No regrets
I wanted to share my experience, as a first time Linux user. I'm a CS student and my laptop is old and slow. I decided a month ago to try Linux Mint as it runs faster than Windows and Linux is often used in CS classes. I absolutely don't regret it, it runs super fast, Linux Mint is pretty customizable. Installing it via Rufus was very smooth. Typing commands instead of using the interface saves a lot of time (and it's satisfying) I'm definetly not going back to Windows for work laptops. Loving it !
https://redd.it/lpnred
@r_linux
I wanted to share my experience, as a first time Linux user. I'm a CS student and my laptop is old and slow. I decided a month ago to try Linux Mint as it runs faster than Windows and Linux is often used in CS classes. I absolutely don't regret it, it runs super fast, Linux Mint is pretty customizable. Installing it via Rufus was very smooth. Typing commands instead of using the interface saves a lot of time (and it's satisfying) I'm definetly not going back to Windows for work laptops. Loving it !
https://redd.it/lpnred
@r_linux
reddit
No regrets
I wanted to share my experience, as a first time Linux user. I'm a CS student and my laptop is old and slow. I decided a month ago to try Linux...
Nextcloud Hub 21 released with up to 10x better performance, whiteboard and more collaboration features
https://nextcloud.com/blog/nextcloud-hub-21-out-with-up-to-10x-better-performance-whiteboard-and-more-collaboration-features/
https://redd.it/lpnsph
@r_linux
https://nextcloud.com/blog/nextcloud-hub-21-out-with-up-to-10x-better-performance-whiteboard-and-more-collaboration-features/
https://redd.it/lpnsph
@r_linux
reddit
Nextcloud Hub 21 released with up to 10x better performance,...
Posted in r/linux by u/ouyawei • 1 point and 0 comments
Building Your Mouseless Development Environment
Hello everybody!
One and a half year ago, I was wondering: would anybody be interested by a book describing how to build a system where the Linux shell would be the most important tool, from an empty hard disk to a complete development environment? Would anybody like some guidance to build their first Linux-based "Mouseless Development Environment"?
I began to poke around and I realized that, indeed, many were interested by the idea. But I was working full time and I also knew I wanted to travel, so I put the project on hold.
After some good old burnout due to my job, I began to travel in Asia in January 2020. And then... you know what's coming.
Covid hit. I had to come back in Europe without any flat (I was subleasing it to other people for 6 months). With difficulties and luck, I ended up with my girlfriend in a temporary flat. I didn't have any job, only the computer I was traveling with (Lenovo x220 for the win!) and some clothes.
Is there a better moment to write? :D
I want to write a book since I'm 10. And now... my first book is out for two weeks already, and I just shipped its first free update this morning! I'm so happy to write that, you have no idea.
Its lengthy name: Building Your Mouseless Development Environment, powered by amazing tools like Arch Linux, i3, Zsh, tmux, and Neovim.
I wasn't alone: I had the support of my family, my friends, my girlfriend, and the amazing subscribers of my newsletter. I shared with them, during the 8 months of intense writing, the process, the doubts, and the ideas I had for the book. They helped me a lot and provided the motivation to keep going. They even helped me proofreading it (I'm not a native English speaker, as you can see).
Long story short, you can now look at the result:
The [book's page](https://themouseless.dev/).
A sample of the book with the entire table of content.
A [quick video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67lbLKTm91U) explaining a bit the Mouseless Development Environment we build throughout the book.
The "behind the scenes": what tools I used to write this book.
This book is not free or open source. If you want to know why, I wrote a bit about it.
https://redd.it/lpnhub
@r_linux
Hello everybody!
One and a half year ago, I was wondering: would anybody be interested by a book describing how to build a system where the Linux shell would be the most important tool, from an empty hard disk to a complete development environment? Would anybody like some guidance to build their first Linux-based "Mouseless Development Environment"?
I began to poke around and I realized that, indeed, many were interested by the idea. But I was working full time and I also knew I wanted to travel, so I put the project on hold.
After some good old burnout due to my job, I began to travel in Asia in January 2020. And then... you know what's coming.
Covid hit. I had to come back in Europe without any flat (I was subleasing it to other people for 6 months). With difficulties and luck, I ended up with my girlfriend in a temporary flat. I didn't have any job, only the computer I was traveling with (Lenovo x220 for the win!) and some clothes.
