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Linux Journal July 2000 Daniel Allen |
Product Review Understudy is a software-based server clustering utility that implements load balancing and failover protection for Linux (Red Hat, Debian and Slackware), Solaris, Cobalt, FreeBSD and Windows NT. |
Linux Journal September 1, 2007 Jeramiah Bowling |
Fedora Directory Server: the Evolution of Linux Authentication FDS seems evolutionary, not revolutionary. It does not change the way in which LDAP operates at a fundamental level. What it does do is take the complex task of administering LDAP and makes it easier while extending normally commercial features. |
Linux Journal May 1, 2002 Glen Otero |
The Beowulf State of Mind Beowulf has grown into the poster child for open-source, clustered computing. The Beowulf concept is all about using standard vanilla boxes and open-source software to cluster a group of computers together into a virtual supercomputer... |
Linux Journal December 2000 Tim Burke |
High Availability Cluster Checklist With a variety of clustering services on the market, the ability to determine how well options meet your specific business needs is necessary... |
Linux Journal September 30, 2006 Dave Jones |
Building and Integrating a Small Office Intranet Here are valuable tips for building an intranet that integrates enterprise services in a user-friendly way. |
Linux Journal December 2000 Glen Otero |
Book Review Building Linux Clusters by David H. M. Spector |
Linux Journal September 27, 2001 Marcel Gagne |
You Can Get There from Here, Part 3 LDAP is an acronym for Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. I like to think of it as directory assistance for your network, a kind of net-enabled 411 service... |
New Architect July 2002 Paul Sholtz |
Directory Integration Using directory services to successfully manage partner relationships |
PC Magazine September 14, 2011 Samara Lynn |
Hands On: Windows Server 8 Microsoft is calling Windows Server 8 a "game-changer." They might be right. |
Bio-IT World November 2005 Michael Athanas |
A New Window on HPC Clusters In recent years, scalable clusters have become commodity and are often encapsulated as single items in vendor catalogs to be issued as part of the greater data center solution. |
Linux Journal September 28, 2005 Ron Minnich |
The Ultimate Linux Lunchbox In this article, we describe the construction of a 16-node cluster that runs from a single IBM ThinkPad power supply. To use the lunchbox with your laptop, you merely need to plug the Ethernet cable in to the laptop and supply appropriate power -- even the power available in an airplane seat will do. |
Linux Journal March 18, 2003 Hans-Cees Speel |
Exchange Functionality for Linux Bynari InsightServer is here already, and Kroupware is coming up. |
New Architect August 2002 Jim Jagielski |
What You Get Is What You See Keeping an eye on web performance. |
D-Lib September 2005 LeVan, Hickey & Toves |
Parallel Text Searching on a Beowulf Cluster using SRW There is reason to be concerned about the efficiency of SRW and SOAP-based Web Services as opposed to SRU and REST-style services, at least in high-throughput multi-threaded clients. |
Linux Journal August 28, 2006 Michael-Jon Ainsley Hore |
Mainstream Parallel Programming Whether you're a scientist, graphic artist, musician or movie executive, you can benefit from the speed and price of today's high-performance Beowulf clusters. |
New Architect April 2002 Neil McAllister |
Database Clustering Is it the end of server budget blues? |
JavaWorld August 2001 Ray Djajadinata |
Sir, what is your preference? J2SE 1.4 offers a number of new APIs to make your Java development life easier. This article discusses one of those APIs: Preferences. It explains how Preferences solves typical problems in managing our applications' preferences, while still being simple and easy to use. |
JavaWorld June 13, 2003 Jeff Friesen |
Datastructures and algorithms, Part 2 This article concludes a two-part series that explores two important computer science topics: datastructures and algorithms. |
Technology Research News September 8, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Simple Search Lightens Net Load Researchers working on finding better ways to search the Internet are increasingly turning to methods that require individual nodes, or servers, to know a little bit about nearby servers, but don't require servers to look much beyond their own neighborhoods. |