LinuxJournal.com Needs Your Help
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
Today’s modular x86 servers are compute-centric, designed as a least common denominator to support a wide range of IT workloads. Those generic, virtualized IT workloads have much different resource optimization requirements than hyperscale and cloud applications. They have resulted in a “one size fits all” enterprise IT architecture that is not optimized for a specific set of IT workloads, and especially not emerging hyperscale workloads, such as web applications, big data, and object storage. In this report, you will learn how shifting the focus from traditional compute-centric IT architectures to an innovative disaggregated fabric-based architecture can optimize and scale your data center.
Sponsored by AMD
Built-in forensics, incident response, and security with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
Every security policy provides guidance and requirements for ensuring adequate protection of information and data, as well as high-level technical and administrative security requirements for a system in a given environment. Traditionally, providing security for a system focuses on the confidentiality of the information on it. However, protecting the data integrity and system and data availability is just as important. For example, when processing United States intelligence information, there are three attributes that require protection: confidentiality, integrity, and availability.
Learn more about catching the bad guy in this free white paper.
Sponsored by DLT Solutions
| Using Salt Stack and Vagrant for Drupal Development | May 20, 2013 |
| Making Linux and Android Get Along (It's Not as Hard as It Sounds) | May 16, 2013 |
| Drupal Is a Framework: Why Everyone Needs to Understand This | May 15, 2013 |
| Home, My Backup Data Center | May 13, 2013 |
| Non-Linux FOSS: Seashore | May 10, 2013 |
| Trying to Tame the Tablet | May 08, 2013 |
- Making Linux and Android Get Along (It's Not as Hard as It Sounds)
- Using Salt Stack and Vagrant for Drupal Development
- New Products
- Validate an E-Mail Address with PHP, the Right Way
- Drupal Is a Framework: Why Everyone Needs to Understand This
- A Topic for Discussion - Open Source Feature-Richness?
- Home, My Backup Data Center
- New Products
- Tech Tip: Really Simple HTTP Server with Python
- RSS Feeds
Enter to Win an Adafruit Prototyping Pi Plate Kit for Raspberry Pi

It's Raspberry Pi month at Linux Journal. Each week in May, Adafruit will be giving away a Pi-related prize to a lucky, randomly drawn LJ reader. Winners will be announced weekly.
Fill out the fields below to enter to win this week's prize-- a Prototyping Pi Plate Kit for Raspberry Pi.
Congratulations to our winners so far:
- 5-8-13, Pi Starter Pack: Jack Davis
- 5-15-13, Pi Model B 512MB RAM: Patrick Dunn
- Next winner announced on 5-21-13!
Free Webinar: Linux Backup and Recovery
Most companies incorporate backup procedures for critical data, which can be restored quickly if a loss occurs. However, fewer companies are prepared for catastrophic system failures, in which they lose all data, the entire operating system, applications, settings, patches and more, reducing their system(s) to “bare metal.” After all, before data can be restored to a system, there must be a system to restore it to.
In this one hour webinar, learn how to enhance your existing backup strategies for better disaster recovery preparedness using Storix System Backup Administrator (SBAdmin), a highly flexible bare-metal recovery solution for UNIX and Linux systems.



3 min 23 sec ago
31 min 53 sec ago
1 hour 29 min ago
2 hours 58 min ago
4 hours 7 min ago
4 hours 53 min ago
5 hours 15 min ago
11 hours 29 min ago
17 hours 8 min ago
23 hours 7 min ago