Is there a better moment to write? :D
I want to write a book since I'm 10. And now... my first book is out for two weeks already, and I just shipped its first free update this morning! I'm so happy to write that, you have no idea.
Its lengthy name: Building Your Mouseless Development Environment, powered by amazing tools like Arch Linux, i3, Zsh, tmux, and Neovim.
I wasn't alone: I had the support of my family, my friends, my girlfriend, and the amazing subscribers of my newsletter. I shared with them, during the 8 months of intense writing, the process, the doubts, and the ideas I had for the book. They helped me a lot and provided the motivation to keep going. They even helped me proofreading it (I'm not a native English speaker, as you can see).
Long story short, you can now look at the result:
The [book's page](https://themouseless.dev/).
A sample of the book with the entire table of content.
A [quick video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67lbLKTm91U) explaining a bit the Mouseless Development Environment we build throughout the book.
The "behind the scenes": what tools I used to write this book.
This book is not free or open source. If you want to know why, I wrote a bit about it.
https://redd.it/lpnhub
@r_linux
themouseless.dev
Do You Write Code With Your Mouse?
Building Your Mouseless Development Environment
Wine 32 bit using flatpak in Centos like distros
I've made a flatpak with wine-stable 6.0 for 32 bit using latest runtime 20.08. Centos does not provide wine i386 version. So this effort. I've tested this on Centos 7 x86_64, works on Fedora 33 and Centos 7. https://github.com/fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32.
https://redd.it/lpssq1
@r_linux
I've made a flatpak with wine-stable 6.0 for 32 bit using latest runtime 20.08. Centos does not provide wine i386 version. So this effort. I've tested this on Centos 7 x86_64, works on Fedora 33 and Centos 7. https://github.com/fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32.
https://redd.it/lpssq1
@r_linux
GitHub
fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32
wine build with runtime 20.08 i386, provides wine to Centos like distros - fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32
The Open Build Service now supports building Flatpak bundles, so you can build your own!
https://openbuildservice.org/2021/02/18/introducing-flatpak-builds/
https://redd.it/lpu91c
@r_linux
https://openbuildservice.org/2021/02/18/introducing-flatpak-builds/
https://redd.it/lpu91c
@r_linux
reddit
The Open Build Service now supports building Flatpak bundles, so...
Posted in r/linux by u/vleeth • 4 points and 0 comments
First Look: ‘Spot’ is a Native Spotify App for Linux, Built in GTK & Rust
https://redd.it/lpwq9w
@r_linux
https://redd.it/lpwq9w
@r_linux
Linux is running on the surface of Mars in the Perseverance rover!
I was just listening in on the livestream of the briefing on the landing of the Perseverance, and one question that was asked about the computer hardware on the rover. To my surprise, alot of the camera, microphones and onboard computers are commercial, off-the-shelf ( as they said). As for the operating system, they were using, as you might have guessed, is Linux!
Over the years, Ive casually read about Linux, and have looked in to learning about it, and I've also had heard about Linux being used in other important projects on Earth, but I never thought about the OS being used to power such powerful, and expensive, pieces of hardware, such as the rover, and have it run on another, alien planet. I feel, after hearing this, that I want to actually want to invest time on learning about Linux.
https://redd.it/lpyqcb
@r_linux
I was just listening in on the livestream of the briefing on the landing of the Perseverance, and one question that was asked about the computer hardware on the rover. To my surprise, alot of the camera, microphones and onboard computers are commercial, off-the-shelf ( as they said). As for the operating system, they were using, as you might have guessed, is Linux!
Over the years, Ive casually read about Linux, and have looked in to learning about it, and I've also had heard about Linux being used in other important projects on Earth, but I never thought about the OS being used to power such powerful, and expensive, pieces of hardware, such as the rover, and have it run on another, alien planet. I feel, after hearing this, that I want to actually want to invest time on learning about Linux.
https://redd.it/lpyqcb
@r_linux
reddit
Linux is running on the surface of Mars in the Perseverance rover!
I was just listening in on the livestream of the briefing on the landing of the Perseverance, and one question that was asked about the computer...
