How To Scan A Book Many people ask, "How do I scan a book?". This article has been written to answer this question. The truth of the matter is that scanning a book can be extremely easy if you know what you are doing. Otherwise it will be a nightmare. Scanning a book is very different from scanning other types of documents. The tips in this article should be of great help.This work was written to help people read using the technique called Proportional Reading. In this approach the eyes never move. You can read up to 700 words per minute and still feel like you are being read aloud to. Text can also be read out loud in real human voice at normal reading speed as it is displayed one word at a time. In order to do this type of reading text must first be in electronic for... in Public bookmarkswith peoplescanbookarticlewrittenanswertruthmatterby 2 users
Lazy Linux: 11 secrets for lazy cluster admins 'Cluster' means different things to different people. In the context of this article, cluster is best defined as 'scale-out' -- scale-out clusters generally have a lot of the same type of components like Web farms, render farms, and high performance computing (HPC) systems. Administrators will tell you that with scale-out clusters any change, no matter how small, must be repeated up to hundreds of thousands of times; the laziest of admins have mastered techniques of scale-out management so that regardless of the number of nodes, the effort is the same. In this article, the authors peer into the minds of the laziest Linux admins on Earth and divulge their secrets. in Public bookmarkswith articleclustercontextdefinedmeanspeoplescale-outthings
NewsForge | Linux wireless freedom with OpenWrt Linux wireless freedom with OpenWrt -- article related to Top Story and Networking.You can turn your blue Linksys router into a Linux box with OpenWrt, an embedded Linux distribution for Linksys WRT54G and WRT54GS routers. This tiny distribution exceeds the default firmware functionality in many useful ways. Instead of having only a Web-controlled wireless access point, OpenWrt provides you with a fully interactive Linux system. Some notable features are the ability to telnet/SSH to your router, install software such as Snort, Mini-Sendmail, and Asterisk, and create and control VLANs for every Ethernet port on the device. in Public bookmarkswith linuxwirelessfreedomopenwrtarticletopnetworking.youturn