... and murder me in Ostia ...

Kill an obsolete link.  The original content, before disappearing, was out
of date anyway.
This commit is contained in:
Tom Rhodes 2005-01-31 20:04:02 +00:00
parent facd4f1e9b
commit 157c7c7156
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/www/; revision=23706

View file

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/projects.sgml,v 1.169 2005/01/09 07:44:45 rwatson Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/projects.sgml,v 1.170 2005/01/12 18:47:17 kbyanc Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD Development Projects">
<!ENTITY % includes SYSTEM "../includes.sgml"> %includes;
]>
@ -50,16 +50,6 @@ is a list of resources to help those new to FreeBSD and &unix; in
general. There is also a
freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.org mailing list.</li>
<li><a name="securityhowto" href="http://people.FreeBSD.org/~jkb/howto.html">
FreeBSD Security How-To</a>
FreeBSD is a very secure operating system. Since source code
is freely available, the OS is constantly going through the
review and audit. While FreeBSD comes very secure OOB
(Out-Of-Box), there are many features that can make it more
secure for those of you who are "paranoid". This How-To will
go over some steps which will help you increase overall
security of your machine.</li>
<li><a name="BSDsites" href="http://mirrorlist.FreeBSD.org/">
RELEASE/SNAP finder for FreeBSD FTP servers</a>.
A resource that would allow anyone to find a FTP server that contains