uucpNET fun logo....... for students of LINUX !......the Man Cave

LINUX

Linux Headlines:

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Latest Distro News
News at LINUX.org
The Linux Foundation
Linux Laptops & Notebooks
Create a Watch for Linux News
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... ask us to add a headlines source

 

Linux News Sources
(Linux news & info resources)

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OpenDesktop.org
Linux Online
openSuSE News
The LINUX Insider News
The LINUX Journal
KDE Community
GNome Community

 

Get Connected!
(setup how-to's and info)

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Configuring UUCP
Setting up PPP (dial-up)
Setting up a Small Office Network
Setting up LINUX boot on a Thumbdrive




History:

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Who is Linus Torvalds?
What is Linux | Windows | Mac OSX
What is X-Windows?
(X11)

Comparing Linux vs Windows?
Understanding Multi-User Systems?

What is Open-Source?
What is uucp? . sendmail?


Networks and protocols:

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uucp | PPP | PPPoE | Dial-up | VPN
TCP/IP | IPX | NetBIOS | Token Ring
Lan Manager | NT LanManager (NTLM)
AppleTalk | ARCNET | PRNet | RTTY
ArpaNET |
The Internet

Various File Systems:

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FAT | FAT16 | FAT32 | NTFS | HFS
HPFS | UFS | ext2 | ext3 | ext4
btrfs | ISO 9660 (or CDFS) | ODS-5
Veritas File System | VMFS | ZFS
ReiserFS | UDF | Flash File System
LTFS | MRW | ReiserFS | ReiserFS |


File system:  a method of storing and organizing arbitrary collections of data, in a form and format that is human-readable ...



If you're anxious to try LINUX, take my advise and give openSuSE a try ...

It's easy to install, and administration is a snap, with graphical menus and helpful utilities to make your job much easier! The learning curve is short when you try openSuSE!

You can download the image for a boot CD and create it on your existing system. It's call a "NET boot CD" and it starts the installation from the CD, and then uses your hardwired LAN connection or your wireless connection to do the rest by downloading the rest as it installs!
It's "easy"!


A NETWORK INSTALL is FREE!
I want to get started now ... <click here>
..or you can order a DVD ... <click here>

If you want to learn more, please check it out now at:
............ ......

 

 

Take the command seat ...

Take the command seat of your LINUX system, or systems! Learn about inter-system cooperation, meet users, and work with others in setting up uucp connectivity, ppp dial-up and the various means to bring "remote" systems into the cloud! Experiment with some of the services that made UNIX and LINUX strong. With the growing craze of networking, and the threats at regulation of the Internet, prepare your systems to have total and complete redundancy ... make them reliable, with "backup" methods to ensure you are always and forever ... connected!

In the beginning ...

Ever since I was first exposed to UNIX, I have loved the operating system! My first encounter was with SCO-XENIX, the first version of UNIX to run on a pc ("personal computer", not IBM pc). In this case, it was running on a Radio Shack TRS-6000, a Motorola-based processor system, designed just for running their OS, "TRS-XENIX". It was a version of SCO-XENIX adapted for Radio Shack. I later got a project to put together a multi-user system for a law firm, again running SCO-XENIX! I got to run the lines for the terminals, one located in each office and in the conference room, and for the printer. I custom built the pc, which included a tape cartridge backup system to backup the entire system. I chose the OS, and SCO-XENIX was it! I had them order the XENIX Development System, which means that it came with "everything"!

This was my first exposure to sendmail and uucp, to finger, and telnet, and cu (tty calling out) to name a few! You see, back then we didn't "network" our systems. You "dialed in" to another system, with your modem. Well, I had the system set up with 2 modems! One was for me to dial into the system and administer it from my home office. The other? It was for the owner to dial in and check his email and use the system. We installed a terminal and modem in his home as well. When needed, the UUCP system would send their email out, and retrieve any email they had! This was fantastic! I loved it!

