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Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Educational Games for Kids – Week 24

With so many young children currently unable to follow their usual routine of going to school, playing with friends, and undertaking many hobbies, it’s vital to keep them happy and learning. There are many ways of advancing a child’s education and well-being including online lessons, video calls with family and friends, combined with parental guidance.

Beets – music tagger and library organizer using the MusicBrainz database

Where does beets step in? If your music collection is in a sorry state of affairs with missing or incomplete track details, metadata, duplicate tracks, missing tracks, then beets might just fit the bill.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Viewing Photos – Week 23

This week I’m examining photo viewer software on the RPI4. There’s lots of open source photo viewers, so I focus on gThumb, feh, GPicView, and QuickViewer.

Linux Candy: Steam Locomotive – fun command for your terminal

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Mar 30, 2020 3:57 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
Steam Locomotive is a tiny C program, written in 295 lines of code. It’s just a harmless bit of fun.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Podcasts – Week 22

Podcasts are big business. We see celebrities, influencers, journalists, academics, one man and his dog owning a microphone and mixing desk produce regular podcast shows. The quality is variable. Some are truly awesome, others are strictly an acquired taste. Podcasts are a great way of keeping up to date with the latest news, reviews, banter, gossip, to deepen your understanding of the world we live in, and much more.

22 Best Open Source Linux Note Takers

  • LinuxLinks.com (Posted by sde on Mar 23, 2020 6:15 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups; Groups: Linux
It has often been said that information confers power, and that the most important currency in our culture today is information. Keeping track of bits and pieces of information is a minefield. There is a wide range of competent note taking software for Linux, and this article seeks to cover the finest open source solutions.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – File Management – Week 21

One area I’ve not covered to date is utility software. Nestling in the Raspbian repositories are a ton of utilities from the essential to the wacky. File management is definitely a routine but important activity for any desktop user. Recognizing that file management software is deeply personal (causing almost as many conflicts as text editors), I’ve looked at a good spectrum of file managers this week.

youtube-viewer – lightweight application that searches and streams videos from YouTube

A common complaint about YouTube is that to watch the material you need to use a web browser. Fortunately, some funky developers have created applications that allow you to bypass the web-only barrier of YouTube.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – OBS Studio – Week 20

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Mar 13, 2020 6:28 AM EDT)
  • Groups: ARM, Linux, Multimedia
In the field of open source video recording, my preferred application is OBS Studio. It’s definitely a wondrous class cross-platform application that’s proficient for both video recording and live streaming. Open source at its very finest. Here's my verdict of running OBS Studio on the Raspberry Pi 4.

You-Get – downloader that scrapes the web

You-Get is a small command-line utility to download media contents (videos, audios, images) from the web. This software lets you access material from YouTube, Youku, Niconico and a whole of other sites without ever leaving the console.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – News – Week 19

A news aggregator is software which collect news, weblog posts, and other information from the web so that they can be read in a single location for easy viewing. With the range of news sources available on the internet, news aggregators play an essential role in helping users to quickly locate breaking news.

Linux Candy: tetris – terminal interface for Tetris

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Mar 3, 2020 3:17 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Games, Linux
There’s lots of fun in the terminal. How about a classic iconic tile-matching puzzle video game? Step forward tetris, a terminal interface for Tetris with the main file coded in a mere 333 lines of Haskell.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Firefox Upgrade - Week 18

Raspbian's repositories now ship version 68.5.0 ESR of Firefox. This version was released in February 2020. As it's the latest Extended Support Release, I've revisited Firefox to see if it's a viable alternative to Chromium or Vivaldi on the RPI4.

Excellent System Tools: nnn – portable terminal file manager

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Feb 24, 2020 3:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Community, Linux
In a single sentence, nnn can be probably best summarized as software seeking to bridge the gap between the terminal and the desktop environment.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Retro Gaming – Week 17

For this week, I’m going to look at a few retro games, all nestling in Raspbian’s repositories. While its quad-core BCM2711 system-on-chip has more powerful processing cores, and the first upgrade to the graphics processor in the project’s history, it’s important to be realistic with expectations about the RPI4’s gaming potential.

Linux Candy: xcowsay – displays a cow on your desktop with message

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Feb 18, 2020 12:10 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
For this article, we’re looking at a different take on cowsay. It goes by the name xcowsay. This program displays a cute graphical cow and speech bubble. The program was first started over 12 years ago, but it’s still under active development, with a new release published only last week.

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Screen Capture – Week 16

For this week’s blog, I turn to a desktop activity that I use fairly frequently. It’s screen capturing – offering the ability to share images on my computer screen with a colleague or friend. Recording a video or screencast might be snazzier, but a still-image screen capture, known as a screenshot, is often all I need to get the message across.

dutree – reclaim precious hard disk space

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Feb 10, 2020 5:32 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Community, Linux
dutree is a command line tool to analyze disk usage. It’s written in the Rust programming language. It’s free and open source software. How does it compare to other disk usage analyzers?

Raspberry Pi 4: Chronicling the Desktop Experience – Emulate Home Computers – Week 15

A glaring omission from my RPI4 blog to date is gaming on this wee machine. There’s so many games to play on the machine, it’s difficult to know where to begin. I’ll start with something that shouldn’t be taxing on the machine. Emulating home computers. Specifically, the Amiga, ZX Spectrum, and Atari ST. They were hugely popular home computers targeted heavily towards games, but also ran other types of software.

Terminal Phase – space shooting game in your terminal

  • LinuxLinks.com; By LinuxLinks (Posted by sde on Feb 3, 2020 1:29 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Games, Linux
Many of the text games we’re covered on LinuxLinks have focused on the roguelike genre. But how about a real-time terminal-based game? And a space shooter to boot? Interested? If so, why not check out Terminal Phase, a fast paced, action-packed game.

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