Linux Journal Contents #122, June 2004
June 1st, 2004 by Staff
Linux Journal Issue #122/June 2004
Features
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Simulators for Training Firefighters
by Douglas Maxwell
Fewer real fires means we need more fake fires for training. Behind the scenes at a Navy/New York Fire Department simulator.
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Hacking Democracy
by Doc Searls
LAMP sites at US presidential campaigns offer lessons for your local politics too.
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An Open-Source System for Electronic Court Filing
by Jim Beard
Can the 17,500 courts in the US agree on a common electronic filing system? Good news from the standards front.
Indepth
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GNU Radio: Tools for Exploring the Radio Frequency Spectrum
by Eric Blossom
Listen to ham, shortwave, AM and FM, and even watch HDTV and invent new communications modes, all on the same hardware.
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The Linux Soundfile Editor Roundup
by Dave Phillips
If you want to give your games, desktop apps and answering machine an audible personality, you'll need one of these tools.
Embedded
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Driving Me Nuts
by Greg Kroah-Hartman
Toolbox
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At the Forge
XOOPS
by Reuven M. Lerner
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Kernel Korner
udev—Persistent Device Naming in User Space
by Greg Kroah-Hartman
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Cooking with Linux
When Democracy Becomes Crazy!
by Marcel Gagné
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Paranoid Penguin
Using Yum for RPM Updates
by Mick Bauer
Columns
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EOF
Free Software Licenses
by Maureen O'Sullivan
Reviews
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Xandros Desktop Deluxe 2.0
by Dean Staff
Departments
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From the Magazine
September 2008, #173
Feeling a bit like a Thermian? Never give up, never surrender! Someday, you could go from underdog to top dog. Just take a look at a few of the underdogs we highlight in this issue: Mutt, djbdns, Nginix, Gentoo, Xara and the program voted mostly likely to fail just a few years back—Firefox. If Firefox not radical enough for you, check out Chef Marcel's column for some more alternatives. Having trouble mapping your program data to your relational database? If so, Rueven Lerner shows you some tricks in his At The Forge column.
Need to run GUI applications on your server in the next state? In his Paranoid Penguin column, Mick Bauer shows you how to do it securely. Kyle Rankin keeps hacking and slashing and shows you a few split screen secrets you may not be familiar with. Finally, we all know what happens next February, but only Doc knows what happens afterward.

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