Well, we've come a long way since then! I started LINUX with a version of "Slackware". Man, this was an eye-opener for me! You had to build your UNIX system (Linux) from "scratch"! But I did it! Later after trying RedHat, I decided that I should move to that platform. When I ordered me a copy there was somehow an error in the shipping, and I ended up with a copy of something called "SuSE"! I'd never heard of SuSe (pronounced "soo-say") but I decided to install it and try it.

It was fantastic! I've been a loyal follower ever since! I signed up for their subscription plan, where I received every update as it came out! (again, we had yet to develop "online updates") Then they started offering "updates" through the Internet connection, built right into their management tool called "yast". (yet another setup tool) I found this OS to be very user-friendly, and in keeping with the earlier standards I'd become familiar with in SCO-XENIX. I also found that the SuSE folks usually were the first to get the latest drivers out for their OS before the other LINUX versions. This turned out to be a big deciding factor when I started using SuSE on a notebook computer!

Today, I continue my studies using "openSuSE", their public domain version, and I am still experimenting with uucp, sendmail, and the likes. I like to set up a VMWare session on my Linux box so that I can always run a Windows app if there's one I simply cannot live without. I really believe that eventually, this will not be necessary. At present, openSuSE reads all sorts of drive formats, and uses all sorts of media from floppies to thumb drives to streaming tape, hard drives, you name it! And at the time of this writing, SuSE now is owned by NOVELL, so the OS has a good company backing where networking is understood.

I set up this site to try and solicit other LINUX users, and UNIX alike, to make their systems available to a group of folks who want to learn and experiment with uucp, sendmail, and the many many features that make this wonderful OS a blessing to mankind. Now I think that Windows is great for some folks ... just not for me. I also like Mac's. But let's face it ... they're just other choices. Even the MAC is now running on a version of UNIX, so it's just a matter of time.

With this thought in mind, we do not tolerate nor are we supportive of, "melicious hacking". Now the term "hacker" is a good term! It refers to folks like you and me that love to learn more! But there are a few folks out there who abuse and extort other systems, taking advantage of a system weakness and destructively abuse the knowledge they have of operating systems. We don't support these sorts of malicious hackers! It is their doings that have forced OS admins to lock down nice features of UNIX like "finger" and "telnet" (now replaced by a more secure SSH), etc. to keep destructive behavior from occuring. The freedoms and resourceful natures of the UNIX and LINUX OS have been throttled because of the likes of these. Oh sure Windows has hindered our growth, but Windows is destroying itself ... they don't need us! They keep changing the very operation of their OS, their Office package, etc. so that users each time have to re-learn with each release. It's only a matter of time before this process puts them in the "small minority" category. But they don't need us to help them get there. We all need to work together, and show Windows users how helpful UNIX and LINUX is, and how it is "vital" to any network! And that is our goal here as well!




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Networking your LINUX System:

If you've always wanted to link your system to other systems, and experiment with the world of UUCP, through dial-up, through networking, etc., this is the place for you! Learn how these system features can be used to help a computer, that is otherwise isolated and away from broadband or similar forms of Internet access, and "plug it in" to connectivity, using PPP dial-up, or UUCP, to allow it email priviledges and access to otherwise unavailable resources!
desolate areas, away from normal connectivity, into a normal regular routine "networking experience" with other systems that "are" connected regularly! where connectivity is not readily available.

A simple LINUX workstation has the capabilities to plug into and utilize a standard telephone line, a two-way radio, an ISDN line, a DSL or cablemodem broadband connection, as well as networking interfaces such as hardwire (LAN, WAN, T1, etc.), wireless (wifi, WWAN, bluetooth, and cellphone tethering, to name just a few! It even has the capabilities of VPN connectivity "built-right in" to the OS! Enjoy your adventures with the world of LINUX and the resources and mult-user capabilities of the UNIX environment, and step outside of the box into a brand new world! ....

openSuSE logo

This page is authored and managed by  Richard A. Allcorn    "rAllcorn"
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