LinuxJournal.com Needs Your Help
November 28th, 2007 by LJ Staff in
Thank you to everyone who completed LinuxJournal.com's most recent web survey. We're busy reading every single survey and comment that came in and are so grateful and impressed with all of the feedback. Thank you again!
As promised, here's the list of the 20 randomly drawn winners of Linux Journal T-shirts. Winners, you'll be contacted early next week so that we may get your shirt size before putting them in the mail to you.
Drum roll please...
Eduard Tita of Toronto, Ontario Canada
Gordon Ferguson of Katy, Texas USA
William Meadows of Hunstville, Alabama USA
Douglas Choma of Long Beach, California USA
Pedro Simoes of Lisboa, Portugal
Trevor Need of Raleigh, North Carolina USA
Christopher Thomas of Vancouver, B.C. Canada
Stephen Germany of Chelsea, Oklahoma USA
Jennifer Christopherson of Seattle, Washington USA
Pavan Krishnamurthy of Bangalore, India
Richard Tibbs of Fullerton, California USA
Edward Cundly of Liverpool, England
Mike Sogard of Little Canada, Minnesota USA
Jose Lopez of Monterrey, Mexico
Vijay Prasad of Sunnyvale, California USA
Ethan Peterson of Palatine, Illinois USA
Carl Moore of Bend, Oregon USA
Richard Price of Lincoln, Nebraska USA
Terrance Dreyer of Scandia, Minnesota USA
Mark Johnson of Bellingham, Washington USA
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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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