Software Freedom Day Bangladesh2 Team
Whenever I find a link interesting it will be added here. All credits go to the original source.
I have just drafted a brief project description and send it to ASD for review. Here is the draft:
After getting some problems with firestarter i decided to get knowledge about iptables and how to set my own firewall script and want to share this experience for users who want to set a custom firewall up quickly.
The purpose of this guide is to provide a basic knowledge about iptables and then help to create a firewall script.
The final step will be to make the script running on each boot.
This guide will not talk about NAT things.
By Qusay H. Mahmoud, August 2004 | |
JavaServer Faces (JSF) is a standardized specification for building User Interfaces (UI) for server-side applications. Before JavaServer Faces, developers who built web applications often relied on building HTML user interface components with servlets or JavaServer Pages (JSP pages). This is mainly because HTML user interface components are the lowest common denominator that web browsers support. The implication, of course, is that such web applications do not have rich user interfaces, compared with standalone fat clients, and therefore less functionality and/or poor usability. While applets can be used to develop rich user interfaces, web application developers don't always know what clients will be accessing the application and/or they may have no access to the client device.
Welcome to the Complete CSS Guide, a reference to every aspect of cascading style sheets. If you need help learning CSS or if you're looking for info about selectors, properties and all the other aspects of cascading style sheets, this is the place.
An extended version of this guide with extra sections and integrated browser support information is available for purchase and download. You can get the Complete CSS Guide
EATJ.com provides reliable, fast and cost-effective web hosting for JSP Servlets and Web Services. Our servers
have an uptime of more than 99%, and we monitor them 24 hours, 7 days a week.
This directory of Linux commands is from Linux in a Nutshell, 5th Edition.
Click on any of the 687 commands below to get a description and list of available options. All links in the command summaries point to the online version of the book on Safari Bookshelf.
Buy it now, or read it online on Safari Bookshelf.