As a former print subscriber, I have been getting some free views of the digital version. The problem I have has nothing to do with print vs. digital, but rather the content. As an individual managing several Linux computers, I am by definition a system administrator, but on a small scale.
When I first subscribed to LJ, each issue had at least one, and usually a few articles that I could get useful information from. But as time went on, things seemed to get more esoteric, more advanced than what I could actually use, so when I realized that a half-year's issues had absolutely nothing of interest, I quit LJ.
I still can relate to Doc Searls' pearls, but not anything else. I write
this having just viewed the System Administration issue, but the same has been true
for the last several issues. I think you're out of touch with my segment
of Linux users.
—
Greg
Wow Greg, we're really sorry to hear that. Our goal is to be relevant for as much of our readership as possible. We recently started The Open-Source Classroom column, hoping to cover an area we thought might be lacking. At the very least, hopefully you'll still garner some good information from our Web site. Thanks for letting us know. Without feedback, we have no hope of meeting our readers' needs.—Ed.
I still don't get why people are whining about the digital vs. paper
issue. I personally receive more than 90% of my information digitally,
and I read a lot of books (and other stuff) on my BeBook Neo without
problems—or without any annoying problems. Even on my 24" desktop,
reading the PDF is
okay.
And maybe the most important thing is because I'm from Eastern Europe,
the paper subscription was not possible for me (postal issues, delays and
so on). Because of the digital edition, I'm the proud owner
of a subscription now.
—
Florin
Awesome! We're always happy to hear success stories. Thanks for sharing.—Ed.
I've been a subscriber for at least about ten years, perhaps longer,
since Embedded Linux Journal folded. This is one
magazine I read thoroughly,
because it agrees with what I use a lot of, Linux. I also use the Slackware
distribution thoroughly. So the fact remains, why not cover that one? I
admit,
it's not as easy to use as Ubuntu, but given the fact that Slackware
wants the user to do everything that the user wants to do, it just works.
There are even third-party repositories.
So ideally, the magazine should start being more distribution-agnostic,
and if a specific distro is needed, use that one (Slackware).
—
Gregg C. Levine
You make a valid point, but it's rough for us to force distro-agnosticism on our authors, because they're writing from their experiences. Because Ubuntu and its variants are the most commonly used, it's what we see more often than not. We will continue to strive for non-distro-specific solutions, but we'd rather have accurate articles geared toward a specific distro than commit errors in an attempt to stay “politically correct”.—Ed.
In the April 2012 issue of LJ, Bob Johnson, in the Letters section, states that he's having a hard time downloading LJ issues via wget, as he would rather read the PDF file in an independent reader rather than in a browser plugin. I perfectly agree with him, and I have no problem downloading the PDF via wget. Here is how I do it:
I click on the link received via e-mail.
In the browser that opens, I copy the entire address bar (via Ctrl-A, Ctrl-C). The URL is something like “http://download.linuxjournal.com/pdf/get-doc.php?code=...”.
I then type wget and paste the URL, with one very important precaution though. The URL must be enclosed in double quotes, as the parameters are separated by an ampersand (&), which has a special meaning under UNIX/Linux.
It works like a charm! So, if you have the chance to pass that information
on to Bob, that would be great!
—
Bruno
Thanks Bruno! I suspect a procmail recipe and a little sed/awk magic could make the process completely automatic.—Ed.
I was reading the April 2012 issue, and regarding the letter from Bob Johnson
titled “Linux Journal Download with
wget?”, I think I may have a solution:
the cliget extension for Firefox
(https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/cliget).
—
Jordi Clariana
Thanks Jordi. I suspect we'll hear back from Bob. Hopefully, one of these solutions works for him. Thanks again for the suggestion!—Ed.
After checking many readers on the market for my Android phone (Kindle, Aldiko, PDF-based and so on), I have to admit that the best interface still is yours (Texterity's). Its reflowed text is very good; the graphics look great, and the Navigator (index) is a great way to move between articles. Would it be too much to ask that you try to improve this application further? As great as the Navigator is, if I switch to another task, say to check a phone number, I have to go find the article I was reading again, and the location I was at. Make it remember my last location.
If I do not have connectivity (such as on an airplane), I cannot access the content, as there is some check for connectivity when the application starts. Of course, it was made by developers who do not know what it is not to have an always-on data link, but that is still the case. My data is cached; that's not the issue (I can't even access the library). Make it stop “calling home” when the app is launched for the first time.
Finally, moving between articles in reflowed mode is too easy. What do I mean? The slightest scroll along the x-axis sends me to the next article. The fact that I'm reading on a phone probably exacerbates that (smaller screen), but it still takes 1/4" or less on a 4.3" screen.
That is it.
The native app works great; now please fork some love to Texterity so those
little annoyances can be fixed (so I can comply with the FAA and actually
turn off my phone).
—
Pablo
We'll be sure to pass your note to the Texterity folks. I think the “calling home” that happens is Texterity checking for new content, but I'll admit, I'm not sure that's all it's doing. Thanks for the feedback!—Ed.
You guys do seem diligent and serious about “going digital right”, providing alternative formats and access techniques for maximum convenience. And, I suppose that you are getting a bit sick of digital edition whining. I trust that reader loyalty has kept this change from hurting your circulation numbers too much. There are two aspects of this that, taken together, bring up a question in my mind: you are quite willing to go to miles of extra trouble to get all alternative formats right, and the reason for going digital is economic. So why not see paper is an alternative format—one that, because of raw economic reality, commands a premium price? Some of your readers (not me!) are quite wealthy (some even have been made that way by application of skills promulgated in LJ). There are any number of boutique publish-on-demand technologies that could turn PDF into paper, for a (probably large) extra cost.
