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Jan 30, 2003 Linux News - Issue #117 Jan 23, 2003 Linux News - Issue #116 Jan 16, 2003 Linux News - Issue #115 Jan 9, 2003 Linux News - Issue #114 Jan 2, 2003 Linux News - Issue #113 Dec 19, 2002 Linux News - Issue #112 Dec 12, 2002 Linux News - Issue #111 Dec 5, 2002 Linux News - Issue #110 Nov 28, 2002 Linux News - Issue #109 Nov 21, 2002 Linux News - Issue #108 Nov 14, 2002 Linux News - Issue #107 Nov 7, 2002 Linux News - Issue #106 Oct 31, 2002 Linux News - Issue #105 Oct 24, 2002 Linux News - Issue #104 Oct 17, 2002 Linux News - Issue #103 Oct 10, 2002 Linux News - Issue #102 Oct 3, 2002 Linux News - Issue #101 Sep 26, 2002 Linux News - Issue #100 Sep 19, 2002 Linux News - Issue #99 Sep 12, 2002 Linux News - Issue #98 Sep 5, 2002 Linux News - Issue #97 Aug 29, 2002 Linux News - Issue #96 Aug 22, 2002 Linux News - Issue #95 Aug 15, 2002 Linux News - Issue #94 Aug 8, 2002 Linux News - Issue #93 Aug 1, 2002 Linux News - Issue #92 Jul 25, 2002 Linux News - Issue #91 Jul 18, 2002 Linux News - Issue #90 Jul 11, 2002 Linux News - Issue #89 Jul 4, 2002 Linux News - Issue #88 Jun 27, 2002 Linux News - Issue #87 Jun 20, 2002 Linux News - Issue #86 Jun 13, 2002 Linux News - Issue #85 Jun 6, 2002 Linux News - Issue #84 May 30, 2002 Linux News - May 30, 2002 May 23, 2002 Pearl In The Shell May 16, 2002 Linux Filesystems - Part Two May 9, 2002 Inside The Linux Filesystem May 2, 2002 CD Burning Under Linux Apr 25, 2002 Star Office Vs. Open Office Apr 18, 2002 Surfing With Mozilla Apr 11, 2002 "We Don't Support Linux..." Apr 4, 2002 Visit The UNIX Library Mar 28, 2002 Linux and World Domination Mar 21, 2002 Working With Keyservers Mar 14, 2002 A Look At Public Key Cryptography Mar 7, 2002 Monitoring Systems With "vmstat" Feb 28, 2002 Star Office 6 Not to be Free for Linux? Feb 21, 2002 How Can Programming Benefit a Systems Administrator? Feb 14, 2002 Alias: It's Not Just a TV Show Feb 8, 2002 Using The diff and patch Utilities Jan 31, 2002 How To Detect Cracks Jan 24, 2002 Using Razor to Shave Away Spam Jan 17, 2002 Stomping Spam Jan 10, 2002 Sair Linux Courseware Review Jan 3, 2002 2002: The Year of the Penguin! Dec 27, 2001 UNIX Apps on a Windows Box? Dec 20, 2001 Directory Assistance Dec 13, 2001 How Do You Kill Zombies? Dec 6, 2001 Using Hard and Soft Symlinks Nov 29, 2001 Change Terminal-Based Apps Into Network Apps Nov 22, 2001 Adventures In Booting Nov 15, 2001 Getting To Know PAM Nov 8, 2001 Know Your Enemy Nov 1, 2001 Do Mulder and Scully Use X-Windows? Oct 25, 2001 A Quick Look at the RHCE Certification Oct 18, 2001 What's Up With Linux Certification? Oct 11, 2001 Express Yourself Regularly Oct 4, 2001 Advice For Lazy Penguins? Sep 27, 2001 NVIDIA Jumps On Linux Bandwagon Sep 20, 2001 Understanding DNS in a Linux Environment Sep 13, 2001 Be Careful With Binaries Sep 6, 2001 Party Like It's 999,999,999 Aug 30, 2001 Rooting Out Memory Hogs Aug 23, 2001 Spin Your 'Top' Aug 16, 2001 Keeping Time With NTP Aug 9, 2001 Supporting True Type Fonts Aug 2, 2001 Getting Perl To Fetch Jul 26, 2001 Who's The Man?! Jul 19, 2001 Adobe Cracks The DMCA Whip Jul 12, 2001 Due Processes Jul 5, 2001 Going Adobe Free Jun 28, 2001 Don't Send Mixed SIgnals Jun 21, 2001 Everything is a File. (almost) Jun 