933 captures
18 Jul 2001 - 10 Jan 2026
Mar APR May
06
2003 2004 2005
success
fail

About this capture

COLLECTED BY

Organization: Alexa Crawls

Starting in 1996, Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the Wayback Machine after an embargo period.

Collection: alexa_dw

this data is currently not publicly accessible.
TIMESTAMPS

The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20040406011049/http://linuxdevcenter.com:80/
 
LinuxDevCenter.com
O'Reilly Network.oreilly.comSafari Bookshelf.Conferences.
Articles Weblogs Books Learning Lab News  

BizChair.com Your Online Source for Office Chairs

Traveling to
a tech show?

Canada Hotels
Discount Hotels
Hotel Search
California Hotels
Chicago Hotels
Hotel Discounts
Myrtle Beach Hotels





LinuxDevCenter.com
supported by:

Discount Contact Lenses
Auto Insurance



  

Linux on the GameCube
Porting code to consoles

  

Linux on the PS2
Everything Linux on the Sony's PlayStation 2.

  

OpenSSL Vulnerabilities
OpenSSL vulnerabilities

  

Growing with Gentoo  Daniel Robbins, Gentoo's chief architect, recently spoke to students and professors at Stanford University's Computer Systems Lab. Danny O'Brien reports on his presentation, which focused on lesser known aspects of Gentoo: how it evolved, what problems and opportunities it's encountering, and Daniel's opinions on its future.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
New Nmap  Noel Davis looks at a new version of Nmap, problems in jailed processes under FreeBSD, and other problems in Adobe Acrobat Reader, the GNU Coreutils dir command, xboing, Apple Filing Protocol, libxml2, GNU Anubis, Sun's passwd command, and Safari.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Connecting Your Network to the IPv6 Internet with Linux  IPv6 is coming. In fact, you can encourage its adoption by using it right now. Ibrahim Haddad demonstrates how to connect your local network to the IPv6 Internet by configuring Freenet6's TSP on a Linux router.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Making Screen-Capture Movies  A picture is worth a thousand words, especially if they're documentation. Why not make screenshots -- or, better yet, movies -- to accompany free software documentation? It's not hard. Robert Bernier demonstrates how to put all of the tools together.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Inside Warp Pipe  GameCube afficionados may know of Warp Pipe, a project to allow LAN games to work over the Internet. The already-controversial project experienced another shakeup when the developers announced that all new releases would be closed source. Howard Wen recently talked to them about their experiences reverse-engineering the protocol, developing the software, and closing an open project.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

A Global Survey of Linux Distributions  In the English speaking world, a few Linux distributions claim the top spots. What's popular around the globe, though? Alexander Prohorenko explores some of the more popular commercial Linux distributions.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
Kernel Trouble  Noel Davis looks at problems in the Linux kernel, AMD64 Linux kernels, XFree86, slocate, mod_python, susehelp, mutt, metamail, Mailmgr, PWLib, clamav, and NetBSD's Racoon IKE daemon.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Introducing openMosix  What does your computer do when you're not around? Chances are, not much. Why not spread some of the computing burden around? As Kris Buytaert explains, openMosix is a version of Linux that handles most of the hard work for you, leaving you to enjoy better resource usage across all of your computers.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Inside Scorched 3D  Ex-DOS gamers likely remember the classic tank game Scorched Earth, with its VGA graphics, clever weapons, and good-enough ballistics. Scorched 3D is its spiritual successor, taking the 2D, one-computer battles to the next level. Howard Wen explores the game.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
Real Problems  Noel Davis looks at problems in PHP, Perl, the GNU C Library, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, Oracle9i, RealOne, RealPlayer, CVSup, gaim, GNU libtool, and mailman.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Linux Untethered  Wireless Linux is great, if you can find a hotspot. If not, have you considered a cellular data connection? It may not be as slow nor as expensive as you think. Brian Jepson explores the state of cellular networking with Linux.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Why Run Free Software on a PDA?  As PDAs gain power and capabilities, embedded Linux is more and more attractive. Sharp's Zaurus is a popular Linux PDA. Why aren't more palmtop computers running free software? Guylhem Aznar explores and evangelizes Linux on small devices.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Safari Gets Bigger and Better -- Safari Bookshelf, the premier electronic reference library for IT professionals and programmers, now holds more than 2,000 books from the industry's leading technical publishers. As the library grows, so does its functionality: searches are powerfully precise and as broad or specific as you wish; and now, with a Safari Max subscription, you can download chapters to read offline. Safari will help you save time, reduce errors, keep current, and save more money than ever with up to 35% off print copies of your favorite books. If you haven't yet gone on Safari, try a free trial subscription.

