Thanks for the A2A. That’s an interesting question. This could be viewed from many different perspectives. I’d say, this depends on what you are going to do with Linux and which distribution you choose. For example, the current BlackArch image seems to be somewhere around 12GB. It also depends, what…
Desktop
In this category the primary focus is Linux use with desktop technology, including notebooks and netbooks.
Well, the only way to repair bad sectors would be a low-level format. And contrary to common believe, that’s not possible with modern drives. Why? Because it requires special technology that is way to expensive and therefore not present in modern drives anymore. At least not in the cheap consumer…
Let me share one or two secrets with you. Secret #1: who do you think would be allowed to create the content on Udemy? Answer: Everyone! Did you think, there are some special professionals behind Udemy for all fields that check the content inside out and front to back? NO!…
No it does not. First of all, everything on a computer and according devices boils down to ones and zeros. Files and directories. It’s all human-made applications. So is an operating system and so is the according installer. Bootable just means, there is an application that’s called a boot loader,…
Let me start by saying, that Chrome is a proprietary application that is developed by Google. It is based on an open-source project, which many browsers these days are based on. The Chromium project. The companies just adjust it to their own liking and offer it as their own derivative….
Thanks for the A2A. Given you have found me, because I’m on top of the most read writers in the Arch Linux category, you can imagine, what I’m going to say. Arch Linux is not hard to deal with at all and derivatives like Manjaro are even easier to deal…
Thanks for the A2A. I’ve been using Linux for more than 20 years now and I’ve never heard of it. This should already answer your question. Arch Linux doesn’t have a generic config command. Manjaro doesn’t either. And I’ve never used it either on Ubuntu or back in the ’90s…