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Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Girish Venkatachalam |
Writing Your Own Image Gallery Application with the UNIX Shell You don't need a fancy photo management application to create a Web-based image gallery. Here's how to utilize the power of the Linux command line to create an image gallery. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Jose Fernandez |
Programming Python, Part II The tutorial in last month's issue covered the basics of installing Python, running it and using it. Then, we moved on to building a basic blog in Python. In this follow-up article, the focus is on the blog itself and beyond basics. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Richard Bullington-McGuire |
Mambo Exploit Blocked by SELinux A real-world case where Security-Enhanced Linux proved its worth. SELinux prevented the attacker from executing the second stage of the attack, possibly preventing a root compromise. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Robb Shecter |
Role-Based Single Sign-on with Perl and Ruby Single sign-on dictated by user roles with Perl and Ruby: This simple collection of a few short Web scripts provides a surprising array of benefits. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Reuven Lerner |
At the Forge - First Steps with Django If you want the power of Rails with Python instead, give this open-source Web framework a jingle. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Dave Taylor |
Work the Shell - Displaying Image Directories in Apache, Part IV The final steps in our thumbnail script scales and aligns the images within a pretty table. |
Linux Journal July 1, 2007 Doc Searls |
Linux for Suits - Beyond Blogging's Black Holes With death threats and other terrorism, blogging ain't what it used to be. |
Popular Mechanics September 2007 Joel Johnson |
Open-Source Street View? Google Says Not Yet, but Soon Enough? Currently available in five cities, the Street View function of Google Maps displays a 360-degree panorama of any location on the map. When will user photos be utilized? |
Inc. August 2007 David H. Freedman |
What's Next: Shout It Out Loud Companies should be thinking about making their sites more information-rich. |
InternetNews July 27, 2007 Sean Michael Kerner |
Screaming Monkeys, Mozilla And Microsoft Mozilla may be taking advantage of Microsoft Shared Source Licensed materials to help build out its next-generation JavaScript platform. Among the components of the new platform are efforts code-named ActionMonkey, IronMonkey and ScreamingMonkey. |
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