Showing all headlines, by date
| 25 found. |
FSF prepares a new "Libre Planet" campaign
Linux, 2.6.23-rc2,"-rc2 is the new -rc1"
Brainf*ck Interpreter in JavaScript. GNU GPL.
Googlephonecould be powered by Linux and free of charge
Black Hat USA 2007: That's a wrap
This week at LWN: Still waiting for swap prefetch
The $139 Linux PC
What do you want to hear from Dell about its Linux plans?
Linux: Reliability, Availability. and Serviceability
Poky Linux 3.0 Released
ZenWalk and the art of not booting
What could you do with fat fiber?
Pidgin 2.1.0 released with UI improvements
KDE Quickies
People Behind KDE: Summer of Code 2007 (1/4)
SimplyMEPIS 7.0 prebeta has more cosmetics.
Vector Linux 5.8.6rc1 Released
Xen 3.1 HVM on SLES 10 SP1
Linux Powered PS3 to be used in DARPA Urban Challenge
Business Instant Messaging
Collaborating with Mindquarry
Twisting the Meaning of 'Free'
Red Hat Global Desktop delayed
"Open source business model" takes on a new meaning with the Open Business Foundation
Review: bash Cookbook
O'Reilly's "Cookbook" series can generally be thought of as a collection of recipes for different tech solutions. In the case of Albing's, Vossen's, and Newham's book, this applies to the bash (lower case "b" on purpose) or "bourne again shell" (hey, I don't name these things). bash is the default shell for most Linux distros and the most widely used UNIX shell. Even though many Linux distros have increasingly available and useful GUI utilities, the heart of Linux/UNIX administration still happens in the shell. There are plenty of "HOW TO" books on Linux. What makes the bash Cookbook unique?
