Linux Journal Contents #142, February 2006
February 1st, 2006 by Staff
Linux Journal Issue #142/February 2006
Features
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MSP430 Development with Linux
by Brian C. Lane
Blinking LEDs can be fun an instructive for using a nifty TI processor.
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Shell Scripting a Camera Server
by Erik Inge Bolso
A few contortions are needed but you can still shell script a surveillance system.
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Getting Started with Qtopia
by Lorn Potter
Want to write an application for the increasingly popular PDA platform?
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Building a Home Automation and Security System with Python
by Fred Stelter
Want to use Python and cheap hardware to feel more secure about your home?
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Embedding the db4o Object-Oriented Database
by Rick Grehan
How to get this single-library powerful database into your embedded system.
Indepth
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Thin Clients Pay More
by Stephen Sefton
Thin is always in and cost effective too.
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Heterogeneous Processing: a Strategy for Augmenting Moore's Law
by Amar Shan
What do you do when you can no longer enforce Moore's law?
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Embedding Python in Your C Programs
by William Nagel
Ever wonder how to put Python on a C food diet?
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Three Case Studies in Community-Oriented, Open-Source Software Development
by Randall P. Embry
What does a PDA, video capture card and multimedia appliance have in common?
Toolbox
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At the Forge
Assessing Ruby on Rails
by Reuven M. Lerner
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Cooking with Linux
Little Bitty Applications
by Marcel Gagné
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Paranoid Penguin
Single Sign-On and the Corporate Directory, Part III
by Ti Leggett
Columns
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Work the Shell
Conditional Statements and Flow Control
by Dave Taylor
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Linux for Suits
A First Look at the Nokia 770
by Doc Searls
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/etc/rant
Skim Cream not Scum
by Nicholas Petreley
Review
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Fat Man and Little Boy
by James Turner
Departments
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From the Magazine
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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 is 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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