How to set up a home email server (without being spammed to death) by Stuart R. Kirk Why host your own mail? There are many reasons to host your own email. Perhaps you don't like the limits placed on you by your current ISP. Maybe they aren't willing to host the domain you want, or give you the access you want. And if they do fit your needs, they want to charge a small fortune. Maybe you want complete privacy. Or perhaps you just want to access your email from anywhere using a web-based frontend. The list goes on and on...
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How to set up a home DNS server
Submitted by trochevs on Sat, 2006-12-09 10:25.How to set up a home DNS server by Shannon Hughes Domain Name System The Domain Name System (DNS) is the crucial glue that keeps computer networks in harmony by converting human-friendly hostnames to the numerical IP addresses computers require to communicate with each other. DNS is one of the largest and most important distributed databases the world depends on by serving billions of DNS requests daily for public IP addresses. Most public DNS servers today are run by larger ISPs and commercial companies but private DNS servers can also be useful for private home networks. This article will explore some advantages of setting up various types of DNS servers in the home network.
Guru's RPM Site
Submitted by trochevs on Thu, 2006-11-30 21:06.You'll find SUSE Linux RPM packages for several hundreds of free software projects which I try to keep up to date for SUSE Linux 10.1 (RC1), 10.0, 9.3, 9.2, and 9.1 (10.1, 10.0 and 9.3: built for both x86_64 and i686).
Linux Standard Base (LSB)
Submitted by trochevs on Wed, 2006-11-29 01:54.The Linux Standard Base (LSB) is an application binary interface (ABI) for Linux and Linux-compatible platforms. The LSB draws on the source standards of the IEEE POSIX standards and The Open Group's Single UNIX Specification for many of its behavioral interface definitions.
openSUSE
Submitted by trochevs on Wed, 2006-11-29 01:48.The openSUSE project is a worldwide community program sponsored by Novell that promotes the use of Linux everywhere. The program provides free and easy access to openSUSE. Here you will find a community of users and developers, who all have the same goal in mind—to create and distribute the world's most usable Linux.
