Home > Rss Directory > Technology > LinuxToday > How To Set Up A Headless X Server On Redhat Linux


How To Set Up A Headless X Server On Redhat Linux

How To Set Up A Headless X Server On Redhat Linux   more»»
The Linux and Unix Menagerie: "Today we're going to look at setting up a headless X Server. It's not quite as difficult, or as scary, as it sounds. Running a headless X Server is kind of like Night Of The Living Dead (the original; although the remake was kind of fun) except without all the zombies and with exported displays instead of excoriated remains..."
Sun Oct 12, 2008


Sponsored Links



Rss - Latest News

A Ride With Hessian   more»»
Noor: "Today, I came across what I call a deep-sea pearl. I came to know Hessian, the binary web service protocol."
Bash Script To Find Free Online Fiction and Non-Fiction Books   more»»
The Linux and Unix Menagerie: "For this week's Monday Linux/Unix bash shell script we're going to do the (almost) exact opposite of what we've been doing for the past few weeks. Today, we're going to find free books on the Internet and, possibly, read them ;)"
Public Key Crypto for Enterprise Users   more»»
Enterprise Networking Planet: "Its strength lies in the fact that it can be used to exchange encrypted information between two parties that have never communicated together before and have therefore never agreed on a secure way of exchanging messages."
Analyzing TCP Disconnects On Linux Or Unix   more»»
The Linux and Unix Menagerie: "One question that I get asked a lot (and used to ask a lot ;) has to do with the TCP protocol. More specifically, with how an established connection goes about graciously ending. And, if you haven't guessed, the reason the question gets asked so often is that, with all the different states a graceful TCP disconnect goes through, lots of folks (involved in troubleshooting) are curious as to whether the output they're pouring over is "good" or "bad.""
Linux Evolution Reveals Origins of Curious Mathematical Phenomenon   more»»
Physorg.com: "Zipf's law is a testament to the order in our world, showing that the same patterns emerge in a wide variety of situations. The linguist George Kingsley Zipf first proposed the law in 1949, when he noticed that the distribution of words in a newspaper, book, or other literary article always followed the same pattern."