X

The Linux Web Server CD Bookshelf CD-ROM

Product ID : 17402040


Galleon Product ID 17402040
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension Unknown Dimensions
I think this is wrong?
-
3,144

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown

Pay with

About The Linux Web Server CD Bookshelf CD-ROM

For every Linux consultant who goes to job sites with a four-pound computer and 15 pounds of books, O'Reilly & Associates has a solution: The Linux Web Server CD Bookshelf. It's a searchable collection of six books on the subject of the Linux operating system and its role as a platform for Web sites. The six included books are: Running Linux, Third Edition Linux in a Nutshell, Third Edition CGI Programming with Perl, Second Edition Apache: The Definitive Guide, Second Edition MySQL & mSQL Programming the Perl DBI It's all there: Linux, HTTP services, databases, and scripting. Linux in a Nutshell ships with this kit in its traditional paperbound form. Would you want to read a book cover-to-cover on your computer screen? No. Is the formatting as nice here as in the printed versions of the books? No. Are the documents on this CD-ROM designed to be printed? No. But all the information is here, and the CD-ROM weighs nothing. You can copy all 50 MB of its contents to a hard disk easily enough if saving weight is paramount. The money value of this product is high, too. By buying it, you save about two-thirds of what you'd spend to buy the six books separately. Though O'Reilly deserves praise for amalgamating related books in a compact form, the publisher needs to improve the search utility that ties them all together. As it stands, the unified search feature is a Java applet that does full-text searches on all six books. That's fine, but the results of a typical search aren't well formatted. If you search for pretty much any Linux command--say, diff or pathchk--you'll get a hit on chapter 3 of Linux in a Nutshell, which is a Linux command reference. The hit is on the whole chapter, which is gigantic, and you have to use your browser's text-search feature to find your term again once you've called up the chapter. The search utility would be much mo