Using a simple, step-by-step approach, Lathrop shows how Linux can be integrated in a mixed, Linux/Windows environment, both saving money and avoiding workplace disruption. Linux has now matured to the point where, with modest instruction and using familiar GUI tools, a Windows user or administrator can install, set up, and use Linux effectively in a business, workgroup, school, or government office. "Linux in Small Business: A Practical User's Guide" covers more material than most Linux books - the scenario-based LAN section alone covers DHCP, DNS, NAT, Samba, NFS, Sendmail, Apache, and PostgreSQL. It covers this material using a practical, how-to method, showing the user how to set up these programs and protocols in a realistic, hands-on way, and showing by example how they can be made useful in the office or workgroup.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction Two Installation Three An Introduction to Linux and the Desktop Connecting to the Internet Laying the Foundations: Linux As a LAN Server Linux As an Internet, File/Print, E-mail, Web, and Application Server Serving a Web Site and Mail to the Internet Linux As a Workstation Solution System Management Command-Line Operations
John P. Lathrop has been working with Linux for over five years as an administrator, author, and consultant. Active for many years in setting up computer training operations overseas, he has written about Linux and consulted for major Linux companies in the United States since 1998. His consultancy, Linux Leap (LinuxLeap.org), provides business assessments, solutions for Linux integration, and computer training.