Hardware


The article you are trying to access requires you to be a registered Linux Journal print or digital subscriber. Click HERE to login or SUBSCRIBE NOW for instant access.

If you are subscriber and have not yet created a LinuxJournal.com account, register HERE.

If you have already created a LinuxJournal.com account, but have not linked your subscriber information, click HERE for instructions.

Hacking the Eee PC

April 1st, 2008 by Jes Hall in

How to tweak your Eee PC.
The demands of parallel processing may be met more easily in a language we already know.
The present and future of high-performance computing.
The Nokia N800 starts off the N-series of Linux handhelds with an indisputable winner.
We packed unbelievable power in a tank case and added all the trimmings for less than $4,000.
Tired of x86? See what Linux on Itanium, Sun T1 or POWER5 can do!

The Ultimate Linux Laptop

September 1st, 2007 by James Gray in

EmperorLinux's Raven X60, take your victory lap! Smart innovations vault a compact yet powerful machine over the bar.
Discovering local artists through Zeroconf.
Creating an unattended, encrypted, redundant, network backup solution using Linux, Duplicity and COTS hardware.
Linux-based robots are tricky to create, but Michael Surran's Robotics class found out it can be done.
Puget Custom Computers packs a lot of power into our Ultimate Linux Desktop.
The Ultimate Multimedia Center actually slides in under a million dollars.
Start with the ultimate AMD64 motherboard and build on it to create a masterpiece of your own.
Some people wanted us to build a big powerful SMP system. Some people wanted us to build a silent machine that would be good for audio. So we did both.
Turning the pages of this magazine makes more noise than this year's Ultimate Linux Box does.
Checking back in with gumstix's expanding product line to see if the original concerns have been addressed and what's possible now with the waysmall modules.
Resources for the print article.
Syndicate content

Featured Video

Shawn Powers has a message for hardware vendors. Listen up!

From the Magazine

July 2008, #171

Heard of the Web? If not, read on. This month we talk with Matt Mullenweg about WordPress. If you want to get your hands dirty in Web code, take a look at the rest of our feature articles on WebKit, Dojo and OpenLaszlo.

In the rest of the issue, you'll find articles on OpenID, RDFa and Quanta Plus. Kyle Rankin puts a new spin (as in "no" spin SSD) on hard drives and also tells you how to migrate to that new disk (spinning or not). Mick Bauer continues his series on customizing live CD's. And, James Gray gives us a feel for the state of Linux in the enterprise. After all that, you may need some TV time. If so, check out our review on how to make that digital TV tuner card work in your Linux box.

Read this issue