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  • Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    News: Our Summer Break

    As I have previously noted; summer is upon us, and I plan to take full advantage of it. For next two weeks the site will not be updated as I head of to party my ass off in Ibiza. I have disabled most member features because I can not review any applications for either e-mail, subdomain, e.t.c. The server will not be idle, though. My host has taken responsibility for keeping the colocation server secure the next two weeks, so no need to continue your attempts. Enjoy your summer, LL will be back June 15 2004.

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    Apps: gLabels: Ready for Prime Time

    gLabels, a GNOME program that makes and prints all sorts of labels and business cards, seems to be capable of handling just about any task you throw at it. It's at release 1.93.3, a developer release on the way to a stable 2.0 version, but it's in very good shape. Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    Linux: Getting Comcast Email

    Passing Outbound Mail, plus Masquerading User and Hostname:
    The following instructions explain how to send and receive Comcast email from a home Linux box, which is connected to the Internet via Comcast cable model. To make things interesting, assume the Comcast email is different from the account on the Linux computer. Yet, through "mutt", "elm" or whatever, make it possible to send email to other comcast users, or anyone else on the Internet. When receiving email, have it forwarded to the local Linux account. Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    Linux: Choosing A CPU Scheduler

    Those interested in testing the various efforts focused on improving Linux desktop performance may wish to try the patches available from the CPU Scheduler Evaluation project page. Peter Williams announced his latest patch against the 2.6.7 stable Linux kernel which provides the ability to select a CPU scheduler at runtime. The current version of the patch allows a user to select either Con Kolivas' staircase scheduler, or Peter's own priority based scheduler. Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    BSD: What To Do When Things Go Wrong

    ny trained monkey can administer a system that is working correctly. Such systems rarely, if ever, need external human, or simian, guidance. The system gets some sort of stimulus or input, makes decisions, takes actions, and most likely emits some sort of product or information. Easy enough. Watch the big wheels go round. Good system and network administrators earn their salaries when systems are not working correctly.Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    Code: Programming With bash

    Face it, you can't become any kind of respectable administrator without knowing a decent bit about shell scripting. You don't have to be the "Bashmeister General" or anything, but having a firm grasp on the basics will get you out of a lot of jams, and provide a foundation for furthering your experience and your skill. In this article we'll cover some programming functionality of the bash shell. Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Tuesday, June 29, 2004

    Linux: Upgrade to 2.6.7 on Slackware 10

    DistroWatch includes a quick how-to on how to update your Slackware 10 to use a newer kernel.

    published by lickadmin
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    Monday, June 28, 2004

    Code: Write Unmaintainable Code

    In the interests of creating employment opportunities in the Java programming field, I am passing on these tips from the masters on how to write code that is so difficult to maintain, that the people who come after you will take years to make even the simplest changes. Further, if you follow all these rules religiously, you will even guarantee yourself a lifetime of employment, since no one but you has a hope in hell of maintaining the code. Then again, if you followed all these rules religiously, even you wouldn't be able to maintain the code! Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Monday, June 28, 2004

    Apps: What's New, KDE 3.3 Preview

    Amarok is cool not only because of how well does it's job as a music player but also because of the good documentation that it comes with. I actually figured out why I wasn't getting gstreamer output to work from reading ther help docs. One gst-register-0.8 later amarokin' baby ;) If you haven't already, check it out. It's definitely improved in both looks (slightly) and functionality (IMO greatly since the 3.2 release). Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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    Sunday, June 27, 2004

    Linux: Global File System

    Red Hat has announced the released of the GFS under the GPL, open-sourcing the cluster file system. They're now targetting towards getting GFS included in the mainstream kernel.
    "Red Hat GFS allows Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers to simultaneously read and write to a single shared file system on the SAN, achieving high performance and reducing the complexity and overhead of managing redundant data copies. Red Hat GFS has no single point of failure, is incrementally scalable from one to hundreds of Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers, and works with all standard Linux applications." Read more...

    published by lickadmin
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