@Bibtex-file{Os/linux-journal.bib,
  title =        "Bibliography of the Linux Journal",
  author =       "Nelson H. F. Beebe",
  email =        "beebe@math.utah.edu",
  address =      "Center for Scientific Computing\\ University of
                 Utah\\
                 Department of Mathematics, 322 INSCC\\ 155 S 1400 E RM
                 233\\ Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0090\\ USA",
  supported =    "yes",
  keywords =     "BibTeX, bibliography, GNU, Linux Journal",
  abstract =     "This is a COMPLETE bibliography of the Linux Journal
                 (CODEN LIJOFX, ISSN 1075-3583), which began publishing
                 in March 1994.",
  readme =       "With a few exceptions during its first year, the
                 journal has appeared monthly. It is unusual in that
                 there are not separate volume and issue numbers; each
                 issue is numbered sequentially without regard to year
                 boundaries, so that issue number is recorded as a
                 volume number in the entries below. \par The initial
                 entries in this bibliography at version 1.00 were
                 derived entirely from data at the journal's World Wide
                 Web site: \par http//www.linuxjournal.com/ \par
                 Unfortunately, that data lacks article page numbers.
                 This deficiency will be remedied if alternate sources
                 of bibliographic information for this journal can be
                 found. It is not covered in the Compendex or OCLC
                 Content1st databases. \par Although common usage refers
                 to the operating system as ``Linux'' (from Linus
                 (Torvalds) and Minix, a UNIX-like operating system
                 developed by Andrew S. Tanenbaum), the bulk of the
                 source code used to create a complete running system
                 comes from the Free Software Foundation's GNU Project
                 (GNU is Not UNIX), so the system is more properly
                 referred to as the ``GNU system with the Linux
                 kernel'', or GNU/Linux for short. \par From the GNU
                 jargon file, the 24-Jul-1996 edition of the online form
                 of the New Hacker's Dictionary, by Eric Raymond and Guy
                 L. Steele, Jr., second edition, MIT Press, Cambridge,
                 MA, USA, 1993, ISBN 0-262-18154-1, we cite this entry:
                 \par :Linux:: /lee'nuhks/ or /li'nuks/, *not*
                 /li:'nuhks/ /n./ The free Unix workalike created by
                 Linus Torvalds and friends starting about 1990 (the
                 pronunciation /lee'nuhks/ is preferred because the name
                 `Linus' has an /ee/ sound in Swedish). This may be the
                 most remarkable hacker project in history --- an entire
                 clone of Unix for 386, 486 and Pentium micros,
                 distributed for free with sources over the net (ports
                 to Alpha and Sparc-based machines are underway). This
                 is what {GNU} aimed to be, but the Free Software
                 Foundation has not (as of early 1996) produced the
                 kernel to go with its Unix toolset (which Linux uses).
                 Other, similar efforts like FreeBSD and NetBSD have
                 been much less successful. The secret of Linux's
                 success seems to be that Linus worked much harder early
                 on to keep the development process open and recruit
                 other hackers, creating a snowball effect.",
}
