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Build Your First Add-on for Mozilla Firefox in 30 Minutes

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Mozilla Firefox is a fast, multi-platform Web browser with an extremely large user base. Firefox is made highly customisable by the use of thousands...

Best Open Source Apps for Daily Use

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What the proprietary world can do, FOSS can do better! That's what this article hints at, as it takes you through the 11 most...

Some Glimpses of the ‘Dark’ Internet in Protest of SOPA/PIPA

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Well, the time has come -- January 18, 2012 -- and many of the Free/Open Source Software project/advocacy sites, some popular news/discussion sites, as...

A Letter to Foxy Developers

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A look at what makes Mozilla Firefox the most developer friendly browser around, and how you can get the most out of the community-developed...

Debian 6.0 ‘Squeeze’: What’s New?

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With its extremely long release cycle (this one took two years), Debian 6.0 Squeeze was rolled out on February 6th, amidst jokes like, "See...

Securing Apache, Part 4: Cross-site Tracing (XST) & Cross-site History Manipulation...

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This series of articles addresses the Web security concerns of information security experts, systems administrators and all those who want to jump-start their careers...

Browser Wars: There are Just Way Too Many Options Currently!

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With the growth of the Internet, there has been a considerable increase in the number of Web browsers available for the Linux/BSD/Solaris platforms. Not so...

Securing Apache, Part 2: XSS Injections

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In the previous article in this series, we started our journey to a secured Apache by dissecting its internals. We then looked at various...

A Peek Into the WWW, Courtesy MozillaCamp

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Delhi’s first unconference on Mozilla technologies was a grand event with about a 100 campers who came together to share some Mozilla love on February 10. It was an event that attracted technologists and students, with Mozilla’s Seth Bindernagel and Arun Ranganathan around to discuss the future of the Web.

The GNUnified Experience!

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Here’s a report on an event that touched on almost all aspects of open source—from installations to kernel programming and scripting, from OpenOffice.org to Bash and Perl, from Ext4 file system to SCSI, and from scientific computing to network security.