14, 2001 Know Your Partitions Jun 7, 2001 Where it's "at"! May 31, 2001 A Sneak Peek at RedHat 7.1 May 24, 2001 Scheduling Tasks With cron - Part 2 May 17, 2001 Scheduling Tasks With cron May 10, 2001 Open Source - Seeing Through The FUD May 3, 2001 A Look At Ximian's New Release Apr 26, 2001 Rev Up Your X-Windows Session Apr 19, 2001 Wrangling With GNU Cash Apr 12, 2001 Tame the syslogd Daemon Apr 5, 2001 Test Your Admin Skills At Honeynet Mar 29, 2001 Software RAID on Your Linux Box Mar 22, 2001 Prevent Disasters: Back It Up Mar 15, 2001 Notes From Underground! Mar 8, 2001 SuSE 7.1 - A First Look Mar 1, 2001 Certification Boot Camp Feb 22, 2001 Understanding Runlevels Feb 15, 2001 What Are The Advantages of Joining a LUG? Feb 8, 2001 Diving For Perls Feb 1, 2001 How To Secure Your Linux Installation Jan 25, 2001 Linux Problem Solving Jan 18, 2001 Stand up and Be Counted! Jan 11, 2001 2.4.0 is Here! Jan 4, 2001 When will Mom use Linux? Dec 28, 2000 The Year in Review Dec 21, 2000 The SourceForge Solution Dec 15, 2000 How to Compile and Install the New Kernel Dec 7, 2000 Put Your E-mail Into A Blackberry Basket Nov 30, 2000 Using Perl With Linux Nov 23, 2000 Working With MP3's Under Linux Nov 16, 2000 Apache 2.0 alpha 4 Nov 9, 2000 Dell loves Linux! Nov 2, 2000 What's Up With RedHat 7? |
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LINUX NEWS
RESOURCES & LINKS FROM BRAINBUZZ.COM
Thursday, March 15, 2001
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-----------------
TABLE OF CONTENTS
-----------------
1) Sean's Notes
2) Linux News
DVD Decryption in 7 Lines
Layoffs at Linuxgruven
SOUP, Anyone?
Ain't Kapitalism Great?
3) Linux Resources
Showing syslog in real-time
Fundamentals of Web Application Development
The Secret to Success
Anatomy of an Attack
SE Linux
4) App o' the week
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===========================================================
1) Sean's Notes
===========================================================
A while ago (January 25th, in fact), I gave you a link to
"Underground", a book about the hackers and phreakers of the
1980's. At the time, it had been released to the online
community as a free download.
http://www.underground-book.com/
I downloaded it to my Palm Pilot, and promptly forgot it
was there. I remembered about it when I was stuck in a
waiting room, so I started to read it. For the next two
days, I was glued to my Pilot, fascinated by the story.
Not wanting to spoil the plot, I'll just say the book is
a series of stories, told from the viewpoint of the
crackers. It's not glorifying their actions, instead it
spends a lot of time talking about their involvement with
law enforcement.
I don't know what drew me into this book. Perhaps it's a
nostalgic trip through memories of the hours I spent
acquiring "secret" computer knowledge from BBS hackers.
The first time I was able to connect to a computer system
in another country from the comfort of my home was an
epiphany. Though I didn't understand a thing about what I
saw and read, the desire to gain a deep knowledge of how
these systems worked is something that stayed with me, even
to this day.
In some ways, I think it is this quest for power and
outreach that draws people like us to Unix, especially Linux.
