About Us
Linux Pro Magazine keeps the emphasis on real-life, practical techniques,
which has helped make it one of the fastest growing Linux magazines worldwide.
Linux Pro Magazine delivers insightful technical articles on a range of topics
related to IT technology, including:
- Comprehensive coverage of technical subjects. Recent cover stories have explored topics such as interoperability, rootkits, virtualization, and cryptography.
- Thorough reviews of new products. Many reviews are written by the experienced engineers within Linux New Media’s advanced test lab.
- Practical advice on tools and strategies for system administrators.
- Tips on programming in the Linux environment.
- Discussions of advanced desktop techniques.
The articles are richly illustrated and offer abundant references to
additional sources for deeper study. Additionally, the articles are designed for
the seasoned Linux user. In fact, the #1 reason readers purchase Linux Pro is to
have access to the advanced technical articles they cannot find anywhere else.
Issue 212/2018
Buy this issue as a PDF
News
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Red Hat Adds GPLv3 Cure Clause to its Code-Base
It will provide violators with a grace period to achieve compliance with license.
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SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 Released
It’s a modular OS.
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GitLabs Drops Pricing after Microsoft, GitHub Acquisition
GitLabs is creating more incentives for users to switch from GitHub.
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KDE Plasma 5.13 Is Here
The desktop environment is designed to be more resource efficient.
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SUSE Forks Red Hat’s Spacewalk Project
SUSE relies heavily on the project for its own SUSE Manager.
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openSUSE Leap 15 Announced
The release was announced at the openSUSE Conference in Prague, Czech Republic.
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SoftMaker FreeOffice 2018 for Linux
SoftMaker Software GmbH has announced FreeOffice 2018, a free of cost office suite for Linux.
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A New CentOS
Latest version of the community Linux based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.5
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Ubuntu 18.04 Released
“Bionic Beaver” comes with hardware-focused improvements and Gnome as the default shell.
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Richard Stallman Calls Azure Sphere OS a Positive Step
Stallman is glad that Microsoft will respect user’s freedom.
