Richard Petersen holds a M.L.I.S. in Library and Information Studies. He
currently teaches Unix and C/C++ courses at the University of California, Berkeley.
If one term could be
applied to the new Fedora
Core 5, it could well be
streamlined. The focus of
this release seems to be
more on the desktop user
because of the changes in
software management,
applications support, and
security configuration.
The changes make the ...
One of the more
frustrating features of a
Fedora Core installation
is its lack of popular
multimedia and driver
support as well as
alternative applications
like Abiword. But, with a
few simple steps you can
easily access a large
collection of such
software from your system
using YUM.
IPv6 can be used to
automatically connect a
host to a network using
stateless
auto-configuration, doing
away with the need for
any IP addressing support
like a DHCP server. In an
IPv6 network, the IPv6
protocol includes
information that can
directly configure a
host.
With Fedora Core 4, Red
Hat, for the first time,
released its Global File
System (GFS) as an open
sourced, freely available
distributed network file
system. A distributed
network file system
builds on the basic
concept of NFS as well as
RAID techniques to create
a...
This article discusses
the implementation
details for the new
device management methods
udev and HAL, now used on
all Fedora Core 3 and 4
systems for all devices.
It's time to relearn how
devices are managed!
This article provides a
glimpse into Red Hat: The
Complete Reference
Enterprise Linux and
Fedora Edition (with
DVD), published by
McGraw-Hill/Osborne. It
covers what you need to
get started with Red Hat
Linux - including the
overall design of Linux,
Linux distr...