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Configurable Menu: Install the best menu for Linux Mint 17/17.1 Cinnamon

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Dec 7, 2014 11:12 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Configurable Menu is one of the best applet’s I’ve found in Linux Mint Cinnamon. I’ve been using it for about three weeks on Linux Mint 17 installed on my laptop. And I’ve just installed it on a test installation of Linux Mint 17.1 Cinnamon in VMware.

“No CAPTCHA reCAPTCHA” is as annoying as reCAPTCHA if…

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Dec 4, 2014 2:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
So it appears that the “significant number of users” that “will be able to securely and easily verify they’re human without actually having to solve a CAPTCHA” will be those already logged into the website. For the other very significant number of users that the system cannot uniquely identify, it will try the old technique – shove a reCAPTCHA in there faces.

With Btrfs the default on openSUSE, when will other distros follow suit

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Dec 3, 2014 3:54 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
One change that was implemented in openSUSE 13.2 makes Btrfs the default file system for the root (main) partition. That makes openSUSE the first desktop distribution to use Btrfs as a default file system for any partition.

Devuan, DevOne. Here comes a fork of Debian

Ha, from ongoing discussions surrounding Systemd/Init in Debian, anybody could have predicted this was going to happen sooner or later. Well, it has happened. A fork of Debian has been announced by the “Veteran Unix Admin collective.”

How to set the PATH variable in Bash

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Nov 26, 2014 12:50 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
The Bash shell is a command language interpreter for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems. There are other shells like it, but it has become the most popular, and it is the default shell in Linux and Mac OS X. Bash was designed as a free replacement for the Bourne shell, one of the earliest shells for the Unix operating system. It (the Bourne shell) was named after its creator – Stephen Bourne.

Sponsored Tiles now live in Firefox

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Nov 24, 2014 7:13 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
To refresh your memory, back in February (2014), Mozilla announced that some of the tiles in a new tab page in Firefox will be sponsored. In other words, ads from Mozilla partners. Note that you need to be using Firefox 33.1 to see sponsored tiles. They’re not available in Firefox 33.0 and earlier.

Ubuntu 14.10 review

  • LinuxBSDos (Posted by finid on Nov 8, 2014 5:41 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Ubuntu
I haven’t done a review of Ubuntu in a while, so the release of Ubuntu 14.10 last week game me a good excuse to do just that. Code-named Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.10 is the last Ubuntu release this year.

Preview of Cinnamon 2.4. Features desktop slideshow

Cinnamon 2.4 will come with many cool features, one of which will be desktop slideshows. Yep, it’s being available on other desktop environments, but it’s never too late to have a feature like that.

CAINE 6 “Dark Matter” review

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 19, 2014 11:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
CAINE 6 uses an installation application called systemback and is the first CAINE installer that I could not use. No matter where I tried to install CAINE 6, systemback failed to start.

How to replace LibreOffice with Apache OpenOffice on Fedora 20

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 16, 2014 6:03 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
The few times that I’ve had to use it, not being able to copy and paste with the mouse always rubbed me the wrong way. That was something I used to be able to do. But not any more.

Anonabox bundles OpenWrt with Tor for anonymous Web browsing

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 15, 2014 10:36 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
It is designed to sit between your computer and your home router and route all traffic through Tor. At its size, two anonaboxes can fit inside a pack of cigarettes.

ROSA Desktop Fresh R4 KDE review

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 14, 2014 4:41 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
For new users, it is one of the better designed KDE desktop distributions, with a few features you won’t find on mainstream KDE desktops. However, my experience with this latest release has put a damper on that “better designed” label.

How to replace Shorewall with FirewallD on ROSA Desktop Fresh R4

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 14, 2014 5:34 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
This tutorial show how to replace it with FirewallD, a firewall application with support for network zones (also IP zones). FirewallD comes with a command line client (firewall-cmd), a graphical interface firewall-config and an applet appropriately named firewall-applet.

Aeromobil: It’s a car and it can fly

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 12, 2014 2:23 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
It’s a 2-sitter and looks really nice and sleek.

It can ride like a regular car and fly like a small plane, with a flying range of 430 – 540 miles (700 – 850 km)

Netrunner Rolling 2014.09 review

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 10, 2014 2:44 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
Though they are all Linux distributions, Netrunner Rolling uses the pacman package management system from Arch Linux, while the standard version, the one that’s based on Kubuntu, uses APT, the Advanced Packaging Tool, from Debian.

Why I switched from Postgres to MongoDB, then to Neo4j

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 8, 2014 11:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
His article is about how he went from using Postgres to MongoDB, then finally to Neo4j. Postgres (or PostgreSQL) is a relational database, while MongoDB and Neo4j are NoSQL databases. MongoDB is, of course, the most popular NoSQL database, while Neo4j is the most popular NoSQL graph database. All three database applications are Free Software.

The best Markdown editors for Linux

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 8, 2014 9:02 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In this post, I share with you the few that I consider the best Markdown editors for Linux. And every single one is better than your traditional text editor like GEdit, Tomboy, Kate and KWrite. Why?

Data and Goliath: Digital surveillance and what you can do about it

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 7, 2014 5:27 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Data and Goliath is about digital surveillance, its scope, implications and what you can do about it. You don’t have to be a tech-person to want to read this book. If you’re a participant in the digital age (who isn’t?), I think this is one book you’d want to read.

The search for a usable Markdown editor for my Linux desktop

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 6, 2014 10:31 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
So I went looking for something more to my liking. Something that’s Markdown-enabled. That has meant installing and uninstalling Markdown-enabled editors all day. With this post, I share with you what I’ve found and which ones passed the it-fits-the-way-I-work test.

Using GNOME Boxes to create and access local virtual systems on GNOME 3.14

  • LinuxBSDos; By finid (Posted by finid on Oct 3, 2014 6:48 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
GNOME Boxes is a native GNOME 3 application for accessing remote machines and local virtual systems, primarily using the libvirt technology. Consider it an alternative to VirtualBox and VMPlayer.

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