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Rewriting GPL No Easy Task

  • eWEEK Linux (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:50 AM EDT)
  • Groups: GNU; Story Type: News Story
It's been 14 years since major changes have been made to the GNU General Public License, and there is a need for a new version; however, there will be significant challenges, claims FSF's Eben Moglen.

Shutdown, by Jeremy Zawodny

Sun Microsystems President Jonathon Schwartz recently joined the weblog community (http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/jonathan/) to regularly dish out his thoughts on Sun's business and the computer industry at-large. Sure, Schwartz's blog is part propaganda, but he's also provided some interesting insights into how Sun looks at Linux and -- reading between the lines -- how they plan to compete with it.

Perl of Wisdom, by Randal L. Schwartz

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
As I mentioned last month, having persistent Perl code means that some steps of your application can be reused rather than repeated. One very easy optimization is keeping your database handles open between web hits, rather than reopening them on each new hit. The Apache::DBI module (found in the CPAN) does the work for you by altering the way normal DBI connections are processed.

LAMP Post, by Michael Bordash

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
If you want to make money with your web site, running advertisements is a good, first approach. Running ads requires little or no capital expense, and there are several options to sell ad space: you can sell it directly; you can hire a salesperson or consultant to sell it; or you can sign up with an ad network, which matches advertisers with your site. Implementing and managing ads is also quite easy, thanks to phpAdsNew, the LAMP ad management software of choice of many webmasters. In this article, let's look at ad networks and learn how to use phpAdsNew.

Guru Guidance, by Roderick W. Smith

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
If you've used Linux for a long time, you're probably quite familiar with file permissions. Indeed, managing permissions is a critical part of managing a Linux system.

Do It Yourself, by R. Scott Granneman

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux offers several excellent music players, including (but not limited to) XMMS, Zinf, noatun, amaroK, Juk, Rhythmbox, and Kaffeine. Most of these can play streaming Internet audio, compact discs, and best of all, digital audio files. With music stored as digital audio files, you can enjoy your music wherever and whenever you want to. If you don't know how to convert CDs into audio files on Linux, this column is for you.

MySQL, by Jeremy Zawodny

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Groups: MySQL; Story Type: News Story
Last month, we looked at MySQL's new storage engine, NDB (also known as NDBCluster or MySQL Cluster). Now it's time to look at the compilation, installation, and configuration process.

On the Desktop, by Jason Perlow

In this installment, I'd like to touch on an oft-forgotten but increasingly important component of the Linux desktop: Java applications. Since Java is largely distribution neutral, what Java code works on Fedora Core works for Debian, Red Hat, SuSE, Mandrake, and any number of other distributions. And, yes, Java applications really do exist, and some are actually good.

Tech Support, by Jeremy Garcia

Do you administer multiple distributions and find it frustrating that you can find packages for some distros and not others? Have you ever tried looking for a .rpm only to find a .deb (or vice versa)? Sometimes, Linux can be maddening. Luckily, there's a program that can help solve this problem: alien. alien is a script that converts between the Red Hat .rpm, Debian .dpkg, Stampede .slp, and Slackware .tgz file formats. alien can also handle Solaris' .pkg file format. alien lets you to take a package from a system with a different distribution than the one you are running, and makes it usable on your system.

Power Tools, by Jerry Peek

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux often gives you lots of ways to do the same thing and file transfer is no exception. We covered file transfer in three columns from March to May 2003 (available online at http://www.linux-mag.com/depts/power.html). This month let's look at yet another variation using gFTP and some not-so-obvious details that can help you navigate all of the file transfer protocols.

On The Docket, by Daniel Egger

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:46 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The mayor of Munich, Germany, Christian Ude, recently found a creative way to focus worldwide attention on the unavoidable conflict between the current "business as usual" patent system, which favors large corporations, and the innovative business models and greater customer choices made possible by Linux and its open source licensing model. It may be surprising that a municipality, even one as large as Munich, finds itself at the forefront of a worldwide political and financial debate about open source software, but Ude understands what's at stake, and succeeded in translating the often confusing and ideologically charged conflict into something even non-developers can understand: taxpayers' money.

Booting Up, by Martin Streicher

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:45 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
After almost two decades of working with computers, I want to give it up. Instead, I want to become a plumber. Plumbers have it made.

Fault Tolerant MPI

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:45 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Clusters of every size experience failures: processors can die, hard disks often crash, and interface cards have been known to produce spurious errors. Of course, software can fail, too, for any number of reasons. Prevention is a necessity, but the next best option is to react and respond to faults as they occur. If you're a cluster developer, Fault Tolerant MPI (FT-MPI) can help keep your compute jobs humming.

One-Sided Communications with MPI-2

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:45 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Traditional interprocess communication requires cooperation and synchronization between sender and receiver. MPI-2's new remote memory access features allow one process to update or interrogate the memory of another, hence the name one-sided communication. Here's a hands-on guide.

Why Linux on Clusters?

  • Linux Magazine (Posted by dave on Feb 2, 2005 6:45 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux on high-performance computing clusters seems an obvious choice now, but it wasn't a forgone conclusion when Thomas Sterling and Donald Becker used Linux to build the world's first Beowulf cluster in 1999. Linux has come a long way since then. Learn why Linux has put "super" back into supercomputers.

Open source helps Flickr share photos

Flickr, the online photo-sharing Web site, is a good case study on the benefits of open source. The technology that powers Flickr is a catalog of open source tools: Red Hat Linux, the Apache Web server, MySQL databases, PHP, Perl, Smarty templates, Postfix mail gateways, and even ImageMagick to handle the image manipulation.

OOo Off the Wall: Fielding Questions, Part 1 - The Basics

  • Linux Journal (Posted by dave on Feb 1, 2005 4:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Fields aren't supposed to mess up your documents and make you pull out your hair--learn when fields are useful and how to use them.

Product of the Day: MPP - Message Processing Partners

  • Linux Journal (Posted by dave on Feb 1, 2005 2:46 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The following information has been provided by the product vendor and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Linux Journal.

Debian Weekly News - February 1st, 2005

  • Mailing list; By Martin Schulze <joey@infodrom.org> (Posted by dave on Feb 1, 2005 2:03 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Newsletter; Groups: Debian
Welcome to this year's 5th issue of DWN, the weekly newsletter for the Debian community. Andreas Schuldei announced that the registration for this year's Debian conference has been opened. Og Maciel installed Debian for the first time and thought that the expert mode was appropriate, giving him the opportunity to answer all 27 questions of which only a fraction would be displayed during a normal installation.

Review: Linux Client Migration Cookbook

  • NewsForge (Posted by dave on Feb 1, 2005 1:17 PM EDT)
  • Groups: IBM; Story Type: News Story
Even the most hapless management automatons are aware of the licensing and maintenance costs associated with perpetuating a Windows workplace. As security concerns escalate and the reliability of Windows diminishes, the appeal of desktop Linux intensifies. Ready or not, businesses must heed the migratory instinct, or risk getting left behind. The Linux Client Migration Cookbook, an IBM Redbook written by a group of seasoned IT specialists and freely downloadable from IBM's Web site, is a balanced and informative guide to practical migration.

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