Home » Blog Page

Blog Page

GNOME – open-source software

George Lebl Elliot Lee Miguel de Icaza Issue #70, February 2000 The GNOME team bring us up-to-date on the progress of this popular desktop environment. The GNOME Project is aimed at making UNIX attractive and easy to use. To help achieve the goals of the GNU project, we want to make sure that users are presented with a full suite ...

Read More »

KDE—K Desktop Environment

Kalle Dalheimer Issue #70, February 2000 Ready to jazz up your KDE desktop—get KDE 2.0. The KDE team is working full steam on the next release of the K Desktop Environment which is planned for spring 2000, so it is time to look at what the new version will have in store. When you first install one of the beta ...

Read More »

X Marks the Spot

Best of Technical Support Various Issue #69, January 2000 Our experts answer your technical questions. X Marks the Spot My system worked fine for a few months, but now I’m facing some problems with it. When using X, the system suddenly freezes. Neither the keyboard nor the mouse responds. I can’t telnet to my computer—nothing works. Log files tell nothing—just ...

Read More »

BIND Version 8 Features

Eddie Harari Issue #69, January 2000 Wondering about the latest version of BIND? Wonder no more. Mr. Harari is back this month to tell us all about it. Many new features have been compiled into the new version of BIND (Berkeley Internet name daemon), including security bug fixes and several major changes that give the network administrator the needed tools ...

Read More »

Advanced Packet Data Testing with Linux

Wesley Erhart Joseph Bell Marc Hammons Mark Mains Issue #69, January 2000 At Nortel Networks, we have developed a Linux-based system for testing a second-generation packet radio service. During system development we explored the details of packet radio, the IP internals of the Linux operating system and device-driver development. What is your 56K modem doing while you ponder the sophisticated ...

Read More »

Linux is the dominant operating system

linu os

Guest Editorial: World Domination Eric Raymond Issue #69, January 2000 Eric takes a serious look at what the world will be like when Linux is the dominant operating system—or is he just kidding?           World domination. It’s a powerful and faintly sinister phrase, one you might imagine some B-movie mad scientist muttering as he puts the ...

Read More »

Voice-Over IP for Linux

Greg Herlein Issue #69, January 2000 Call your friends and family from your computer—a look at the future or the present? With Linux, the future is now. The OpenPhone Project (http://www.openphone.org/) has a simple goal—to phone-enable every computer on the planet. If a computer can browse the Web and play audio from Internet radio stations, it should be able to ...

Read More »

Networking Oddities

migrate linnux

Best of Technical Support Various Issue #68, December 1999 Our experts answer your technical questions. Partitioning I am installing and have a 3GB hard drive. I am not sure of the best way to partition it. Any suggestions? —Jes, jes2@mindspring.com You do not say what you plan to do with the disk, or what the host machine is (server? workstation?). ...

Read More »

1999 Editors’ Choice Awards

Jason Kroll Marjorie Richardson Doc Searls Peter Salus Issue #68, December 1999 Once again, it is time to present our annual awards to those we feel deserve recognition for their contributions to forwarding the Linux cause in the real world.         Welcome to the 1999 Editors’ Choice Awards, brought to you by the same cool cats who ...

Read More »

Securing Name Servers on UNIX

Nalneesh Gaur Issue #68, December 1999 Because the DNS plays such a vital role in the Internet, it is important that this service be protected and secured. The Domain Name System (DNS) is essential to the functioning of the Internet. The DNS organizes the Internet into distributed hierarchical domains. This hierarchical domain structure provides ease of administration and scalability. It ...

Read More »