I've been a reader of LJ since issue #2 was excitedly passed around a compiler design class I was taking in college, and a subscriber since issue #3. No breaks, all the way through.

I have a stack of LJ going way back, all the way to issue #3. My wife has declared that they can no longer have a home in the closet that now belongs to our young children, and she is right. It is time to let them go, especially with the ease of searching on the archive CD.

I am about to send them out with the recycling, but I thought I'd ask a simple question here first.

Does anybody want some classic LJ issues? I may be missing one or two, but I've literally got a three foot stack of LJ magazines from right at the beginning up through present day.

All I'll ask is that you pay for shipping if you want them.

Scott

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http://www.folkjam.org (LAMP+Drupal)
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The November 13, 2008 edition of Linux Journal Live! Shawn Powers and special guest, Linux Journal Author Daniel Bartholomew, talk e-book readers and Daniel's Kindle, DRM, and other goodness.

From the Magazine

December 2008, #176

The Oxford English Dictionary says the word "gadget" is a placeholder name for a technical item whose precise name one can't remember. Like that book-reader thingy from Amazon...what's it called? Spindle, Gindle...Kindle, that's it. Check it out in this month's gadget issue.

Other gadgets covered include the Nokia tablets, the BlackBerry, the Neo FreeRunner, the Dash Express, the Roku Netflix Player, the Kangaroo TV, The TomTom GO 930 and the MooBella Ice Cream System. On the larger hardware front, read the reviews of the Acer Aspire One and the YDL PowerStation. On the software front, check out the articles and columns on memcached, Samba security, Mutt, desktop gadgets, bash and Puppet. To wrap it all up, read Doc's thoughts on Google and the browser platform.

Read this issue

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