OnionShare 2.3 adds tabs, anonymous chat, better command line support, and quite a bit more
https://micahflee.com/2021/02/onionshare-tabs-anonymous-chat-cli/
https://redd.it/lpuyuf
@r_linux
https://micahflee.com/2021/02/onionshare-tabs-anonymous-chat-cli/
https://redd.it/lpuyuf
@r_linux
Micah Lee
OnionShare 2.3 adds tabs, anonymous chat, better command line support, and quite a bit more
After a ridiculously long sixteen months (or roughly ten years in pandemic time) I'm excited to announce that OnionShare 2.3 is out! Download it from onionshare.org. This version includes loads of new and exciting features which you can read about in much…
NASA/JPL Thanks open source Community for amazing software in regards to Linux running on the new Mars rover 1:07:05
https://youtu.be/gYQwuYZbA6o?t=4025
https://redd.it/lq01sw
@r_linux
https://youtu.be/gYQwuYZbA6o?t=4025
https://redd.it/lq01sw
@r_linux
YouTube
See Mars Like Never Before! NASA's Perseverance Rover Sends New Video and Images of the Red Planet
NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover safely touched down on the Red Planet on Feb. 18. So what will the robotic scientist "see" on her descent and what will she do...
How long have you been using Linux?
I'm old school, I've been using Linux for 18 years, I don't know why I remembered that, but it was a long time ago, when fedora come out only fedora for me red hat is the are linux masters all the most important things for linux the red hat is made, gnome, pulse audio........many think the cenonical did it but did not.....
https://redd.it/lq018x
@r_linux
I'm old school, I've been using Linux for 18 years, I don't know why I remembered that, but it was a long time ago, when fedora come out only fedora for me red hat is the are linux masters all the most important things for linux the red hat is made, gnome, pulse audio........many think the cenonical did it but did not.....
https://redd.it/lq018x
@r_linux
reddit
How long have you been using Linux?
I'm old school, I've been using Linux for 18 years, I don't know why I remembered that, but it was a long time ago, when fedora come out only...
Convos brings the IRC experience into the 21st century
https://convos.chat/
https://redd.it/lq2486
@r_linux
https://convos.chat/
https://redd.it/lq2486
@r_linux
Convos
About Convos - The simplest IRC client around
A multiuser chat web app for IRC. Always online, supports video, custom theming and is extremely easy to install
Lenovo's X1 Carbon Shows Why Linux Is Great on ThinkPads
https://www.wired.com/review/lenovo-thinkpad-x1-carbon-linux-edition/
https://redd.it/lq4tiw
@r_linux
https://www.wired.com/review/lenovo-thinkpad-x1-carbon-linux-edition/
https://redd.it/lq4tiw
@r_linux
WIRED
Lenovo's X1 Carbon Shows Why Linux Is Great on ThinkPads
It’s not flawless, but the excellent hardware and software support make this a great laptop for Linux users.
Mozilla is testing ads ("Sponsored Top Sites") in Firefox
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/sponsor-privacy?as=u&utm_source=inproduct
https://redd.it/lq4m4c
@r_linux
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/sponsor-privacy?as=u&utm_source=inproduct
https://redd.it/lq4m4c
@r_linux
support.mozilla.org
Sponsors on the home page and New Tab page | Firefox Help
Working with its advertising partners, Mozilla may place sponsored shortcuts on the default Firefox home page and New Tab page. Learn more.
winepak32 - build wine32 bit flatpak bundle
https://github.com/fastrizwaan/winepak32
I've upgraded flatpak-wine (flapak runtime 18.08 i386) to winepak32 (flatpak runtime 20.08 Compat.i386). Now winepak32 is future proof when and if 1.4 and 18.08 32 bit runtimes go End-Of-Life.
It creates wine 32 bit bundles of windows apps/games from installation directory (we can copy the directory from \~/.wine/Program\\ Files\\<application>) This is useful for saving and using your paid windows apps/games in Linux.
Example NotepadPP windows application is packaged in flatpak sandbox with wine dependency.
For non-bundle games/software installers use https://github.com/fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32
https://redd.it/lq67ue
@r_linux
https://github.com/fastrizwaan/winepak32
I've upgraded flatpak-wine (flapak runtime 18.08 i386) to winepak32 (flatpak runtime 20.08 Compat.i386). Now winepak32 is future proof when and if 1.4 and 18.08 32 bit runtimes go End-Of-Life.
It creates wine 32 bit bundles of windows apps/games from installation directory (we can copy the directory from \~/.wine/Program\\ Files\\<application>) This is useful for saving and using your paid windows apps/games in Linux.
Example NotepadPP windows application is packaged in flatpak sandbox with wine dependency.
