The Open Container Project and What It Means Slashdotby samzenpus on opensource at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 11:03 pm)

An anonymous reader writes: Monday saw the announcement of the Open Container Project in San Francisco. It is a Linux Foundation project that will hold the specification and basic run-time software for using software containers. The list of folks signing up to support the effort contains the usual suspects, and this too is a good thing: Amazon Web Services, Apcera, Cisco, CoreOS, Docker, EMC, Fujitsu Limited, Goldman Sachs, Google, HP, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Joyent, the Linux Foundation, Mesosphere, Microsoft, Pivotal, Rancher Labs, Red Hat, and VMware. In this article Stephen R. Walli takes a look at what the project means for open source.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Breach Defense Playbook: Incident Response Readiness (Part 2) (Dark Reading) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at June 24, 2015, 11:00 pm)

In economic forum, U.S. talks gov't sponsored theft with Chinese officials (SC Magaz SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at June 24, 2015, 11:00 pm)

Report: Security incidents in finance sector 300 percent more frequent than other in SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at June 24, 2015, 11:00 pm)

AMD Radeon R9 Fury X Launched, Independent Benchmarks, HBM Put To the Test Slashdotby samzenpus on amd at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:33 pm)

MojoKid writes: AMD officially launched the Radeon R9 Fury X based on their next generation Fiji GPU and HBM 3D stacked DRAM memory. Fiji is manufactured using TSMC's 28nm process. At its reference clocks of 1050MHz (GPU) and 500MHz (HBM), Fiji and the Radeon R9 Fury X offer peak compute performance of 8.6 TFLOPs, up to 268.8 GT/s of texture fill-rate, 67.2 GP/s of pixel fill-rate, and a whopping 512GB/s of memory bandwidth, thanks to HBM. Its compute performance, memory bandwidth, and textured fill-rate are huge upgrades over the previous generation AMD Hawaii GPU and even outpace NVIDIA's GM200, which powers the GeForce Titan X and 980 Ti. To keep the entire assembly cool, AMD strapped a close-loop liquid cooler onto the Fury X. There's a reason AMD went that route on this card, and it's not because they had to. There will be air-cooled Fury and Fury Nano cards coming in a few weeks that feature fully-functional Fiji GPUs. What the high-powered liquid-cooler on the Fury X does is allow the use of an ultra-quiet fan, with the side benefit of keeping the GPU very cool under both idle and load conditions(around 60C max under load and 30C at idle), which helps reduce overall power consumption by limiting leakage current. The AMD Radeon R9 Fury X performed very well in the benchmarks, and remained competitive with a similarly priced, reference NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 Ti, but it wasn't a clear win. Generally speaking, the Fury X was the faster of the two cards at 2560x1440. With the resolution cranked up to 3840x2160, however, the Fury X and 980 Ti trade victories.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

AMD Radeon R9 Fury X Launched, Independent Benchmarks, HBM Put To the Test Slashdotby samzenpus on amd at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:33 pm)

MojoKid writes: AMD officially launched the Radeon R9 Fury X based on their next generation Fiji GPU and HBM 3D stacked DRAM memory. Fiji is manufactured using TSMC's 28nm process. At its reference clocks of 1050MHz (GPU) and 500MHz (HBM), Fiji and the Radeon R9 Fury X offer peak compute performance of 8.6 TFLOPs, up to 268.8 GT/s of texture fill-rate, 67.2 GP/s of pixel fill-rate, and a whopping 512GB/s of memory bandwidth, thanks to HBM. Its compute performance, memory bandwidth, and textured fill-rate are huge upgrades over the previous generation AMD Hawaii GPU and even outpace NVIDIA's GM200, which powers the GeForce Titan X and 980 Ti. To keep the entire assembly cool, AMD strapped a close-loop liquid cooler onto the Fury X. There's a reason AMD went that route on this card, and it's not because they had to. There will be air-cooled Fury and Fury Nano cards coming in a few weeks that feature fully-functional Fiji GPUs. What the high-powered liquid-cooler on the Fury X does is allow the use of an ultra-quiet fan, with the side benefit of keeping the GPU very cool under both idle and load conditions(around 60C max under load and 30C at idle), which helps reduce overall power consumption by limiting leakage current. The AMD Radeon R9 Fury X performed very well in the benchmarks, and remained competitive with a similarly priced, reference NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 Ti, but it wasn't a clear win. Generally speaking, the Fury X was the faster of the two cards at 2560x1440. With the resolution cranked up to 3840x2160, however, the Fury X and 980 Ti trade victories.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

U.S., China appear to get little done in removing economic barriers (Yahoo Security) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at June 24, 2015, 10:30 pm)

User Monitoring Not Keeping Up With Risk Managers' Needs (Dark Reading) SANS ISC SecNewsFeed(cached at June 24, 2015, 10:30 pm)

Test-Stream-1.302007 search.cpan.orgby Chad Granum at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Experimental successor to Test::More and Test::Builder.
Test-Simple-1.302007_001 search.cpan.orgby Chad Granum at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Basic utilities for writing tests.
Test-Simple-1.302007_001 search.cpan.orgby Chad Granum at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Basic utilities for writing tests.
SMS-Send-Telenor-0.04 search.cpan.orgby Eivin Giske Skaaren at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

IO-Die-0.051 search.cpan.orgby Felipe Gasper at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Namespaced, error-checked I/O
IO-Die-0.051 search.cpan.orgby Felipe Gasper at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Namespaced, error-checked I/O
Test-Stream-1.302007 search.cpan.orgby Chad Granum at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at June 24, 2015, 10:03 pm)

Experimental successor to Test::More and Test::Builder.