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Content Tagged with SQL + linux

PostgreSQL: The world's most advanced open source database

quite successful in growing the databases as the company has grown, both in number of users and in the complexity of services we offer.

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

SQL-Ledger ERP

Double entry accounting/ERP system

License:GPL: del.icio.us tag/gpl

SQLite Home Page

SQLite is a software library that implements a self-contained, serverless, zero-configuration, transactional SQL database engine. SQLite is the most widely deployed SQL database engine in the world. It is used in countless desktop computer applications as...

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

SQLiteDBMS - Free OS Linux/OSX

SQLiteDBMS is a database management server for SQLite. It allows an sqlite3 process to be accessed via a TCP/IP network. It provides Extended SQL, SSL, basic authentication, prepared statement, query cache, WebDAV and table level access control. It includ

XML: del.icio.us/tag/xml

SQL HOWTO - FreeRADIUS Wiki

FreeRADIUS works out with a large list of SQL servers, but there are a number of configuration guides available on the internet that are wrong, or obsolete, or both. This guide corrects some of the misinformation.

RADIUS: del.icio.us/tag/radius

Free Ebooks Sharing

Technical and non-technical e-books.

Hibernate: del.icio.us tag/hibernate

Rekall: The database front-end for KDE and the Web

Rekall is a database front-end, somewhat in the style of MicroSoft Access(tm). However, Rekall is not itself a database, and does not include a database. By this we mean that data is stored somewhere else in an SQL server, and Rekall is fundementaly just

License:GPL: del.icio.us tag/gpl

Henceforth, I dub thee GLAMP

I've decided to start replacing L with GL in acronyms where L supposedly stands for Linux.

I'm not a big user of acronyms, because I think they are exclusionist and they obscure, rather than revealing. (This wouldn't matter if I wrote for people who already knew what I meant and agreed with me, but that's a waste of time). However, LAMP is one that I've probably used a few times, without thinking that it is supposed to stand for Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP/Perl/Python. In fact, it doesn't refer to Linux, it refers to GNU/Linux. Therefore, it should be GLAMP.

Why does this matter? I try not to say Linux, unless I'm referring to a kernel, because a kernel is not an operating system. I try to be pretty careful about saying GNU/Linux when I'm talking about an operating system. An exception is a recruiting event yesterday at the University of Virginia, where I compromised my principles because of the noise. Trying to explain myself at that decibel level was just beyond my willingness, so I said we use Linux. If the potential recruits hire on with us, they'll get to hear me say GNU/Linux. And if they don't, maybe they'll attend Richard Stallman's upcoming talk at the engineering school there on March 27th or 28th (sorry, it's not listed online, so I can't link to it).

And you'll see GNU/Linux used conscientiously if you read the book I'm helping to write, too.

GNU matters. A lot. You may not think so, but if it ceased to exist, you'd find out. That applies equally even if you don't think you are a Free Software user. You have no idea how much you rely on Free Software in your daily life. And the GNU project has been and continues to be a keystone in that arch of freedom.

Thanks to MySQL's Brian Aker for snapping me out of my LAMP carelessness.

MySQL: Planet MySQL

Using Archiveopteryx on the Mac

Archiveopteryx is quite a wonderful little database store, which holds e-mail in a PostgreSQL database and lets you access it via the IMAP protocol. It's aimed at long-term storage and high volume.

fetchmail: del.icio.us/tag/fetchmail

CLIP

"a Clipper/XBase compatible compiler"

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

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