Security Alerts
Lotus Trouble  Noel Davis looks at problems in Lotus Notes for Linux, tcpdump, mod_perl, kdepim, honeyd, NetWorker, NetPBM, jabber, mc, and Mambo Open Source.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Connecting to the IPv6 Internet  IPv6 is coming. In fact, you can encourage its adoption by using it right now, if you've already configured your Linux machine for IPv6. Ibrahim Haddad explains how to connect to the IPv6 Internet with Linux.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Open Source in Government: Newport News, Va.  Open source software is often attractive to local governments due to cost savings, stability, security, and open access. Migration is still tricky though. Andy Stein, CIO of Newport News, Va., is tackling the problems of adopting open source. In this interview with Tom Adelstein, Andy explains why local governments should form an alliance to share their knowledge and their code.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Professional Video Editing on Linux with Cinelerra  Someday Linux will be a great platform for editing media files, right? If you know about Cinelerra, you know that day is soon, if not now. Howard Wen explores this high-quality, long-lived video editing application.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Enabling IPv6 in Linux  IPv6 is coming. In fact, you can encourage its adoption by using it right now. Ibrahim Haddad explains the ideas behind, and justifications for IPv6 and demonstrates how to support it on a Linux server.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
Apache Regex Problems  Noel Davis looks at problems in Apache, mod_php, XDM, Goahead Web Server, Xerox Document Center, SARA, phpBB2, OpenBB, SquirrelMail, and pServ.   [ LinuxDevCenter.com]

Using Linux as a Small Business Internet Gateway, Part 2  Internet access is vital to many small businesses. Maintaining a reliable and worry-free connection may seem difficult, but several good monitoring tools exist to simplify the lives of administrators. Alexander Prohorenko explains how to serve DNS and monitor a small network.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
Linux Kernel Problems  Noel Davis looks at problems in the Linux kernel, rsync, cdwrite, 4inarow, CVS, Ebola, net-snmp, lftp, and irssi.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Flying the Open Skies with FlightGear  Realms of geographic data are entering public use every day. Mappers, hikers, and navigators love it. What's in it for the rest of us? Realistic flight simulators. That's what pilots, aeronautical engineers, and enthusiasts are building with FlightGear, a GPL'd flight sim. Howard Wen talks to the creator and the maintainers.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
BIND DoS Attack  Noel Davis looks at a denial-of-service attack against BIND and problems in KDE, GnuPG, screen, Ethereal, FreeRadius, mod_gzip, Pan, detecttr, OpenCA, EPIC, and libnids.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Using Linux as a Small Business Internet Gateway  Internet access is vital to many small businesses. Creating a reliable and worry-free connection used to be difficult. With good software such as the Linux kernel, wvdial, Squid, Postfix, and iptables, it's reasonably easy to set up Linux as an Internet gateway. Alexander Prohorenko explains how.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Using and Customizing Knoppix  Several Linux distributions boot directly from CD-ROMs. How many are usable in that state? How many are customizable in that state? Klaus Knopper's Knoppix is perhaps the best known of these distributions. Robert Bernier explains how to use Knoppix and how to customize your own self-booting distribution CD.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

BZFlag  Sometimes a demo program can spin out of control to take on a life of its own. A ten-year-old project to demonstrate 3D movement has become a simple-yet-clever online tank battle game. Howard Wen talks to the creator and maintainer of BZFlag.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Security Alerts
Trouble with glibc  Noel Davis looks at problems in the standard C library libc and in xinetd, hylafax, pServ, UnAce, Quagga, Zebra, terminatorX, and omega-rpg.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

