Sunday, September 6, 2020

Q4OS Goodies

 Dragi drugari i drugarice, mislio sam da je Elementary OS, a potom i novo-otkriveni Linux Lite najbrži i najresponzivniji Linux, ali evo iskustvo me ponovo demantuje, pronašao sam novi sveti gral medju Linux distribucijama, a to je Debian bazirani Q4OS Linux.
Q4OS je jednostavno ultra brz i ultra responzivan, sve radi perfektno. Najbolje merilo kvaliteta operativnog sistema je kad na 1 GB RAM memorije YouTube ne secka.

Antix je brži, ali je previše čudan pa sam se zaustavio kod Q4OS i Kanotix Linuxa.







The Long Term Support release codenamed 'Centaurus' gives you five years of security patches and updates, it will be supported until July 2024 at least.

https://cleanbrowsing.org/filters

The Linux commands series in ongoing. I'm hard at work on a new book that will be, I hope, a great resource to learn how to use Linux and the macOS terminal. I label those "Linux commands", but I use them in macOS all the time. Underlying its beautiful user interface, macOS is a UNIX system, which means it's technically very similar to the GNU/Linux Operating System. You get to use shells like Bash and Zsh (which is the default shell since macOS Catalina was released last year).
Here's a funny story I remember. It was 2004, I was about to purchase my first iBook, the predecessor of the MacBook laptops. At that point I was using Linux exclusively on my desktop computer, and I got the Mac because it was a very beautiful machine, but I wanted to run Linux on it. So the plan was to buy it and then immediately install Linux on it. I was at a local pub I met a friend whose girlfriend owned a Mac. He was a Linux fan as me, and he told me to "try Mac OS X for a week". I absolutely loved Mac OS X, now called macOS, and I never used Linux on a desktop ever again. Just on servers.
Those Linux commands also work on Windows with WSL, the Windows Subsystem for Linux. Something definitely worth checking out if you use Windows!
This week I explored 7 new commands:
Linux commands: top
A quick guide to the `top` command, used to list the processes running in real time
Linux commands: echo
A quick guide to the `echo` command, used to print the argument passed to it
Linux commands: ps
A quick guide to the `ps` command, used to list the processes currently running in the system
Linux commands: ln
A quick guide to the `ln` command, used to create links in the filesystem
Linux commands: find
A quick guide to the find command, used to find files and folders on the filesystem
Linux commands: cat
A quick guide to the cat command, used to add content to a file
Linux commands: touch
A quick guide to the touch command, used to create an empty file
I'm going to keep writing about Linux commands in the next couple weeks until I'll cover all the most important/used ones.
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