On Novemat the Kitchener/Waterloo Linux Users Group: Linux Tools for Monitoring and Peformance.On February 9, 2010: Overview of the LAMP stack for the February GTA LUG meeting.On April 20, 2010: 2.4 million page views/day, 60 million per month, one server at the San Francisco 2010 DrupalCon.On May 3, 2010: Overview of the MySQL Database.On June 3, 2010: London (Ontario) Drupal Users Group: Overview of Views and Panels.Drupal Camp Toronto 2010 3.4 million page views per day, 92 million per month, one server, and Drupal!.Web Site Performance Optimization and Scalability at Drupal Camp Toronto 2011.
HUGE? How to deal with 381 modules, 174GB database and 200 million row tables at Drupal Camp Toronto 2012.Panel: Earning a living from Free/Libre Open Source Softare (FLOSS).Drupal Performance: What you need to know, for the London, Ontario Drupal Users Group.Drupal Performance: Tips and Tricks at the Drupal Camp Toronto 2014.
Flashing Android OmniROM on Acer Iconia A500 Tablet, Jan 5, 2016.Replacing a laptop disk on Linux and making hibernate work.Frugal Astrophotography for the KW RASC.Open Source Software for Astronomy for the KWLUG meeting.Forgotten History: Al-Sufi's Book Of Fixed Stars for the KW RASC.Medieval Islamic Astronomy And Its Influence on Renaissance Europe for the KW RASC.Incremental Backup For Linux for the KWLUG.Islamic Astronomy and its Legacy in Arabic Origin Of Modern Star Names.Microcontrollers and the Internet of Things, for the KWLUG.To get over this, you would do the following:įind out what the latest version is, using the link above. The above may not work still, because you will be running Firefox as a regular user, and not the root user. You can also click on "Help" then "About", then click on the "Check for Updates" button to see if there updates. Choose "Check for updates, but let me choose whether to install them". To do so, click on "Edit", then "Preferences", then "Advanced", then "Updates". Therefore, you have to enable Firefox's native updating mechanism, to check for updates within Firefox. Updating FireFoxīecause you installed the ESR manually, you can no longer use Ubuntu's excellent apt mechanism to keep Firefox up to date. You now have a short cut, and you can add it to your favorites menu as well. Click on the empty icon, and choose "Other icons", then "Browse", and point to "/opt/firefox/browser/icons/", and choose the icon that is there.Place it under "Internet", and name it "Firefox", and use "/opt/firefox/firefox" for the command.