In this case there are two dozen chapters, each devoted to a distinct set of tasks (starting with finding documentation and ending with managing name resolution). Like all good cookbooks this has plenty of recipes neatly organised into chapters. However, other distros (such as SuSE and Slackware) also get mentioned to point out relevant differences. It also tries to steer a path through the jungle of distributions, focusing on Red Hat and Debian (as representatives of RPM and APT based distributions), with occasional forays into Knoppix. As such it avoids the hand-holding guide to installation at one extreme and the how to navigate raw inodes at the other. Not quite complete beginner and not quite super-user or guru. It's pitched at the reader who is still finding his or her Linux feet. This is a wonderfully useful sort of book well-written, well-organised and well-worth seeking out. VirtualBox physical to logical migration.Web Development Recipes by Brian Hogan, Chris Warren, Mike Weber, Chris Johnson, Aaron Godin.The Unofficial Lego Mindstorms NXT Inventor's Guide by David J.Tomcat: The Definitive Guide by Jason Brittain with Ian Darwin.SUSE Linux 10 Unleashed by Michael McCallister.Succeeding With Open Source by Bernard Golden.Subversion Version Control by William Nagel.Spidering Hacks by Kevin Hemenway and Tara Calishain.Self-Service Linux by Mark Wilding and Dan Behman.The Practical Manager's Guide To Open Source by Maria Winslow.Practical Guide To Red Hat Linux by Mark Sobell.PHP 5 Power Programming by Andi Gutmans, Stig Bakken and Derick Rethans.Open Source For The Enterprise by Dan Woods and Gautam Guliani.Open Source Development with CVS by Moshe Bar and Karl Fogel.The Official Ubuntu Book by Benjamin Mako Hill and Jono Bacon.The Official Damn Small Linux Book by Robert Shingledecker and John Andrews.Moving To The Linux Business Desktop by Marcel Gagne.Mambo - Visual Blueprint by Ric Shreves.Linux Quick Fix Notebook by Peter Harrison.Linux Programming By Example by Arnold Robbins.The Linux Programmer's Toolbox by John Fusco.Linux Kernel Primer by Rodriguez, Fischer and Smolski.Linux Application Development by Michael Johnson and Erik Troan.Learning Python by Mark Lutz and David Ascher.Java Power Tools by John Ferguson Smart.Java Application Development On Linux by Carl Albing and Michael Schwarz.Introducing Ubuntu: Desktop Linux by Brian Proffitt.Forensic Discovery by Dan Farmer and Wietse Venema.Exploring The JDS Linux Desktop by Tom Adelstein and Sam Hiser.Eclipse 3.0 Kick Start by Carlos Valcarcel.Core PHP by Leon Atkinson and Zeev Suraski.Computer Science and Perl Programming edited by Jon Orwant.C++ GUI Programming With Qt 3 by Jasmin Blanchette and Mark Summerfield.Building Web Sites With PHP-Nuke by Douglas Paterson.Apache Jakarta Commons: Reusable Java Components by Will Iverson.Advanced Unix Programming by Marc Rochkind.If you don't find what you're looking for then take a look also at the TechBookReport Programming Index, Java Index or the Other Index for HTML, CSS and other web related materials. Also included are development-related topics, such as CVS and open source licensing. This is the place to find book reviews on Linux and open source, from straight introductions to GNU/Linux, open source programming and programming languages and to applications such as, Mozilla Firefox and so on.
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