/dev/null
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Re: /dev/null
hahaha, perfect :)
All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense, and true and false and meaningless in some sense.
Re: /dev/null
Getting myself a good "Donkey Punch" in vbox. :D
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^ Driving Arch w/Gnome 3 atm, so also enjoying a donkey punch! :D
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^Took the for me comfy Debian jessie/sid route myself.
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time for somebody to post a roast recipe for that mythic Donkey Punch.
All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense, and true and false and meaningless in some sense.
Re: /dev/null
Well, just laid down a chunk of change for a Macbook Air for our daughter, who graduates from high school on Friday. Gulp!
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Have been helping out with an upgrade on a Macbook Pro for my father in law who do not understand anything of computer stuff. No I do not understand much either :D, that is why he got a Mac :) Hmmm that is a thought...a good reason for getting one, and it is ehm...very nice.
- RandomCharacter
- Gangbanger
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Re: /dev/null
vic, that is why many refer to Macs as "appliances". You turn them on, and they just work, for people who don't care about the inner workings. This is not to say Mac users are stupid, they can do quite genius things with their applications, which is what they are focused on doing.
I used to work in a large bank as an Oracle DBA. I was very often amazed by things my users could do with MS Excel, users who had a difficult time changing their passwords.
Tim
I used to work in a large bank as an Oracle DBA. I was very often amazed by things my users could do with MS Excel, users who had a difficult time changing their passwords.
Tim
Re: /dev/null
ja, and this is also the reason why more computer-savvy people tend to dislike Macs, because they insist on taking the controls away from you. at least that is why i dislike everything to do with Apple, except the iPod Nano Classic (of course, of course)
All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense, and true and false and meaningless in some sense.
Re: /dev/null
I'll have to respectfully disagree with the idea that the inner workings and controls are taken away from you on a Mac. Savvy power users know how to get to these things. The only thing that is really beyond the ability to meaningfully change is the UI, and even that is somewhat hackable. You get a bash console, and even that is easily changeable to zsh, ksh, csh, tcsh (all already installed). Don't like that iTunes can't fucking deal with FLAC files? Use something else that does. Sure, it's not Linux, but if I only had Mac OSX or Windows to choose from, you can bet your ass I'd choose OSX any day of the week. Don't get me wrong, I've got plenty of gripes about Apple and their products, too, but for now I will not bite the hand that feeds me. :)
- RandomCharacter
- Gangbanger
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Re: /dev/null
I agree with bones. You can get into the inner workings of a Mac, if you want to. I occasionally use terminal, ssh, scp, etc on my son's Macbook Pro. There is a full UNIX-type OS under the hood. It's well hidden, but it's there.
Tim
Tim
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I guess as long as there's MacPorts (and you can disable GATEKEEPER) ... Apple's really crashing down on GPL 3 - as FreeBSD - so by default you have outdated tools like Bash v3.
It's funny how we used to be able to do real stuff with rudimentary computers, but now we can't. -- ratcheer
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i must say my experience with Apple products does not include many hours on a Mac. as for customizability: it is usually the UI i am dissatisfied with, and as you say, that is often the most difficult thing to change. i am sure shit is hackable, but it is the entire philosophy behind their designs (ie. the fact that you need to *hack* it in the first place instead of just being given some options), what they call their 'unified design' or whatever, and what i call 'others thinking they know better than me what i want', that discourages me from using their products. i am not saying that is wrong or whatever, it is just why i personally stay away from them.
this might all be fueled by my anger towards the retardation of the iPod Touch UI though.
this might all be fueled by my anger towards the retardation of the iPod Touch UI though.
All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense, and true and false and meaningless in some sense.
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- Baconator
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Re: /dev/null
^^Yes, have the same feelings about it more or less. Bling & bloat and a phancy shmanzy DE is fun for fifteen minutes, then I just want to crawl back in my b/w OpenBox wiping the tears of joy of being back in my comfortable austerity zone. But really there were another thing I wondered about, what is this???
http://finalterm.org/
http://finalterm.org/
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Holy! No more aliases? :D
/reads on...
/reads on...
:-(Final Term stands on the shoulders of giants by building on proven, powerful open source technologies such as GTK+ 3, Clutter and Mx.
Final Term is written in 100% Vala, the language of Desktop Linux's future, and runs at native speed without the need for any runtime.
It's funny how we used to be able to do real stuff with rudimentary computers, but now we can't. -- ratcheer
- wuxmedia
- Grasshopper
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Re: /dev/null
GNU screen is a 'hack' ? Ivan - sharpen your blade...Reflow like a pro. On Linux.
This feature, as famously seen in the Mac OS terminal, has been among the most requested ones from Linux terminal programs for several years now.
Well, the wait is over. Final Term does it, no need for hacks (screen), no questions asked.
and i3 and Urxvt happily resizes 'like a pro' too.
Still, command completion popups and context menus don't sound too evil.
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- Baconator
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Re: /dev/null
I bet if you use 'command completion popups' for a while, they are more annoying than a double-tap-tab. Didn't we once try a test install of Final Term a few months ago and it pulled in like 60MB of shit? Naaah, not for popups :D
..gnutella..
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- Baconator
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Re: /dev/null
[troll]
http://www.tecmint.com/linux-terminal-emulators/
[/troll]
Spot #1 Terminator
Spot #20 urxvt (!)
Comment quote:
http://www.tecmint.com/linux-terminal-emulators/
[/troll]
Spot #1 Terminator
Spot #20 urxvt (!)
Comment quote:
It’s commercial, but I’ve been a user of VanDyke Software’s SecureCRT for years now. Originally only for windows, they ported it to Linux and OSX a few years back and it’s become my go-to term app on all 3 platforms.
..gnutella..
Re: /dev/null
Thanks for the responses guys, wow :)