Linux Journal Contents #157, May 2007
May 1st, 2007 by Staff
Linux Journal Issue #157/May 2007
Features
-
Ajax Simplified
by Nicholas Petreley
Ajax doesn't have to be intimidating
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Writing Web Applications with Web Services and Ajax
by Mike Diehl
How about a slightly more advanced Ajax primer?
-
MochiKit by Example
by Ryan Wilcox
Get up to speed without losing control.
-
Four Cool Plugins for WordPress
by Marco Fioretti
Spruce up your WordPress-based site with these four plugins.
Indepth
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An Ajax-Enhanced Web-Based Ethernet Analyzer
by Paul Barry
Ruby + Ajax + bash + CGI = Ethernet Analyzer?
-
Protecting SSH Servers with Single Packet Authorization
by Michael Rash
Security does not live on SSH alone.
-
OpenOffice.org ODF, Python and XML
by Collin Park
Messing with the internals of ODF
Columns
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Reuven Lerner's At the Forge
Firebug
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Marcel Gagné's Cooking with Linux
When Ajax Held the World on His Shoulders
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Dave Taylor's Work the Shell
Displaying Image Directories in Apache, Part II
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Jon "maddog" Hall's Beachhead
What Is the Value of Software?
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Doc Searls' Linux for Suits
Penguins in Winnipeg
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Nicholas Petreley's /var/opinion
They're Ba-ack
Quick Takes
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Zimbra Collaboration Suite, Version 4.5
by Marcel Gagné
-
The Aptana IDE for Ajax Development
by Ben Martin
-
Open-Source databases, Part II: PostgreSQL
by Reuven M. Lerner
In Every Issue
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July 2009, #183
News Flash: Linux Kernel 3.0 to include an on-the-go Expresso machine interface! Ok, maybe not, but Linux is definitely going mobile, from phones to e-readers. Find out more inside about Android, the Kindle 2, the Western Digital MyBook II, The Bug, and Indamixx (a portable recording studio). And if you've gone mobile and you been wanting more Emacs in your life then check out Conkeror.
To compliment the mobile we've got the stationary: parsing command line options with getopt, checking your Ruby code with metric_fu, and building a secure Squid proxy. How is this stationary you ask? What can we say? It's not. We just wanted to see if anybody actually read this part of the page :) .
All this and more, and all you have to do is get your hot sweaty hands on the latest copy of Linux Journal.

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