Software: New in PCLinuxOS, Some More Spying in Firefox
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SFTPGo: Open Source SFTP Server with WebDAV Support
SFTPGo is a feature-rich open source SFTP server that offers HTTP/S, FTP, FTPS, and WebDAV support.
It also supports several storage backends as local filesystem, encrypted local filesystem, S3 (compatible) Object Storage, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob Storage, SFTP.
The project is written in the Go programming language. It is an ideal solution for enterprise companies and creative team which require something fast and efficient.
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15 Open Source WebDAV Servers
WebDAV is an extension protocol to HTTP that allows users to create, move and edit remote documents on the server.
WebDAV is widely used for file sharing, file collaboration between teams and groups. It is widely used in many enterprise apps as groupware, and ERP solutions.
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Ventoy 1.0.81 - PCLinuxOS
Ventoy is an open source tool to create bootable USB drive for ISO files.With ventoy, you don’t need to format the disk again and again, you just need to copy the iso file to the USB drive and boot it. You can copy many iso files at a time and ventoy will give you a boot menu.
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Thunderbird 102.4.1 - PCLinuxOS
Mozilla Thunderbird is a standalone mail and newsgroup client. Thunderbird has been updated 102.4.1 and shipped to the PCLinuxOS software repository.
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Firefox 106.0.2 - PCLinuxOS
Mozilla Firefox is a free and open source web browser descended from the Mozilla Application Suite and managed by Mozilla Corporation.
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Chris H-C: This Week in Glean: Page Load Data, Three Ways (Or, How Expensive Are Events?)
At Mozilla we make, among other things, Web Browsers which we tend to call Firefox. The central activity in a Web Browser like Firefox is loading a web page. It gets done a lot by each and every one of our users, and so you can imagine that data about pageloads is of important business interest to us.
But exactly because this is done a lot and by every one of our users, this inspires concerns of scale and cost. How much does it cost us to learn more about pageloads?[0]
As with all things in Data, the answer is the same: “Well, it depends.”
In this case it depends on how you record the data. How you record the data depends on what questions you hope to answer with it. We’re going to stick to the simplest of questions to make this (highly-suspect) comparison even remotely comparable.