This week, advisories were released for kde, phpsysinfo, fonts-xorg, gaim,
phpBB, mozilla suite, PostgreSQL, FreeRADIUS, ncpfs, kdelibs, cyrus-imapd, rsh,
glibc, ia32el, and the Red Hat kernel. The distributors include Conectiva, Debian,
Fedora, Gentoo, and Red Hat.
This week, advisories were released for squid, smail, XFree86, lapack, system-config-bind,
gnutls, util-linux, libexif, ethereal, postgresql, gaim, pygtk, GnuTLS, gzip,
TCPDump, libTIFF, HT, and openmotif. The distributors include Debian, Fedora,
Gentoo, and Red Hat.
This week, perhaps the most interesting articles include ethereal, prozilla,
smartlist, kdewebdev, wireless-tools, gimp, bootparamd, tcpdump, kdelibs, vte,
php, words, util-linux, lapack, gnuutils, and glibc. The distributors include
Conectiva, Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, and Red Hat.
The old saying about cleanliness being next to godliness has a certain resonance in the world I live in every day. What is so appealing about a clean computer system? Why does my Unix co-author Jason Miller seem so obsessed with his "clean" BSD systems? I can tell you that Jason is a pretty paranoid individual, and his desire for cleanliness and purity in his operating system has its roots in paranoia.
An even more appropriate question might be, what is the connection between cleanliness and rootliness (considered godliness in a Unix system)?
This week, articles were released for squid, gaim, evolution, junkbuster,
samba, cvs, kdelibs, libtiff, mc, dia, cyrus, ImageMagik, openMosixview, kimgio,
convert-UUlib, kernel, shareutils, and mozilla. Distributors include Conectiva,
Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, Red Hat, and SuSE.