<b>Really Linux:</b> "In this article, Andrea explores some of the most recent Linux job postings and determines that Linux is a very good niche to be in during these economically strange times."
This is nothing short of extremly cool from a technical perspective. The author has done it by writing an ARM emulator for an AVR controller and running Linux with this emulation : Linux on an 8-bit micro?.This is definitely not the fastest, but I think it may be the cheapest, slowest, simplest to hand assemble, lowest part count, and lowest-end Linux PC. The board is hand-soldered using wires, there is not even a requirement for a printed circuit board
my computer previously only had windows installed on it. Recently I decided to try Linux and opted for a dual boot so I installed Linux Mint 17 Cinnamon 64-bit on a separate hard drive within my computer. After installation my computer would directly boot to Linux upon start up and did not even show a grub screen. Using the boot-repair I was finally able to make the Grub loader show a boot list upon start up, but the Windows partition is not there. The boot-info summary is found on this link.
http://paste2.org/9pIGZtDv
Any help would be great
Motherboard: Gigabyte z77 ud5h
OS: Linux Mint 17 Cinnamon 64-bit & Windows 8.1 64-bit
<b>Kernel News: </b>"It can be hard for new users to figure out which Linux Distribuiton that they should use. Although Ubuntu Linux isn't the best distribution for everyone, in our opinion it is the best Linux Distribution for new users."
<b>Linux Planet:</b> "Linux was a resounding failure on netbooks, so what makes this French start-up firm think it can succeed with an Ubuntu Linux derivative?"
<b>Handle With Linux:</b> "Measuring at just 2 x 2 x 2.2 inches this is the smallest Desktop PC. And it's running Linux, one more point for Linux coolness."
<b>DaniWeb: </b>"I know it sounds crazy but the Linux Desktop isn't dead, it's just pining. It's pining for the correct platform--a tablet computer. And, I'm not referring to some cheap imitation tablet that will merely satisfy a few observers and nerdlets who use Linux. I'm thinking of a tablet computer for hardcore Linux moguls."
<b>Handle With Linux:</b> "Some manufacturers are using Linux for their television sets, Sony for instance has a impressive list of tv's which are running Linux."
<b>Linux Planet:</b> "Ubuntu Linux is gearing up for the debut of its latest release with Ubuntu 10.04, codenamed "the Lucid Lynx" and scheduled for general availability at the end of the month. It's a release that offers multiple new features on the desktop and a new look to Ubuntu Linux."
<b>Cyber Cynic:</b> "Take one part Intel's Moblin, mix with Nokia's Maemo, bake for three months in the Linux Foundation oven, and you get MeeGo. Linux Foundation executive director, Jim Zemlin has called this new embedded Linux, the open-source uber-platform for the next generation of computing devices:"
<b>Linux User and Developer:</b> "Linux has come a long way from being just a geek’s operating system. But there is no doubt that Linux is still the best operating system for geeks and developers."
<b>Handle With Linux:</b> "This is the 1D/2D scanner imager available as an extension to the wearable w200 rugged Linux computer. Finally the Linux equivalent of the cap'n crunch secret decoder ring."
<b>Linux Magazine:</b> "Some of us are still waiting for the year of the Linux desktop. Some think it’s already here. One thing is certain however, Linux does not have a majority desktop market share. By the time we get there, perhaps the entire idea of what a Desktop is will have been re-defined, thanks to “The Cloud”."
Enterprise Linux is the open source Linux operating system used by corporate and SMB clients for servers, desktops, workstations and mobile deployments.
<b>Datamation:</b> "Enterprise Linux is the open source Linux operating system used by corporate and SMB clients for servers, desktops, workstations and mobile deployments. Enterprise Linux has become increasingly popular due to cost and customizability factors."
<b>Linux BSDos:</b> "The installation program on Ubuntu 10.04 and Linux Mint 9 are the same. And that's because Linux Mint is based on Ubuntu. So if you install one, which involves a simple seven-step process, you can use the same instructions to install the other."
<b>Linux.com:</b> "Which Linux distro should I use? It's one of the most common questions for new and aspiring Linux users. There's so many to choose from, how can you pick the right one? Let's see if we can help clear it up a little and help you choose between all the other major distros."
I am trying to connect to a SonicWall VPN that requires the client to fetch IP addresses from the SonicWall DHCP server.
I have tried to use Linux Openswan U2.6.22/K2.6.31-20-generic (netkey), and I connect fine, but the server fails the connection:
IKE Responder: WAN GroupVPN policy does not allow static IP for Virtual Adapter.
Anyone that can help me with this? I am at my wits end.
I use the following tools for my auditing needs
A) System Auditing and Hardening (One time)
1) Linux Security Auditing Tool (Security centric,Text based output )
2) Dmidecode ( Retrieves info from BIOS )
3) Systeminfo ( Generates a nice html report)
4) Syssumm (Inactive since Oct 2000)
5) Rootkit Hunter (Does a basic config check in addition to rootkit checks)
6) CIS benchmarks
7) Bastille ( Interactive hardening and a security scoring tool)
B) Automatic Auditing (as a cron job or a service)
1) Logwatch
2) Psad
C) Remote Auditing
1) Nmap (Port scanning)
2) Nessus ( Remote Vulnerability check)
D) Wikipedia
1) System profiler
Any other tools/scripts which you can recommend?
Just like the title states. How come this setting is disabled (2 in about:config rather than 0) under Linux by default? Is there a reason to not turn it on?
WatchGuard officially has clients only for Windows and Mac. But I see that it uses openvpn internally. I couldn't connect to WG from Linux.
Is there someone who actually get this working? How?