For non-bundle games/software installers use https://github.com/fastrizwaan/flatpak-wine32
https://redd.it/lq67ue
@r_linux
GitHub
fastrizwaan/winepak32
Flatpak bundle with Wine 32 bit with Flatpak Sdk 20.08 with Compat.i386 runtime - fastrizwaan/winepak32
GitLab 13.9 released with a Security Alert Dashboard and Maintenance Mode
https://about.gitlab.com/releases/2021/02/22/gitlab-13-9-released/
https://redd.it/lq4z86
@r_linux
https://about.gitlab.com/releases/2021/02/22/gitlab-13-9-released/
https://redd.it/lq4z86
@r_linux
GitLab
GitLab 13.9 released with a Security Alert Dashboard and Maintenance Mode
GitLab 13.9 released with a Security Alert Dashboard, Maintenance Mode, and so much more!
IBM, Call for Code, and the Linux Foundation announce new open source projects to combat racism
The Linux Foundation last week announced it was hosting seven open source projects in partnership with IBM and David Clark Cause’s Call for Code for Racial Justice.
**Background:** Call for Code for Racial Justice launched late last year to solicit solutions from the global coding community.
The seven initiatives, per a Linux foundation blog post, include:
* Fair Change: A platform to help record, catalog, and access evidence of potentially racially charged incidents to help enable transparency, reeducation and reform as a matter of public interest and safety.
* TakeTwo: \[This project\] aims to help mitigate bias in digital content, whether it is overt or subtle, with a focus on text across news articles, headlines, web pages, blogs, and even code.
* Five Fifths Voter: This web app empowers minorities to exercise their right to vote and helps ensure their voice is heard by determining optimal voting strategies and limiting suppression issues.
* Legit-Info: Local legislation can have significant impacts on areas as far-reaching as jobs, the environment, and safety. Legit-Info helps individuals understand the legislation that shapes their lives.
* Incident Accuracy Reporting System: This platform allows witnesses and victims to corroborate evidence or provide additional information from multiple sources against an official police report.
* Open Sentencing: To help public defenders better serve their clients and make a stronger case, Open Sentencing shows racial bias in data such as demographics.
* Truth Loop: This app helps communities simply understand the policies, regulations, and legislation that will impact them the most.
https://redd.it/lqa5p4
@r_linux
The Linux Foundation last week announced it was hosting seven open source projects in partnership with IBM and David Clark Cause’s Call for Code for Racial Justice.
**Background:** Call for Code for Racial Justice launched late last year to solicit solutions from the global coding community.
The seven initiatives, per a Linux foundation blog post, include:
* Fair Change: A platform to help record, catalog, and access evidence of potentially racially charged incidents to help enable transparency, reeducation and reform as a matter of public interest and safety.
* TakeTwo: \[This project\] aims to help mitigate bias in digital content, whether it is overt or subtle, with a focus on text across news articles, headlines, web pages, blogs, and even code.
* Five Fifths Voter: This web app empowers minorities to exercise their right to vote and helps ensure their voice is heard by determining optimal voting strategies and limiting suppression issues.
* Legit-Info: Local legislation can have significant impacts on areas as far-reaching as jobs, the environment, and safety. Legit-Info helps individuals understand the legislation that shapes their lives.
* Incident Accuracy Reporting System: This platform allows witnesses and victims to corroborate evidence or provide additional information from multiple sources against an official police report.
* Open Sentencing: To help public defenders better serve their clients and make a stronger case, Open Sentencing shows racial bias in data such as demographics.
* Truth Loop: This app helps communities simply understand the policies, regulations, and legislation that will impact them the most.
https://redd.it/lqa5p4
@r_linux
reddit
IBM, Call for Code, and the Linux Foundation announce new open...
The Linux Foundation last week announced it was hosting seven open source projects in partnership with IBM and David Clark Cause’s Call for Code...
Linux has been ported to run on Apple’s M1 Macs
A new Linux port allows Apple’s M1 Macs to run Ubuntu for the first time. Corellium, a security firm that offers a virtualized version of iOS for security testing, has successfully ported Ubuntu over to M1 Macs and released a tutorial for others to follow. The modified version of Ubuntu boots into the regular user interface and includes USB support.
Apple hasn’t designed its M1 Macs with dual-boot or Boot Camp in mind. Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, has previously ruled out official support for natively booting alternate operating systems like Windows or Linux. Virtualization seems to be Apple’s preferred method, but that hasn’t stopped people from making their own ports.
https://redd.it/lqaaks
@r_linux
A new Linux port allows Apple’s M1 Macs to run Ubuntu for the first time. Corellium, a security firm that offers a virtualized version of iOS for security testing, has successfully ported Ubuntu over to M1 Macs and released a tutorial for others to follow. The modified version of Ubuntu boots into the regular user interface and includes USB support.
