Ian Searle Issue #26, June 1996 Rlab stands for “our lab”. It is available to almost everyone who needs a computational tool for scientific and engineering applications, because it is freely available, and it runs on many platforms. I started working with high level languages when I realized I was spending far too much time writing Fortran and C language ...
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Uniforum ’96
Belinda Frazier Issue #26, June 1996 UniForum ’96, now billed as a Unix and Open Systems show, attracted about 20,000 attendees in San Francisco in February. UniForum ’96, now billed as a Unix and Open Systems show, attracted about 20,000 attendees in San Francisco in February. It included 90 tutorials, seminars, and keynotes from Lew Platt, of Hewlett-Packard, and Scott ...
Read More »Creating A Linux Firewall Using the TIS Firewall Toolkit
Benjamin Ewy Issue #25, May 1996 If you have a valuable or fragile network to protect, you may want to protect it with a very strong, well-proven firewall. In this article, Benjamin Ewy explains very thoroughly how to build your own ‘bastion host’ firewall with Linux. As more and more companies try to develop a presence on the Internet, establishing ...
Read More »The Trouble With Live Data
David Bonn Issue #24, April 1996 One use of such hacks is to break security. live data, n. 1. Data that is written to be interpreted and takes over program flow when triggered by some un-obvious operation, such as viewing it. One use of such hacks is to break security. For example, some smart terminals have commands that allow one ...
Read More »Finding Linux Software
Erik Troan Issue #24, April 1996 There is a treasure trove of software for Linux just waiting for you to download it from the Internet or copy it from a CD-ROM. However, you may need to keep an open mind to recognize a treasure when you see it. One of the most popular questions asked throughout the comp.os.linux Usenet hierarchy ...
Read More »XF-Mail
John M. Fisk Issue #24, April 1996 If you have a dial-up connection to the Internet, one of your easiest options for getting and receiving e-mail is popmail. But to use popmail, you need a “popmail client”. XF-Mail is a convenient, easy-to-use, and reasonably powerful popmail client that is worth a closer look. I suspect that there are a lot ...
Read More »Running Windows Applications NOW
Ron Bardarson Issue #23, March 1996 If you need to run MS Windows applications under Linux and haven’t been satisfied with the current solutions, here’s the road less traveled… There are three methods of obtaining use of Microsoft (MS) Windows applications under Linux. They are: Wine, available from ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/ALPHA/Wine/development/DOSEMU, available from ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/ALPHA/dosemu/DESQview/X (DV/X), available from QuarterDeck software Wine is rather ...
Read More »Ext2tools—Reading Linux files from DOS
Robert Dalrymple Issue #23, March 1996 Robert admits he uses Windows on his PC along with Linux. Here’s how he survives his divided existence. I don’t know about you, but I will admit to using Windows on my PC along with Linux. It’s just that some Windows applications are still better than those available for the X windows system. (No ...
Read More »Geomview
Tim Jones Issue #23, March 1996 Looking for a powerful visualization tool? Geomview, designed to serve as both a general purpose viewer and a visualization tool for mathematics research, may fit the bill. Tim Jones demonstrates Geomview’s virtually unlimited applications. At first glance, Geomview appears to be a neat piece of 3-D software—a toy. In reality, an hour’s study of ...
Read More »COMDEX ’95
LJ Staff Issue #22, February 1996 Open Systems World in DC had a Linux track and exhibition at the same time as Comdex and drew many of the Linux Vendors who otherwise might have been at Comdex. COMDEX is the second largest computer trade show in the world, offering multiple convention floors with 2,000 exhibitors plying their new computer products ...
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