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Newsflash |
atwork di Alberto Turelli - soluzioni software & web. - Certificazioni GNU/Linux LPIC-1 e LPIC-2
- Certificazioni MySQL 5.0 Developer e DBA
- Consulenza relativa a GNU/Linux (Debian in particolare) e al software libero
- Migrazione di server, workstation e reti da Windows a GNU/Linux
- Installazione, configurazione e manutenzione dei seguenti servizi su piattaforma GNU/Linux:
- Server web (Apache, Tomcat)
- Server database (MySQL)
- Server email (Postfix, Qmail, Courier) con filtri antispam (Spamassassin) e antivirus (ClamAV)
- Configurazione ed amministrazione di reti GNU/Linux e di reti miste (Windows, GNU/Linux, BSD, Unix, Mac OS X)
- Progettazione e realizzazione di database e applicativi web-based (HTML/CSS/Javascript, PHP, JSP e MySQL)
- Sviluppo software in Java
- Installazione, configurazione e manutenzione portali con Joomla! e Mambo
- Corsi GNU/Linux: introduzione, amministrazione del sistema, server, desktop, sicurezza
- Corsi per certificazioni: GNU/Linux (LPIC-1 e LPIC-2) e MySQL (Core, Professional, 5.0 Developer e 5.0 DBA)
my personal homepage my personal blog via Trebeschi, 69 - Castegnato (BS) - Italia tel. +39 328 6110095 Partita IVA 03595310172 email info CHIOCCIOLA atworkonline PUNTO it private email alberto DOT turelli AT atworkonline DOT it (GPG key) |
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El Pais :: Microsoft busca mercenario que hable bien de ella en la Wikipedia |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
¿Tan mal están las cosas?
Es sólo una anécdota, pero las que son como esta son siempre noticia: Microsoft ha estado intentando - no se sabe si lo ha conseguido - contratar a mercenarios de renombre para que den una opinión más "equilibrada" (en la particular visión del gigante del software) de sus productos. Lo cuenta un experto en estándares que, dejando a un lado los aspectos más técnicos, viene a dar parte de razón a la compañía.
Lee más en El Paìs |
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APC Magazine :: 10 reasons not to get Vista - by Ashton Mills |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
It's all too easy to get caught up in the million dollar marketing engine as we approach the consumer release of Windows Vista, so lets not forget that it isn't the second coming, and by all counts is an upgrade you can do without.
There are many lists out there on why to get Vista, so here's ours on why not to.
Read more on APC Magazine |
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APC Magazine :: 10 reasons you should get Vista - by Dan Warne |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
My colleague Ashton Mills published the top 10 reasons you shouldn't get Vista this morning.
I see his point on some fronts -- admittedly, Microsoft's official publicity material hasn't done a great job of explaining the basic benefits of Vista.
Microsoft's talk of Vista's ‘richer experience' and ‘getting ready for a new day' just makes the hardened tech user roll their eyes and move on.
However, I've been running Vista at APC since the earliest leaked builds, and witnessed its extraordinary evolution as Microsoft meandered its way towards the final product.
Read more on APC Magazine |
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Groklaw :: The Linux Foundation is Born - Updated |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
OSDL and the Free Standards Group have merged to form The Linux Foundation. If you go to osdl.org now, you arrive at The Linux Foundation. Here's the operative paragraph from the press release:
"For Linux to remain open and attain the greatest ubiquity possible, important services must be provided, including legal protection, standardization, promotion and collaboration. Successful proprietary software companies, for instance, do several important things well: backwards compatibility, promotion, interoperability, developer support, and more. In the voluntary and distributed world of Linux development, the industry continues to successfully use the consortia model to rapidly improve these value attributes for Linux. The Linux Foundation has been founded to help close the gap between open source and proprietary platforms, while sustaining the openness, freedom of choice and technical superiority inherent in open source software."
Read more on Groklaw |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 January 2007 )
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Linux Journal :: Customizing general OpenOffice.org settings |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
OpenOffice.org includes dozens of options for how it behaves. Available from Tools > Options, they are divided into general settings for the entire office suite and settings particular to each application. General settings are available under the general headings of OpenOffice.org, Load/Save, and Language Settings.
Frankly, the logic with which options are arranged in tabs under these headings is a little elusive. For that reason, when looking to customize OOo, you should not just look at any tab whose name seems related to your purpose, but scan all of them for additional features. This necessity becomes obvious when you consider four common use-cases: setting automated features, reducing memory requirements, setting security options, and enabling assistive options -- although none of these by any means exhausts the array of options that OpenOffice.org makes available.
Read more on Linux Journal |
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HowtoForge :: Using XenExpress To Virtualize Your Server |
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Written by bibe
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Tuesday, 23 January 2007 |
This Howto covers the installation of XenExpress and the creation of virtual machines with the XenServer Administrator Console. XenExpress is the free virtualization platform from XenSource, the company behind the well known Xen virtualization engine. XenExpress makes it easy to create, run and manage Xen virtual machines with the XenServer Administrator Console. XenExpress can run up to 4 virtual machines at the same time with a max. total amount of 4GB RAM. The XenExpress installation CD contains a full Linux distribution which is customized to run XenExpress.
Read more on HowtoForge |
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All About Linux :: traceroute - a very useful troubleshooting tool |
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Written by bibe
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Monday, 22 January 2007 |
I am sure anyone who is at the least Internet savvy, will be aware that to move data from one point say A to another point B across the Internet, it has to pass through a number of intermediary points say C, D,E.... But what many won't know is that your data is not transferred in one piece when it is sent over the net, rather, it is split into chunks of say 1500 bytes each, then each chunk is enclosed in what is known as a packet which contain some additional data such as the destination IP address and port number apart from some other details which provide the unique identity to the packet and finally it is sent across the net.
Read more on All About Linux |
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LinuxWorld.com.au :: Windows Vista "over-hyped": Torvalds |
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Written by bibe
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Monday, 22 January 2007 |
With the imminent release of Windows Vista to consumers this month, Linus Torvalds, the father of Linux, has claimed Microsoft's latest desktop effort is over-hyped and not a revolutionary advancement.
"I don't actually think that something like Vista will change how people work that much," Torvalds told Computerworld. "I think it, to some degree, has been over-hyped as being something completely new and I don't actually think it is."
Read more on LinuxWorld.com.au |
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Ubuntu Tutorials :: My New IRC Client - Irssi |
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Written by bibe
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Monday, 22 January 2007 |
I’ve been hearing about the Irssi IRC client for some time and I finally took some time over the weekend to seriously look into it. After the initial learning curve that often comes with a new application (and a terminal based application at that!) I’m hooked on Irssi. I’m using it as my main IRC client and I also use it to access my other IM networks (ie; Jabber) that you read about in my previous post.
Read more on Ubuntu Tutorials |
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HowtoForge :: How to make apache2 authenticate against MS SQL 2000 Server |
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Written by bibe
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Monday, 22 January 2007 |
In a recent project I needed to make apache2 authenticate against MS SQL 200 Server.
I did some hacks to make it happen. So to keep history log of what was done this document was made.
Read more on HowtoForge |
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HowtoForge :: A Beginner's Guide To LVM |
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Written by bibe
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Monday, 22 January 2007 |
This guide shows how to work with LVM (Logical Volume Management) on Linux. It also describes how to use LVM together with RAID1 in an extra chapter. As LVM is a rather abstract topic, this article comes with a Debian Etch VMware image that you can download and start, and on that Debian Etch system you can run all the commands I execute here and compare your results with mine. Through this practical approach you should get used to LVM very fast.
Read more on HowtoForge |
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