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Develop a working PHP function to validate e-mail addresses.
Cross-reference and convert source code to HTML for easy viewing.
Speed up your Web applications with SCGI.
Here is how to install and use four dynamite plugins for the WordPress content management system.
Get the Apache images in thumbnails by putting everything in a for loop.
An Ajax primer with Perl and PostgreSQL.
If the ancient Greeks had created open-source Web applications, would they have used Ajax...or maybe Atlas?
Screen the unwanted results out of your access log searches.
Getting back to Apache log analysis by ending with a cliffhanger.
A kilo of information on how to represent even giga numbers in a mega-useful way.
Ever wondered what your Web server is doing, but find that you don't have a stats or analytics package installed? In fact, analyzing log files is a perfect task for the Linux command line and, by extension, shell scripts too.
If you want an easy way to calculate the amount of data transferred from a log file, you can always look awk-ward.
Why and how the Planetizen Web site migrated to the Drupal infrastructure for communities.
How to build simple content Web sites using DocBook XML and CSS.
Static content on a website is like a phone book, but imagine how difficult it would be to use your "paper cache" if the numbers inside the phone book constantly changed or if numbers differed based on who was looking them up.  This is why caching dynamic content poses a more difficult problem than caching static content.
It's a crime not to mashup two or more Web services to deliver more than they can deliver separately.
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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