Older blog entries for brain (starting at number 5)

installed suse 6.4, liking every moment of it. realised how much the linux distributions (in general) are getting easier to install; this one recognized by itself every single bit of my hardware; conectiva linux 5.0 did the same - I think it's amazing.

wrote a piece about mail-based worms, and how to stop them on sendmail. seems like everyone and their mother are interested on this topic these days.

managed to publish 2 articles on the site today - one text about migrating NT passwords to unix, and the other about expect. both in portuguese, of course.

finished reading 'building linux and openbsd firewalls' (thanks Livraria Tempo Real!). Good 'real world' book, maybe deserving a review.

I am going to fly to Recife this week - anybody from there reading this? :)

After a long (~1.5 week) interval, I'm back to the free software world. Missed it while I was gone :)

Things are going mad on my day job; now I'm back to the network operations arena, no more web development. More and more command-line and network stuff, but less html and php.

Two of my articles were printed on 'revista do linux' (www.revistadolinux.com.br) while I was away; one talking about text-mode browsers (mostly links - not lynx - and w3m), and the other on tomsrtbt. In portuguese, as usual.

Today I posted two more articles on the site. Both about the same event: 'software livre 2000', pretty interesting stuff.

For the next days, I'll try hard to finish reviewing Conectiva Linux 5.0, or else they'll have a new release before I write about this one.

busy day. really.

published a text about Canvas 7, a (paywere) publishing suite available for linux - not mine, but sent by a reader. interesting stuff...

need to attend to more classes, school is getting a heavy burden

Another day full of dull admin activities; against all odds, managed to write a small (3 printout pages) security checklist for Linux networked workstations. In portuguese, of course. Seems like people keep reading this kind of stuff, and the more we write it, the more they want it. It makes a guy wonder about the role of technical writers on our community.

I hope to publish it tonight, after some classes I can't skip.

A very busy day, mostly admin stuff. Every day learning new ways to dislike the need to use closed source programs at my day job...

Somehow I've managed to edit and publish (www.linux.trix.net - Portuguese only) a quick tutorial on how to "secure" single mode boots using lilo on linux - all the (not so) obvious stuff. I'm sick and tired of seeing people (mostly - but not only - newbies) expect "security" from a server wide open to physical access to anyone, and hope to clarify the common mistake of thinking that "single mode boot" == "security flaw" - and that's a feature, not a bug :)

Also defined a new article - mostly a wrapup on common installation doubts - a newbie installation checklist, so to speak. Expect more about this, but not very soon.

And the next nights will be devoted to school - nothing interesting, I think...

This is my first diary entry, and from now on I'll try to get this thing up to date. Yesterday (Apr/21) I installed xlab, the new computer donated by Alexandre Meintanis to be used for research purposes - like installing every new distro around.

Afterwards i published 2 articles on the site: SuSE 6.3 analysis, and the ALSA-Howto translation. Both are in brazilian portuguese and contributed by local users.

Today I've sent two articles to print, but I can't discuss those before the magazine goes to the newsstands

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