No more do you have to risk jail time to connect to other
computers, or break into machines to have a conversation with
other enthusiasts, but the global reach is there. We can
peek under the hood of our machine, can simulate enterprise
class applications on a desktop, and even play the cat and
mouse game with the script kiddies out there. (Though, the
target these days seems to be defacing web pages or causing
damage, rather than increasing knowledge).
Give Underground a shot... You may learn something about what
motivates you. At the very least, it's a great story, and a
background on what shaped the Internet culture. I'd also
recommend "The Cuckoo's Egg" by Cliff Stoll. Some of its
characters are mentioned in Underground, but this one is told
from the viewpoint of the systems administrator.
Long live the penguin,
Sean
mailto:swalberg@brainbuzz.com
Visit The Linux Newsletter Board
http://boards.brainbuzz.com/boards/vbt.asp?b–2
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2) Linux News
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-------------------------
DVD Decryption in 7 Lines
-------------------------
DVDs have a fairly restrictive licensing scheme, and are
encrypted to boot, thus limiting their availability under
Linux. Some time ago, a fellow managed to figure out the
encryption and posted DeCSS to the Net, which allows anyone
to decrypt a DVD and watch it on Linux. Not to be out done,
some MIT students rewrote the code in only *seven* lines of
PERL.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,42259,00.html
----------------------
Layoffs at Linuxgruven
----------------------
Linuxgruven has been the source of many questions lately...
Is it worth it to pay them for a course, in order to get
a job? Or, is it a scam? Recently, this company laid off
100 employees, and the Slashdot commentary has a lot of
insight into this event.
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid/03/10/140214&mode=thread
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SOUP, Anyone?
-------------
SOAP is Microsoft's answer to distributed computing (that's
Simple Object Access Protocol). Ximian, formerly HelixCode,
is working on making sure that Linux users aren't left out
of the loop. To do this, they're porting SOAP to the GNOME
environment and dubbing it SOUP.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200-5079895.html
-----------------------
Ain't Kapitalism Great?
-----------------------
Kapital is a personal finance manager designed for KDE that
has recently been released in an online format in preparation
for an upcoming boxed release. It isn't free, but if the
screenshots are any indication of the functionality, it'll
be worth the $25.
http://dot.kde.org/982559990/
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3) Linux Resources
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---------------------------
Showing syslog in real-time
---------------------------
Brainbuzz member mdnelson posted this great set of
instructions on how to get syslog to output to a virtual
terminal. Using this technique, you can see the real time
output of the logging system on your monitor.
http://itresources.brainbuzz.com/tutorials/tutorial.asp?t=S1TU1110
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Fundamentals of Web Application Development
-------------------------------------------
Designing web applications is no walk in the park. There
are a lot of things you have to keep in mind. This article
goes into great depth on what makes a web application
successful.
http://www.phpbuilder.net/columns/angus20010304.php3
---------------------
The Secret to Success
---------------------
Luke Ehresman, the brains behind the ever-so-cool
SquirrelMail project, gives an accounting of what it takes
to make an Open Source project successful. Remember, you
can't throw money at the developers to make them work
harder, since everyone is working on a volunteer basis.
http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/223/
--------------------
Anatomy of an Attack
--------------------
One of the best ways to learn how to protect yourself from
crackers is to think like one. This article shows packet
traces of a successful attack on a RedHat 6.2 box, along
with commentary on what's going on.
http://www.netw3.com/documents/compromised_redhat.html
--------
SE Linux
--------
The American NSA (National Security Agency, or No Such Agency,
depending on who you ask) did some work to make a more secure
version of Linux dubbed "SE Linux" (Security Enhanced). The
main goal seems to be adding mandatory access controls to the
operating system in order to replace current physical security
measures being used. This secretive agency even released the
source code. Keep your eye on this site, as future articles
that explore the code itself are promised.
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/s-selinux/?n-s-381
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4) App o' the week
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A reader sent in this App o' the week... Dia is a high-
quality drawing tool, along the lines of Microsoft Visio.
It is quite functional, easy to learn, and best of all, free.
http://www.lysator.liu.se/~alla/dia/dia.html
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(C) 2001 BrainBuzz.com. All Rights Reserved.
===========================================================
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