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Building a Linux video jukebox for an anime convention
software and application Building a Linux video jukebox for an anime convention By: Amy R. Zunk
How do you run video to four different video rooms at an anime convention without having a staff member change tapes or DVDs at regular intervals? How do you run a video room where viewers can choose what to watch and when to watch it? You hire an open source developer to code a video keg and video jukebox. Roy Harms, the CEO of METROCON, Tampa, Fla.'s largest anime convention, was trying to figure out a way to play non-stop anime, Japanese live action films, and other videos of interest in four video rooms at the convention. He wanted an inexpensive solution that was stable, and that wouldn't require a staff member to change out videotapes or DVDs at the end of every program. And he needed something that could play for three days straight with no interruptions.
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Posted by admin on Friday, November 25 @ 16:12:46 EST (9333 reads)
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Linux.com: Secure Remote File Management with sshfs
software and application NewsForge: Nine principles of security architecture by Nathan Willis

"It's a dangerous Internet out there, kids. If you are going to work on remotely connected machines, do it safely. Simple file transfers and interactive sessions have scp and ssh respectively; in fact there is hardly a commercial Web hosting provider left that doesn't support them. For more complicated scenarios we have VPN tools. But what if you need to work with files on a remote server, but find scp tedious in repetition and FreeS/WAN too *****bersome? You might find just what you're looking for in sshfs -- a tool for mounting a remote filesystem transparently and securely as if it were just another directory on your local machine. "sshfs is primarily the work of Miklos Szeredi, a Linux hacker from Budapest who is better-known as the creator of FUSE, the Filesystem in USErspace framework that makes sshfs possible. Szeredi was already working on FUSE when he discovered Florin Malita's similar project named LUFS and its SSHFS filesystem..." read more

Posted by admin on Friday, November 25 @ 16:06:29 EST (16288 reads)
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NewsForge: Nine principles of security architecture
Linux security NewsForge: Nine principles of security architecture Bruce Byfield
" Security architecture is a new concept to many computer users. Users are aware of security threats such as viruses, worms, spyware, and other malware. They have heard of, and most use, anti-virus programs and firewalls. Many use intrusion detection. Architectural security, though, remains a mystery to most computer users". The truth is, anti-virus software, firewalls, and intrusion detection are only the surface of security..." Read more


Posted by admin on Friday, November 25 @ 16:01:58 EST (26875 reads)
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Getting started with BitTorrent and Azureus
software and application Getting started with BitTorrent and Azureus By: Chris Lynch Most of us have heard of BitTorrent, the highly scalable peer-to-peer file sharing technology designed to reduce the bandwidth strain on content distributors. With BitTorrent, the challenge is not in finding content to download, but in installing BitTorrent on your computer and finding a good, user-friendly client to manage them. We took a look at BitTorrent itself and the excellent Azureus client, and can offer you some tips on how to install them on your system.
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Posted by admin on Monday, March 28 @ 20:21:38 EST (33623 reads)
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Linux Advisory Watch - March 25, 2005
Linux security Linux Advisory Watch - March 25, 2005
By: Benjamin D. Thomas This week, advisories were released for cyrus-imapd, curl, xloadimage, xli, PERL, slypheed, libgal2, libsoup, evolution, gimp, procps, lsof, lockdev, xloadimage, mailman, boost, kdelibs, firefox, thunderbird, mozilla, devhelp, epiphany, rxvt, LTris, MySQL, ethereal, ipsec-tools, and ImageMagick. The distributors include Conectiva, Debian, Fedora, Genotoo, Mandrake, Red Hat, and SuSE. Read more



Posted by admin on Monday, March 28 @ 20:18:05 EST (24442 reads)
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Tips for when hackers strike
Linux security Tips for when hackers strike By: Brice Burgess Last week I was faced with the situation every user and administrator dreads -- my Web server was hacked. Here's hoping you can use my experience as a guide to investigating your own compromised server, if and when the time comes. The nightmare started when I returned to my office to discover 17 missed calls on my cell phone. A moment later, the phone rang again. A frantic customer complained of "eyes" on his Web site. I visit the site, and, lo and behold, discovered it proclaiming being "owned" by a hacking group. Upon further investigation, I discovered all the other Web sites on the Debian-based server had been defaced. Read more



Posted by admin on Monday, March 28 @ 20:14:02 EST (22128 reads)
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PC World: First Look: OpenOffice.org 2.0 Looks Good
software and application First Look: OpenOffice.org 2.0 Looks Good
by Edward N. Albro
"If you're thrifty and you use an office suite, it's hard not to like OpenOffice.org, the open-source set of office productivity tools. Version 1.0, which first appeared in 2002, does most things Microsoft Office can do (including smoothly trade files with users of Word, Excel, or PowerPoint). Plus it's free. So what's to improve in version 2.0? Read more



Posted by admin on Thursday, March 24 @ 11:49:00 EST (39645 reads)
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