This appeared on comp.os.linux.announce, but maybe new users here would like
it too?
From: Ludootje <ludootje@linux.be@telenet-ops.be>
Subject: New free online Linux magazine: The Grasshoppers' Linux Journal
Date: 19 Sep 2002 15:50:39 GMT
Hi all!
Some people from the linuxnewbie.org forum and I have been working hard on a
GNU/Linux magazine, we've recently released issue number 1. We need readers
of course, but most of all writers. Currently we don't have a lot of
writers, and it's a lot of work to get enough enough articles and
interviews to bring out another issue. We're mostly oriented towards
newbies (unlike other online Linux-magazines), but some articles can be
very interesting to experts too. The interviews for example, can interest
everyone.
For those interested, this is the Table Of Contents of our first issue:
-------------
What is Linux?
My First Linux
A Noob's Perspective
Unix Tool of the Month
Open Source Alternatives
MrProject Interview
Mandrake vs. SuSE
Custom RedHat CDs
Dual Monitor Guide
Gnomemeeting Interview
Getting Help in Linux
Dynamic IP Webservers
The Year of the DVD
Review: Creative vs. Labtec Speakers
Letters
-------------
For those interested in writing (English doesn't even have to be your native
language, we have proof-readers): simply register on our forum, and say
you're willing to write an article / make an interview. We'll give you
access to the articles & interviews forums once your interview / article is
done.
Anyone who thinks (s)he can somehow help the project is free to do so, of
course.
If you have any remaining questions, you can simply answer to this post,
e-mail me at ludootje(a)linux.be, or register on the forum and ask your
question there.
Ludootje
--
The Grasshoppers' Linux Journal - a free, online distributed magazine about
GNU/Linux / Open Source / ... oriented towards newbies. Check it out @
http://ghj.sunsite.dk !
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Meeting this weekend at the Fat Cat pub in Norwich from 2pm onwards. See
here for more on the Fat Cat http://www.greatbeer.co.uk/norfaca.htm
Not sure who will be there, but there will be some there and MJR will bring
a penguin. Someone add this to the wiki, please?
Remember I posted an item on the Main list on backup strategies a while
back?
Here's an interesting article from slashdot on the same topic;
Linux Backups Made Easy
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/07/1630234
mfago writes "A colleague of mine has written a great [0] tutorial on
how to use rsync to create automatic [1]"snapshot-style" backups.
Nothing is required except for a simple script, although it is thus not
necessarily suitable for data-center applications. Please try to be
gentle on his server: it is the $80 computer that he mentions in the
tutorial. Perhaps try the [2]Google cache." An excellent article
answering a frequently asked question.
Links
0. http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/
1. http://www.netapp.com/products/filer/snapmirror.html
2.
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:ysk5qyhZDzcC:www.mikerubel.org/computer
s/rsync_snapshots/+%22mike+rubel%22&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
Regards,
Keith Watson
____________
Whatever thou sayest of God is untrue.
Meister Eckhart
From: "Bradley M. Kuhn" <bkuhn(a)fsf.org>
Subject: Nominations Request for The 2002 FSF Award for the Advancement of Free Software
Date: Fri, 6 Sep 2002 12:13:56 -0400
[ Please redistribute this message widely where appropriate. ]
The FSF and the GNU project request nominations for the 2002 FSF Award for
the Advancement of Free Software. We want to give this award to a person
who has made a great contribution to the progress and development of Free
Software (free as in freedom; see
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html for the definition), through
activities that accord with the spirit of software freedom.
Any kind of activity could be eligible -- writing software, writing
documentation, publishing CDs, even journalism -- but whatever the
activity, we want to recognize long-term central contributions to the
development of the world of software freedom. "Accord with the spirit"
means, for example, that software, manuals or collections of them (online
or on CD) must be entirely Free. Work done commercially is eligible, but
we give this award to individuals, not to companies, organizations, or
teams.
People such as Miguel de Icaza, Donald Knuth, Brian Paul, Guido van
Rossum, Richard Stallman, Linus Torvalds, and Larry Wall who have already
received this or other awards for their contributions, are not eligible
for the Award for the Advancement of Free Software. Among those who are
eligible, the award committee will try to choose whoever has made the
greatest contribution.
Please send your nominations to <award-nominations(a)gnu.org>, on or before
15 October 2002. Please submit nominations in the following format:
* Put the name of the person you are nominating in the email
message subject line.
* Please include, in the body of your message, an explanation
(40 lines or less) of the work the person has done and why you
think it is especially important to software freedom.
* Please state, in the body of your message, where to find the
software which your nomination is based on.
Information about the previous awards can be found online at:
http://www.gnu.org/award/
--
Bradley M. Kuhn, Executive Director
Free Software Foundation | Phone: +1-617-542-5942
59 Temple Place, Suite 330 | Fax: +1-617-542-2652
Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA | Web: http://www.gnu.org
Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2002 18:41:42 +0100
From: Ian Brown <ian(a)fipr.org>
Subject: FIPR-Bulletin: Conference announcement: A Fair Deal on Copyright?
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
You have received this message from the FIPR Bulletin mailing list run by
the Foundation for Information Policy Research http://www.fipr.org/
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Fair Deal on Copyright?
http://www.fipr.org/events.html
WHAT: A mini-conference organised by
The Foundation for Information Policy Research
WHEN: 5.30pm-7pm, Wednesday 25 September 2002
WHERE: The Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House,
LSE, The Aldwych, London WC2A 2AE.
Hosted by the Department of Information Systems,
London School of Economics
Admission: free.
