more at ranjith.zfs.in
 

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Untitled

Amplify’d from www.omgubuntu.co.uk

Ubuntu 10.04.2 released

The second maintenance update of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS has been released.


Ubuntu 10.04 LTS will be supported with routine maintenance updates until April 2013 on desktops and April 2015 on servers.


The release integrates ‘numerous post-release updates’ including security updates and ‘corrections for high-impact bugs, with a focus on maintaining stability and compatibility with Ubuntu 10.04 LTS.’


A full Change log for Ubuntu 10.04.2 can be viewed on @ wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes/ChangeSummary/10.04.2


Download


Ubuntu 10.04.02 can be downloaded @ ubuntu.com/desktop/get-ubuntu/download




Related posts:

  1. Ubuntu 10.04.1 released

  2. ubuntu 10.04 lucid lynx release candidate released

Read more at www.omgubuntu.co.uk
 

Untitled

Amplify’d from techcrunch.com

Google has acquired social search service Aardvark, says a source that has been briefed on the deal, for around $50 million. We first reported on the discussions between the two companies in December. Those discussions have now turned into a signed deal, says our source, and will be announced today or tomorrow.

Aardvark, founded by ex-Googlers, has raised around $6 million in venture capital to date. The service lets users ask questions and get immediate responses from their friends and friends of friends.

Earlier this month the company published a research report that included some key stats about their business:

As of October 2009, Aardvark had 90,361 users, of whom 55.9% had created content (asked or answered a question). The site’s average query volume was 3,167.2 questions per day, with the median active user asking 3.1 questions per month. Interestingly, mobile users are more active than desktop users. The Aardvark team attributes this to users wanting quick, short answers on their phones without having to dig for anything. They also think people are more used to using more natural language patterns on their phones.

Read more at techcrunch.com