Purple Hearts atwork di Alberto Turelli - soluzioni software & web
Main Menu
Home
News
Contact Us
Search
My Articles
Ubuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon on a Macbook
Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft on an Asus Z92J notebook
Debian Etch on an Asus Z92J notebook
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)
 
Free Software Magazine :: How dumb can GNU/Linux users be? PDF Print E-mail
Written by bibe   
Friday, 08 December 2006
Let's rephrase: How technically sophisticated should GNU/Linux users have to be? How knowledgeable should any computer user have to be? The answer to that, of course, ranges from "very" to "not very." We need to get past the name-calling of clueless newbie and sneering elitist, and understand that there are going to be varying levels of ability in any community, including the one made up of people interested in using free software. From there, I suggest it is critically important that we expand the size of the free software community. That means dealing with more "dumb" people.
Read more on Free Software Magazine
 
< Prev   Next >
Debian Security
Latest Linux Kernel Versions