Space is limited, so please RSVP to fairdeal02(a)fipr.org if you
would like to attend.
PLEASE REDISTRIBUTE THIS FLYER UNTIL 25 SEPTEMBER
- --
The Internet has presented a dramatic challenge to the existing copyright
regime. Rights holders such as the music and film industry claim that their
businesses are losing many millions of dollars each year to file-swapping
networks such as Napster and its successors. One of their main responses has
been to lobby for changes in copyright legislation to restrict the ability
of consumers to extract and exchange content on-line.
The UK government is now holding a consultation on legislation to update UK
law in this area, based on the European Union's recent Copyright Directive.
This would criminalise certain copyright infringements and circumvention of
technology that controls access to media such as DVDs.
Would the draft legislation properly balance the incentives given to content
creators through copyright, with the benefits to society of the free
exchange of information? What effect will criminalising "circumvention
technologies" have on computer and Internet security? Will authors,
musicians and film-makers needing to sample previous works become criminals?
At this conference you can debate the issues with speakers from the Patent
Office and open source and library communities, and hear how well similar US
legislation has worked in practice.
Speakers:
The Patent Office: Intro and Q&A on the copyright consultation
Julian Midgley, FIPR: Problems with the draft legislation
Toby Bainton, Society of College, National and University Libraries: The
effect on the UK's libraries
Barbara Simons, Association for Computing Machinery: Where the United States
went wrong on copyright
Background:
The Copyright Directive (2001/29/EC) - UK Implementation, The Patent Office:
http://www.patent.gov.uk/about/consultations/eccopyright/index.htm
Critique of the Proposed UK Implementation of the EU Copyright Directive,
Julian Midgley:
http://uk.eurorights.org/issues/eucd/ukimpl/critique_uk_impl.html
ACM briefings on the US Digital Millenium Copyright Act:
http://www.acm.org/usacm/IP/#copyright
Media contacts:
Ian Brown, Director, FIPR: ian(a)fipr.org / 07970 164 526
Ross Anderson, Chair, FIPR: rja(a)fipr.org / 01223 33 47 33
- --
(c) FIPR September 2002.
This e-mail may be copied freely in whole or in part.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
You have received this message from the FIPR Bulletin mailing list run by
the Foundation for Information Policy Research http://www.fipr.org/
To unsubscribe, send an email to: <bulletin-unsubscribe(a)admin.fipr.org>
If you need to change your subscribed email address, or for any other
administrative matters, please write to: <bulletin-request(a)admin.fipr.org>
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------- End of forwarded message -------
xpost from newsforge;
http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/09/01/1636239
- By Robin "Roblimo" Miller - Linux.com is eager to publish
reader-written reviews of Linux software, new or updated Linux
distributions, and hardware you have used with Linux. We will pay a
small honorarium for each original review, so when you write a review
for Linux.com you will not only be helping fellow Linux users but
putting a little money in your pocket.
Keith
From: "Mark Lewis" <mark(a)lug.org.uk>
Subject: [Lugmaster] Senior Linux role
Date: Fri, 23 Aug 2002 08:29:02 +0100
Gentlemen,
I would not normally post 'jobs' to the list, however this chappie has the
courtesy to telephone me and ask how best to approach our members. It
appears it's a pretty decent Server Admin job in New York, responsible for
running some 100+ Redhat boxes for a bank.
Jason tells me it's a high calibre job with high a salary ticket, so
thought someone may be interested?
Perhaps if you are also happy, you may like to forward to your lists?
Regards,
Mark
*********** BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE ***********
On 22/08/2002 at 15:50 Jason Yank <jyank(a)astoncarter.co.uk> wrote:
>Linux SA (NY)
>EAT, BREATH, SLEEP AND DRINK LINUX?
>I want to talk to you.
>New York based role - relocation necessary if applicable.
>New senior Linux SA role is live! in NY for our Investment banking client.
>Linux Computer Farm SA
>Approx 100 Redhat 6 machines and +200 new Redhat machines supporting
custom
>software.
>Serious hard-core linux guru, +5 of linux development, building and
support
>in large commercial environment.
>Strong NFS, good automounter,
>Source code/kernel level tuning, unix internals/fundamentals.
>Role is NY based and will require relocation.
>Very strong communication skills, presentable, well educated and
>articulate!
>URGENT.....
>
>Regards,
>
>Jason Yank
>Senior Consultant
>Aston Carter Ltd.
>+44 (0)20-7739-5500
>+44 (0)7957-583-526
>jyank(a)astoncarter.co.uk
>www.astoncarter.co.uk
>
>
[This message has also been posted.]
Tim Williams <T.M.Williams(a)cs.bham.ac.uk> wrote:
> I've got sPOP3 configured on my home system if you need help setting this
> up. Fetchmail works fine with sPOP3, not sure about other retreival
> clients though. Haven't needed to explicitly use the stunnel command to
> get it to work, although this may be happening transparently.
Retchmail also supports spop (and is much simpler and faster, but doesn't do
multidrop or other things fetchmail gets wrong itself). APOP should be in
the snapshots now. There is interest in someone updating fastforward to
support SSLing a port forward. There's already SSL support in its stream
library, so shouldn't be too hard. It's just that it's not been needed yet,
so no-one's written it.
Fastforward is a fast port forwarder that tries not to waste more CPU or
memory than absolutely necessary. It's with retchmail at
http://open.nit.ca/ Maybe if you're not interested, someone in your LUG
might be? Feel free to forward this request onwards. Thanks.