Friday, December 14, 2018

Kotlin Native Compiler for Windows

Lazarus IDE on multiplatform environment


(Integrated Development Environment) development platforms- these development IDE’s, were very popular in the mid to late 90’s and ushered in an era or rapid Windows applications development, by letting you visually build your rich Windows applications, such as  dragging and dropping widgets on the screen and then attaching event-driven code actions, such as button clicks , to them.
This was great for rapidly prototyping and developing rich graphical applications, and orders of magnitude faster than writing Windows apps using the heaving-iron tools of the time of C/c++ compiling the very large and overwhelming windows API. Ironically even 2016 some of the popular  IDE’s for for web or mobile development still use the same classic IDE design pioneered by Visual Basic, with choices like Adobe Dreamweaver and Apple’s Xcode and Android Studio are trying to re-create the magic of those 90’s IDE’s but sometimes just fall short.
Although the hey days of rich Windows client applications  ( or Mac, or Linux ) are behind us with developers mostly focusing their efforts  today on the web browser and native  mobile apps , there are still use cases when full-blown rich client applications need to be developed for the PC. While Visual Basic (Microsoft) and Delphi  (Embarcadero) are still around in their  modern incarnations, I want to discuss another compelling open-source, cross platform alternative, Lazarus.


**Source:

Thursday, December 13, 2018

The Real Truth About KOSOVO and METOHIJA


How to install live Knoppix on your HDD ?

How to install live Knoppix on your HDD:

System Requirements

To install and run Knoppix on your PC, you'll need:
  • Pentium-class processor, preferably 300MHz+
  • 64MB RAM
  • A spare partition on your disk, min 3GB
  • (of course) a Knoppix CD

Installation Procedure

To get Knoppix installed onto your hard drive:
  1. Boot the Knoppix CD.

  2. When the boot prompt comes up, choose your language.
    Most of us speak English, so we'll type:
    boot: knoppix lang=en
    then press ENTER (you don't type the 'boot:' part, of course)

  3. Wait till the system is fully launched, including the KDE desktop

  4. Press CTRL-ALT-F1, to get a root console. You should see a shell prompt

  5. Type: knx-hdinstall

  6. Follow the guided installation menus. This will include:

    • Creating a Linux partition (at least 2.5GB
    • Creating a Linux Swap partition (at least 256MB)
    • 'Mounting' the Linux partition as root
    • Initialising the swap partition
    • Copying all the required files (automatically)
    • Setting up networking
    • Setting passwords
    • Setting up the bootloader (Note: take care with this stage - it could render your system incapable of booting into Windows. If you really need Windows, then it might be a good idea to set up GRUB Bootloader with a 'chainloader' entry, so that you can dual boot. Working this out is an exercise left to the reader - there are too many possible scenarios for me to cover in this short guide. Also see man grub and the files in /usr/share/doc/grub)
    • Rebooting (without the CD)

  7. When you've rebooted Knoppix from your hard disk, click on the KDE Control Centre icon in the launcher at the bottom of the screen (icon of a colour monitor with a card in front of it)

  8. Within the Control Center, click on Personliche Einstellungen

  9. Click on Land und Sprache

  10. Choose the locale and language of your choice

  11. Click on Andwenden at bottom of that window

  12. Close and restart the Control Center

  13. Click on Peripherals, then Keyboard, and choose your preferred keyboard layout (which will probably be US.English. Click OK and close the window

  14. Press CTRL-ALT-F2 to get to the root console, and log in as root (using the password you chose when you ran the installer)

  15. (Optional) - type apt-get update (followed by ENTER). This will update your list of available packages, and takes about 5-10 minutes.

  16. Hey, presto, you've got a fully installed GNU/Linux desktop
  17. Enjoy !

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

THE BEST FREE OPERATING SYSTEMS

THE BEST FREE OPERATING SYSTEMS:


Linux Lite is the best for office and everyday use.


The best desktop distros:

1) Linux Lite - super duper - fast, extremely responsive

1) Linux Mint (Playonlinux, Libre Office, OracleVirtualMachine, HPLIP drivers,...)

2) Elementary OS (super brz na starim kompjuterima, a sve može što i Linux Mint)

2) MX Linux (Synaptic Package Manager,...)

3) AntiX


The best live distros:


2) Slax


4) Talis (anonymizer)

5) Kali (security)


The best server distros:

1) Centos (XAMPP,...)

2) Debian

3) Fedora


If you want something weird, try this one:



Još mojih aplikacija:

Thursday, December 6, 2018

More Linux Distros

More Linux Distros>

Moj izbor za surfere:


Mint Linux

https://www.elivecd.org/download/stable/


za poslovne korisnike preporučujem MXLinux

a za decu koja bi se sigrala:
https://www.linuxconsole.org/ ili Steam linux.

A za ljubitelje srpske ćirilice i srpske lokalizacijehttps://sourceforge.net/projects/serbian2014/

https://www.debian-srbija.iz.rs/p/serbian.html