Linux on Pocket PCs  While tiny handheld computers may seem like geek toys, they're actually very practical for any environment with mobile data access--hospitals, restaurants, even journalists. They can even run Linux. John Littler explores the Penguin-friendly heavy hitters in this area.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]

The State of Home-Brew PVRs on Linux  A TiVo is basically a Linux box with some extra software (and a nice service). That's something a competent hacker could replicate. Joe Stump explores the state of the home-brew PVR community on Linux as of late 2003.   [LinuxDevCenter.com]




Linux in a Nutshell: Directory of Commands

This directory of Linux commands is from Linux in a Nutshell, 3rd Edition.


Linux Resources
  • Linux Online
  • The Linux FAQ
  • linux.java.net
  • Linux Kernel Archives
  • Kernel Traffic
  • DistroWatch.com



  • Today's News
    April 05, 2004

    The Age: How Independent is Independent? "...[T]he Institute for Policy Innovation (IPI) has joined a long string of self-titled independent think tanks such as the Alexis de Tocqueville Institute in releasing a study strongly critical of Open Source..." [Source: Linux Today]

    iTWeb: Surprising Forecast for Linux "...[T]he International Data Corporation (IDC) forecasts that Linux will not come near to replacing the Unix and Windows operating systems in the next three to four years..." [Source: Linux Today]

    LinuxInsider: SCO Business 'Plan' Is a Flop "I guess SCO CEO Darl McBride and his colleagues have concluded, 'If you can't join them, beat them.' Beat them with a stick, that is..." [Source: Linux Today]

    eWeek: Sun Weighs Open-Source Options "Sun Microsystems Inc. is pondering the possibility of open-sourcing more of its software--this time with its next-generation 3-D windowing system, called Project Looking Glass, which is under development..." [Source: Linux Today]

    Enterprise Linux IT: The New Linux Speed Trick "There are two scheduling policies included in kernel 2.6: the anticipatory scheduler, and the deadline scheduler..." [Source: Linux Today]

    MozillaZine: Mozilla 1.7 to Become New Long-Lived Stable Branch "In a newsgroup posting, Asa Dotzler has announced that the Mozilla 1.7 branch will become the new long-lived stable branch, replacing 1.4..." [Source: Linux Today]

    INQ7.net: Open Source Has No Future in RP, Says Expert "Despite having pockets of communities spread across the country, open source software (OSS) has no future in the country's budding software development business, according to a software development expert..." [Source: Linux Today]

    internetnews.com: New Software Head in Sun Management Shift "New faces are taking over in key spots at Sun Microsystems as the company restructures itself out of ten quarters of red ink..." [Source: Linux Today]

    LinuxPlanet: Love/Hate Relationship with Mozilla Mail 1.6 "I go back a long way with personal computers, and believe me when I tell you, I know the limitations and frustrations of using Windows, but it was Spam that drove me into the arms of open source and Mozilla..." [Source: Linux Today]

    LinuxPlanet: ItÂ’s a Love/Hate Relationship with Mozilla Mail 1.6 "I go back a long way with personal computers, and believe me when I tell you, I know the limitations and frustrations of using Windows, but it was Spam that drove me into the arms of open source and Mozilla..." [Source: Linux Today]

    internetnews.com: Q&A: Matthew Szulik, Red Hat CEO "Red Hat's mission to stay atop the increasingly competitive field of Linux distributors took it on a seven-city tour recently, with the company's executives looking to win hearts, minds and even some market share in the open source movement..." [Source: Linux Today]

    VNUnet: HP Ups Pressure on Rivals in Linux Space "Last week the vendor announced that it has made Novell's SuSE Linux its standard for customers that want an open source operating system for business desktops and notebook PCs..." [Source: Linux Today]

    More News


     Sponsored by:



    Get Red Hat training and certification.



    Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Press Center | Jobs

    Copyright © 2000-2004 O坦eilly Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    All trademarks and registered trademarks appearing on the O'Reilly Network are the property of their respective owners.

    For problems or assistance with this site, email