Whatever that cost, some population of those you are losing could choose
and would choose to pay it. Even if the cost was so prohibitive that
practically no one would choose it, at least the choice would be preserved,
and people could feel good about saving themselves money by moving on to
digital—rather than the money being saved all going to your corporation.
Get your bean counters out of their cages and cost out a “boutique
paper”
alternative that pays its toll and offer it to your readership! You are
doing so much else “right” with going digital, I hate to see you miss this
trick.
—
Dave Carew
Thanks Dave, we really have been working hard on the digital versions. It's hard to remember the days when we only had one layout to work on! As far as the print-on-demand aspect goes, we haven't had much discussion internally about it. I always assumed folks would just send their PDF files to the boutique printers if they wanted paper. It occurs to me, however, that I might be putting my foot squarely in my mouth. Perhaps a commercially produced PDF like Linux Journal would be rejected as a copyright violation or something. We'll have to look into it.—Ed.
I would think that the geeks all would have loved the digital subscription.
I guess not. I enjoyed reading LJ before bedtime. Now I do it on a
tablet. A funny thing happened—a side effect. I started questioning
myself for keeping old magazines around when I can always buy a DVD of the
archives if I really need to. I had only a few LJs, because I bought them
from the bookstore and have kept a few hard copies. Now I subscribe to the
LJ digital version. This spring cleaning has prompted me to throw out
a hundred pounds of archived magazines with topics on radios and electronics and all those
IT magazines that presented peripheral articles with no meat. I even had
my old NT magazines that I gladly discarded from the 1990s. Thanks
LJ for a
great product. Keep developing, keep improving and keep your eye on the
future. See you at the next SCALE.
—
Roman Kamienski
That's awesome, Roman. I still get a few paper magazines at work, and I find myself getting annoyed when I misplace them. Linux Journal is always in my pocket now, and on my computer only a click away. I think digital magazines are making me even more forgetful!—Ed.
I'm sure you're tired of the messages regarding the whole e-reader topic.
At first I was dismayed because I love the portability of print, but now I
am squarely in the e-reader camp and all of its benefits. Kudos on the
digital version. My one gripe, however, is the mechanism by which I can
download the EPUB files for my NOOK. The default browser in the NOOK
doesn't seem to want to download the files. Is there a way this can be
fixed? I keep forgetting to download the issues and sideload them via the
laptop. Thanks, and keep up the great work!
—
Dave Heebner
I don't have a NOOK myself with which to experiment, but perhaps if our group effort to download automatically with wget pans out, an additional step to e-mail the downloaded file as a regular attachment would work.
I'm beginning to picture in my mind a script that scans an IMAP server on the first of every month, and based on configuration options, will save and re-mail the digital versions to the reader as plain attachments.—Ed.
I've often heard Richard Stallman argue
about why schools should use
free software instead of proprietary software. My kids are very young, and
they haven't been introduced to computers yet, but I would like their school
to start considering GNU/Linux as an alternative to Windows, but I don't know
how to do that. I would really appreciate any information to achieve this
goal.
Maybe you could write an article about this or point me to a
previous article that you already have?
—
Carlos Le Mare
Your timing is perfect! My Open-Source Classroom column this month touches on one way to start introducing Linux in a server room. If you haven't won the hearts of the IT staff, however, it might be rough. If you read the past few months of my column regarding LTSP, you might think about a small classroom-sized install. You'd still need permission from the Principal and IT staff, but if you find the right teacher, you could start a pretty powerful grass-roots campaign. Good luck!—Ed.
My six-year-old has a computer with Ubuntu installed (thanks to dad, of
course), and now I am wondering how I can secure the computer.
She goes on YouTube and mostly stays on secure channels, but sometimes some
not-very-friendly channels come up.
Could you describe some ways to make the Web experience
for kids better?
I have tried the 0.0.0.0 in the hosts file for YouTube, but that stops my
kid from even going there, and as I mentioned before, there are some channels that
are meant for kids.
—
Trond Huso
Since YouTube is completely controlled by Google, filtering specific aspects of the site is challenging. You might check out YouTube's education-specific site though: www.youtube.com/education. If that doesn't help, there are sites like www.schooltube.com, but they don't have the same amount of content.—Ed.
I started using Ubuntu and Synapse a little while ago. I learned the Synapse program, and I was very happy with it, and I wanted to give some ideas to the Synapse team. I sent my idea to the launchpad page, but no one replied. I found one of the main developers on his personal blog, and he answered me, “I'm really sorry, but we are both busy with our jobs, so at the moment we are no longer active on Synapse.” You can see it here: https://answers.launchpad.net/synapse-project/+question/192032.
I'm very sad that the project is practically dead—no bug fixes and no updates.
Can you let others know? Maybe some other developers would like to
continue the project. I know Synapse has many users, and if people know
this,
they might want to join the project. Thank you.
—
Emre
Sadly, this happens to many, many projects. Often wonderful applications are developed by overworked folks in their spare time. Once that spare time goes away, so do updates. If there is a large user base, you might consider posting to the e-mail list or support forums and hope someone else will take over. I wish I had better news.—Ed.
In my article “System Administration of the Watson
Supercomputer” in the April 2012 issue, I made an error regarding
the corpus size. I mistakenly had it as 400TB, but the corpus size is actually 59GB.
—
Aleksey Tsalolikhin