A really common need for these commands is corporate on-prem hardware support, which might be less applicable in a cloud setting. Hardware support might be akin to knowing AIX/Solaris in year 2000 as Linux took off.
PS - tldr builds it's database from the man pages. So if something is in man pages it will be in tldr too. Also, thanks for your videos. They are very helpful.
That command opens the config file for his i3 window manager. So unless you are running the i3 window manager on Mint and you have set up i3cf as an alias to open that config file, it won't open anything for you
@ Thanks, but no thanks. WSL is working just fine, so I am using Linux whenever I need it. And for the times I need Windows, I also have it available, so I don't see any problem with my setup.
I don't know if I'm really supposed to be reading the info pages or something but whenever I take the lspci man page at its word it does something inscrutable and unhelpful. Often I want to combine kernel modules, descriptive text, bus numbers, verbose, and see it in a tree. But for the life of me it just won't !#@$!#$ do it. I end up having to invoke it multiple times and use some ridiculous sed script to stitch the various modes together. Yet the man page is mum about what options are intercompatible and when.
A really common need for these commands is corporate on-prem hardware support, which might be less applicable in a cloud setting. Hardware support might be akin to knowing AIX/Solaris in year 2000 as Linux took off.
17:45 the vocabulary is 2 RAM sticks or RAM modules.
tldr is awesome because if you find a neat trick you want to remember, you can add it to the markdown file for that particular tldr entry.
PS - tldr builds it's database from the man pages. So if something is in man pages it will be in tldr too. Also, thanks for your videos. They are very helpful.
Do you have an alias for i3cf? I'm not finding that command. Maybe you covered that in a previous video? (Using Linux Mint 20.3 Una)
That command opens the config file for his i3 window manager. So unless you are running the i3 window manager on Mint and you have set up i3cf as an alias to open that config file, it won't open anything for you
Unfortunatelly, most of this will not work if you use WSL on Windows, but still nice video to watch
There's a solution for that ;)
@@NeuralNine we wanna know, we wanna know 😁
The solution ditch windows
@@burstfireno1617 Use Linux 👀
@ Thanks, but no thanks. WSL is working just fine, so I am using Linux whenever I need it. And for the times I need Windows, I also have it available, so I don't see any problem with my setup.
I don't know if I'm really supposed to be reading the info pages or something but whenever I take the lspci man page at its word it does something inscrutable and unhelpful. Often I want to combine kernel modules, descriptive text, bus numbers, verbose, and see it in a tree. But for the life of me it just won't !#@$!#$ do it. I end up having to invoke it multiple times and use some ridiculous sed script to stitch the various modes together. Yet the man page is mum about what options are intercompatible and when.
🎉 first
2nd
third
Must known command when using linux: remove linux && install windows👌🏻