Apple hasn’t designed its M1 Macs with dual-boot or Boot Camp in mind. Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, has previously ruled out official support for natively booting alternate operating systems like Windows or Linux. Virtualization seems to be Apple’s preferred method, but that hasn’t stopped people from making their own ports.
https://redd.it/lqaaks
@r_linux
reddit
Linux has been ported to run on Apple’s M1 Macs
A new Linux port allows Apple’s M1 Macs to run Ubuntu for the first time. Corellium, a security firm that offers a virtualized version of iOS for...
Jailer, a Database Subsetting and Relational Data Browsing Tool.
https://github.com/Wisser/Jailer
https://redd.it/lpwfwn
@r_linux
https://github.com/Wisser/Jailer
https://redd.it/lpwfwn
@r_linux
GitHub
GitHub - Wisser/Jailer: Database Subsetting and Relational Data Browsing Tool.
Database Subsetting and Relational Data Browsing Tool. - Wisser/Jailer
How to have 3 display screens? Or at least display on 2 monitors, laptop screen off.
I have Ubuntu and Intel Graphics UHD 620 on my Thinkpad X1 Carbon gen 6. My laptop can display 2 displays (1 monitor and laptop screen) fine, but cannot do 2 displays (2 monitors, laptop screen off) nor 3 displays (2 monitors and 1 laptop screen). In short, my laptop can detect both monitors, can display each monitor separately but can not display on both monitors together.
I understand that it is because it might be the limit of my graphic card hardware. However, I'm still looking for a solution to display 3 screens or at least 2 monitor screens in order to boost my work productivity. Is there any solution that can help me?
https://redd.it/lqcu6b
@r_linux
I have Ubuntu and Intel Graphics UHD 620 on my Thinkpad X1 Carbon gen 6. My laptop can display 2 displays (1 monitor and laptop screen) fine, but cannot do 2 displays (2 monitors, laptop screen off) nor 3 displays (2 monitors and 1 laptop screen). In short, my laptop can detect both monitors, can display each monitor separately but can not display on both monitors together.
I understand that it is because it might be the limit of my graphic card hardware. However, I'm still looking for a solution to display 3 screens or at least 2 monitor screens in order to boost my work productivity. Is there any solution that can help me?
https://redd.it/lqcu6b
@r_linux
reddit
How to have 3 display screens? Or at least display on 2 monitors,...
I have Ubuntu and Intel Graphics UHD 620 on my Thinkpad X1 Carbon gen 6. My laptop can display 2 displays (1 monitor and laptop screen) fine, but...
I created a bash tool to help with critical thinking
I'm still new to Linux and to help my critical thinking skills I developed a tool based on the criticalthinking.org (https://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/the-elements-of-reasoning-and-the-intellectual-standards/480) methodology.
What it does is take input from the terminal and spit out a .html & css file that's responsive to mobile devices. But please don't think it's perfect or even noscripted by the best methodology. What it is, as far as I can tell. Is a rough first draft and there's no guarantee it will even work on your system.
If you're still curious you can find it here. https://github.com/Nswayze/linuxTools/blob/main/README.md
Terminal window on Archlinux \(i3\)
https://preview.redd.it/7rksjxazs6j61.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=91390806a6e258f4ed77cb268a6165fb558242bd
Demonstration of \\"responsiveness\\"
https://redd.it/lqdg37
@r_linux
I'm still new to Linux and to help my critical thinking skills I developed a tool based on the criticalthinking.org (https://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/the-elements-of-reasoning-and-the-intellectual-standards/480) methodology.
What it does is take input from the terminal and spit out a .html & css file that's responsive to mobile devices. But please don't think it's perfect or even noscripted by the best methodology. What it is, as far as I can tell. Is a rough first draft and there's no guarantee it will even work on your system.
If you're still curious you can find it here. https://github.com/Nswayze/linuxTools/blob/main/README.md
Terminal window on Archlinux \(i3\)
https://preview.redd.it/7rksjxazs6j61.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=91390806a6e258f4ed77cb268a6165fb558242bd
Demonstration of \\"responsiveness\\"
https://redd.it/lqdg37
@r_linux