AlfaEbooks allows you quickly scan your computer to find ebooks. You can select specific folders on your PC and file types. AlfaEbooks will automatically detect books, extract ISBN and create a book list that you can check, update and save to the database. It will also find duplicates if found file already exists in the database. You can also use this powerful tool to actualize your e-library when you move books to another drive or DVD.
GForge® Advanced Server GForge AS is completely rebuilt to make a modern, extensible platform with an intuitive interface that ties together a huge toolset, from Source Code Management (SCM) to extremely customizable Trackers, Task Managers, Document Managers, Forums, Mailing Lists. All of these are controlled by a centralized permission system and maintained automatically by the system.
Protégé is a free, open source ontology editor and knowledge-base framework. The Protégé platform supports two main ways of modeling ontologies via the Protégé-Frames and Protégé-OWL editors. Protégé ontologies can be exported into a variety of formats including RDF(S), OWL, and XML Schema. (more) Protégé is based on Java, is extensible, and provides a plug-and-play environment that makes it a flexible base for rapid prototyping and application development. (more)
Many biomedical terminologies, classifications, and ontological resources such as the NCI Thesaurus (NCIT), International Classification of Diseases (ICD), Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine (SNOMED), Current Procedural Terminology (CPT), and Gene Ontology (GO) have been developed and used to build a variety of IT applications in biology, biomedicine, and health care settings
The Lexical Grid LexGrid provides support for a distributed network of lexical resources such as terminologies and ontologies via standards-based tools, storage formats, and access/update mechanisms.
Today’s releases of Tasktop Pro 1.6 and Eclipse Mylyn 3.3 represent a major step forward in the maturation of the task-focused interface. Mylyn has become the de facto framework for Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) integrations for Eclipse with an ecosystem that now includes 42 connectors. The Mylyn Connector Discovery mechanism that was released with Eclipse 3.5 Galileo makes it trivial to find and install connectors, helping users and encouraging the number of integrations to grow. The Tasktop Certified connector program has been a key enabler for enterprise adoption of Mylyn by ensuring the quality and compatibility of integrations that exist outside of the Eclipse Mylyn project. We are not done yet. But between the evolution of the framework, the size of the integration ecosystem, and the new features that we’re announcing today, I’m happy to say that support for task management has been established as the critical link between the ALM systems and the IDE.
"For a while now, IBM has had multiple and competing tools for managing AIX and Linux clusters for its supercomputer customers and yet another set of tools that were used for other HPC setups with a slightly more commercial bent to them. But Big Blue has now cleaned house, killing off its closed-source Cluster Systems Management (CSM) tool and tapping its own open source Extreme Cluster Administration Toolkit (known as xCAT) as its replacement."
The Internet is broken. I should know: I designed it. In 1967, I wrote the first plan for the ancestor of today’s Internet, the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network, or ARPANET, and then led the team that designed and built it. The main idea was to share the available network infrastructure by sending data as small, independent packets, which, though they might arrive at different times, would still generally make it to their destinations. The small computers that directed the data traffic—I called them Interface Message Processors, or IMPs—evolved into today’s routers, and for a long time they’ve kept up with the Net’s phenomenal growth. Until now.
"The Fates, through SGI nee Rackable, have granted a new beginning to Silicon Valley's once darling Silicon Graphics. Despite old mistakes and economic misfortunes, Silicon Graphics' engineering contributions are legendary: their systems (oh, the systems!), and software such as the well known OpenGL and the little known Performance Co-Pilot. PCP is an enterprise-class open source system monitoring, measurement, and visualization infrastructure — overlooked in last fall's monitoring tool discussion. Since its proprietary beginning in 1993, PCP has been re-released as open source and ported to all major operating systems. Readers of Slashdot's recent Beginning Python Visualization book review will be pleased to hear there are Python interfaces to PCP data sources. Here is an example of using Python and Blender to visualize PCP data (registration may be required). The PCP dev community is well and active, and includes several of the original team members."
I initially wrote SirAdmin as a diagnostic tool, so that when users reported problems with certain mailboxes, my IT support staff who were not comfortable with the command line interface of cyradm could assign themselves an ACL to view such mailboxes in their own email client in order to quickly diagnose whether the reported problem was server-side or client-side.
One of the most compelling features of Xen virtualization is the ability to migrate a domainU guest from one host system to another. Of particular significance, however, is Xen's ability to perform live migrations whereby a running guest domainU system is moved from one system to another such that there is only an imperceptible interruption in service. In this chapter we will discuss the requirements for performing live Xen domainU migrations before walking through an example live migration.
Xen Projects Here are some active projects within the Xen Community looking for participation (feel free to email stephen.spector@xen.org if you want your project added to this list):
the root causes of disastrous failures can often be traced back to deficiencies of the social organizations in which they are designed, used, or controlled (Charles Perrow, Normal Accidents: Living with High-Risk Technologies).
Bob and Randy are nationally recognized speakers, writers and consultants who have collaborated to bring you the most current, and insightful information on issues and answers related to generally accepted best practices for implementing and supporting technology. Both of the authors have been involved with computers in business since nearly the beginning. Well almost the beginning. Bob was born in 1950 and reminds Randy that in 1950 the total combined RAM in the world was less than 1K. Things have changed, will continue to change, but there is good news. No matter how much technology changes over the years there continues to be certain unalienable principles, and practices, that simply do not change over time. These include proper planning and implementation, training and review of practices. These are the practices this book will endeavor to explore, explain and present for your benefit.
How do I restart NFS server when network link goes down between two servers or NFS client / server under CentOS 4.x / RHEL / CentOS Linux 5.x? Forceful umount command result into more problems such as unresponsive NFS server and cold reboot only solves my