[time stamps] 00:00:00 Intro 00:02:13 Our Week in FOSS 00:03:09 Drew's Week in FOSS 00:04:17 Nate's Week in FOSS 00:05:16 Matt's Week in FOSS 00:08:32 Our Favoirte Terminal Applications And Commands 00:09:05 Drew: Micro 00:10:14 Nate: Neofetch 00:11:35 Matt: Neovim 00:14:24 Drew: EXA and EZA 00:15:42 Nate: CD and mkdir 00:16:54 Matt: Zoxide 00:18:26 Drew: nmap 00:20:30 Nate: speedtest-cli 00:22:20 Matt: LSD 00:23:07 Drew: Alias for MyIP 00:24:26 Nate: sl 00:26:27 Matt: Alias Everything 00:28:50 Drew: Midnight Commander 00:32:23 Nate: nushell 00:33:08 Matt: wl-copy and xclip 00:35:08 Drew: whois 00:36:19 Nate: GPU Tops 00:37:38 Matt: Borgmatic 00:40:07 Drew: Taskwarrior 00:41:24 Drew: Dig 00:42:20 Nate: timer-cli and tty-clock 00:43:59 Matt: pulsemixer 00:47:07 Drew's Ricing Script 00:48:50 Nate: ffmpeg 00:49:57 Drew: mkvmerg 00:51:33 Matt: newsboat 00:53:51 Drew: htop 00:54:59 Nate: nala 00:56:44 Matt: yazi 00:58:54 Nuggies of the Week 01:00:16 Drew's Nuggie of the Week 01:02:58 Nate's Nuggie of the Week 01:05:36 Matt's Nuggie of the Week 01:07:54 Contact Info and Goodbyes
@BradleyBrownАй бұрын
I love the chat, it's great to hear what daily drivers use for tools in Linux, but I'm a visual dude. Could you cut to a photo or short demo of the tool while you're chatting about it just so that we can see why it's cool? Keep up the great work, I love learning about new things to try in Linux!
@mellowgeekstudioАй бұрын
07:14 I think the reason is because docker runs with root privileges, so it can access any directories and mount them as volumes for the container.
@sjesesАй бұрын
As a linux newbie, this is exactly the topic I have been waiting for. In the past 5 months I have only used the terminal twice, once to remove and reinstall xone, and once to add a path. I have been wondering what I've been missing out on since everyone is so vocal about the terminal. I'm eager to see what magic tricks are out there
@xiro-ou3yyАй бұрын
that great to hear people often dont belive that you dont really need the term
@Phoenixwizard77Ай бұрын
I've been using linux for 4 years or so. I've never been too passionate about the terminal. I've learned basic commands, cd, bash, updates. I still prefer a gui for most tasks though I prefer to do my updates and upgrades through the terminal.
@sjesesАй бұрын
@@xiro-ou3yy I suppose that the level of "need" depends on how much of a power user you are. If you never touched the command line on windows, you probably wont touch it on Linux either. The main strength of it comes from the problem solving aspect. I you have a particular problem on windows, you might find a guide with screenshots telling you to open this window, then click that, etc, which becomes unusable when windows changes the UI. On Linux this would be much more of a hassle since there are more UI options than I can imagine, so a command bypasses all of that and becomes a more permanent and universal solution for that particular issue. The fear comes mostly from not knowing what the command actually does, as it is (in my opinion) often impossible to know what a command does just by reading it. In DOS it was more intuitive to me, but that might just stem from the fact that I grew up with it.
@sjesesАй бұрын
@@Phoenixwizard77 The only thing I am afraid of doing with the terminal is updates and upgrades, but that is a result of using Nobara, where Glorious Eggroll has changed things around. I've "bricked" my install once (because I wasn't knowledgeable enough to repair it at the time to restore it) by not using his supplied package manager to upgrade.
@Rbourk252Ай бұрын
Sharp contrast to you I spend most of my time in the terminal. I’ve been using Linux since 1996. My first PC was an IBM XT. The terminal grows on you over time. It’s something that MS (and other OSs worked so hard to depreciate in preference to GUI because they believed that users would only be able to understand ug point click. Not surprising that new users to Linux see terminal as antiquated and alien. If you are a programmer, use vim with Tmux and then boom, no more claw mouse hand, which when you get to my age 65, causes terrible RSI.
@Rbourk252Ай бұрын
Agree Jay did a great MC instruction. I use it a lot.
Micro is my favorite text editor in the terminal too!!
@DarthDweebАй бұрын
I run plex as a deb package. They have really simple instructions on their site to add the PPA and then I set up unattended-upgrades. My plex server is always up to date.
@KaarАй бұрын
I migrated a few years back to write small bash scripts instead of aliases for everything. Gives more freedom how to use (can be executed inside vim), share (gist) and extend them.
@afroceltduckАй бұрын
I like Yazi a lot, but the version in the Tumbleweed repos is SOOO old by now. I don't know if the package is even being maintained or not. So, now I'm back on vifm.
@vulpes-vulpeosАй бұрын
Try vifm instead of mc. vifm supports image preview in terminal (requires config editing), can mount drives with udisks2 out of the box (:media command) and is extremely configurable.
@FabioRaitzАй бұрын
You use tab to navigate input/output tabs on pulsemixer
@trya2lАй бұрын
Thanks Nate🎉
@mikel8190Ай бұрын
I use a lot of these listed, the only ones i can think to add at the moment are vifm, and tmux.
@jr_Linux21 күн бұрын
ok matt so windows borked my wifi so i gave up im back on linux, and i got yazi "trying to be a bit more terminal" although i struggle with remembering binds all the time. but yazi is cool, only thing i hate is that i have to use kitty instead of alacritty because of the image viewer but its cool that you can view your photos in the terminal with that.
@lipepaniguelАй бұрын
tridactyl mentioned ♥️ also, zoxide and eza are really awesome
@keyboard_gАй бұрын
Tyler’s link is in the description instead of Nate’s.