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On Mon, 22 Mar 1999, John Abreau wrote: "GNOME" "raid" "rcs / cvs" Seeing that Samba was a good draw, might suggest that topics on the classic niche serious uses of linux have appeal to less fervent linuxers. What's a "classic niche use"? It is what nearly every article in the mainstream IT press says that linux is getting beyond: "A programmer's practical introduction to Linux/Unix" The basic toolkit on linux is not flashy but packs a lot of power: gcc, g++, make, gdb. Easing editor withdrawal. "Webserving with linux" "Mailserving with linux" "Firewalling with linux" "High availability systems using commodity hardware" Make your linux system even more solid. Stategies to restore service quickly. Readonly /usr filesystems, alternate /boot filesystems, syncronising a backup server to a host and rollover techniques. Filesystems which don't require long fscks. Software raid. "Connecting Linux to the Database" Linux as a database client. Tools & Techniques. "Solidstate Linux" Diskless linux. Embedded. NCs. Xstations. Routers. "Linux data server" Getting someone who has done a serious survey/evaluation and implementation of a data server could be interesting. > In the past, I've tended to seek out technical speakers and topics for our > Linux meetings. Now that Linux is becoming more mainstream, we can start > scheduling less technical topics. I'd like to hear what people think about > this, and about what you'd like to see at our meetings. I have found the presentations over the last six months to be very accessable in regards to expertise. I don't like the sound of "scheduling less technical topics." but the meaning is not really clear. From where I sit it seems like your meetings are a success, why mess? One small failing in some of the presentations. Tuning the visuals is worth more effort. Sure it is dead time to spend a few minutes adjusting fonts or lights, but the enhancement of the rest of the presentation is a big payback. rob - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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