Installing the Jaws CMS on Ubuntu 7.10

February 6th, 2008


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Installing the Jaws CMS on Ubuntu 7.10

Jaws is a content management system that utilizes a PHP
framework with a MySQL back end. I have been looking for a good CMS for
a little while now, but what attracted me to Jaws was its simplicity
and appearance. I decided that since I was going to test Jaws out, I
may as well document it, so that it might help others who are thinking
about using it.

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Quickly and fastly installing LaTeX: LaTeX in Debian Quick HOWTO

February 6th, 2008


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Problem: it`s needed to quickly and simply make scientific articles, books, monographs and practically all that have many formulas and graphs.
Solve: installation LaTeX in Debian - a work of a moment.

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mytop - top like query monitor for MySQL

February 6th, 2008


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mytop is a console-based (non-gui) tool for monitoring the threads and overall performance of a MySQL 3.22.x, 3.23.x, and 4.x server. It runs on most Unix systems (including Mac OS X) which have Perl, DBI, and Term::ReadKey installed. And with Term::ANSIColor installed you even get color. If you install Time::HiRes, you’ll get good real-time queries/second stats.

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News: openSUSE Membership; Community Manager Joe Brockmeier

February 6th, 2008


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Apart from the openSUSE 11.0 Alpha 2 release coming this Thursday, there are a couple of exciting things happening in the openSUSE world:

openSUSE Membership

For a long time the openSUSE project had no fully defined way of distinguishing active and continuously helpful people in the openSUSE project. If you’re in the project then it becomes quite palpable quickly who is doing a lot of great stuff and whatnot, but many people in the project echoed a need for better processes of handling, for example, @opensuse.org email addresses and IRC cloaks.

The result of this can be seen by what we think of as openSUSE Members (see the page for all the details). So, if you are doing great stuff for openSUSE, please do apply and let us know! )

At the moment only the board members are listed, but during our next meeting I hope to publish a much longer list of openSUSE members. If you are an openSUSE member, please try to provide a wiki page or at least a page where you can specify your contributions so anyone else can easily find out about you.

openSUSE Community Manager: Joe Brockmeier

It’s great to see that after many months of interviews and work for a Chief openSUSE Linux Evangelist, openSUSE has a new community manager: Joe Brockmeier. One thing that has sorely been needed in the openSUSE project is extra marketing and community management. It’s wonderful to see both of these very key and essential issues being tackled and I’m confident now that Joe will do remarkable things for openSUSE.

If you want to find out a little more, take a look at a few of his recent interviews or articles about the new job-position:

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