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Written by ircmaxell
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Thursday, 21 June 2007 |
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Administering a server can be a full time job. Thankfully, other people have created some software to make life easier on you. I personally use the Lighttpd web server, because I believe that it is far superior to any other webserver for my uses. Because I am using Lighttpd, I am really limited into my choices in control panels (without some custom programming). So I decided to piece together a monitoring center to watch my server, and let me interact a little bit easier. This is an incomplete list (there are others, and feel free to post them, but these are the ones I feel are the best and give the most information!). Oh, and all these tools are open source! |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 21 June 2007 )
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Written by ircmaxell
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Tuesday, 19 June 2007 |
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Ever since the mid 1990's, the market has been flooded with personal digital media players. Everything from the original Diamond Rio (I still have mine) to the latest Ipod Nano. Since the debut of the Ipod, Apple has reigned king over all other media players. With the easy controls, copious storage and long battery life, the Ipod has been hard to beat. Even Microsoft's Zen player failed to hit the mark. But now there is a new competitor entering the market. One that promises to give Apple the run for its money! Enter the Wizpy. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 June 2007 )
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Written by ircmaxell
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Tuesday, 19 June 2007 |
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In my programming endeavors, I've come across all sorts of coding styles, from extreme OOP to simple structured programming. One thing strikes me as apparent: Neither is the correct path. Now, don't get me wrong, both OOP and structured programming have their advantages, but both have disadvantages as well. The problem comes when a programmer sticks only to one style when the situation doesn't really dictate that style. From a simple development point of view, both look like equal alternatives (depending on your programming style). The problem really comes into view with maintenance and expansion. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 June 2007 )
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Written by ircmaxell
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Monday, 18 June 2007 |
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I just read an article from SlashDot.org that got me wondering. They are reporting about 70% of users are using IE, about 15% FireFox, and about 5% Safari, with the rest too small to matter. I looked into my logs of 3 sites I host, and they tell a completely different story. All the data I am going to quote here is aggregate data since about October 06. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 June 2007 )
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