Final Term – context aware terminal emulator
Category: Linux
Linux is my primary operating system. I used it on the servers, desktops, laptops, netbooks, and even mobile phones since approximately 1997. I’ve tried a number of distributions over the years, and even created a couple myself. I still look around sometimes to see what others are up to. But most of my machines are running some sort of Red Hat – either a quick and easy Fedora Linux, or a stable and secure Red Hat Enterprise Server, or a cheaper CentOS alternative.
And while by now I am very comfortable in the Linux environment (both graphical and command line), I still discover a lot of new and interesting things about it. When I come across something worthy, I usually share it with the rest of the Open Software world, using this category.
Happy 10th birthday, Fedora!
Dear Fedora,
I know we have our disagreements. At times I don’t know where you are going. Or whether even you know where you are going. But that’s OK. Because you are still awesome. You still pay my bills. You are still fun to use. And you are still on every single computer I can get my hands on, both at home and at work.
It’s your 10th birthday. And you’ve grown up a lot. It seems like only yesterday I was upgrading my Red Hat 9 machines to an awkwardly named Fedora Core 1 Yarrow Linux, and yet here we are – expecting the 20th release. You’ve kept your word on releasing every 6 month (albeit with a few weeks delay every single time). You’ve grown. You’ve changed. You’ve matured.
While I had a few hiccups with you over the years – those Gnome and KDE fights, those boot loader changes, and still painful inclusion of SELinux, you’ve always been there for me. I’ve helped me to build numerous projects. To make new friends. To understand the world better.
Please continue to be what you are. Please continue to change. Please continue to improve. Just, if you can, think of me, your biggest fan and seasoned user, once in a while.
Happy 10th birthday and a huge thank you.
Yours truly, Leonid.
Fedora dropping default Sendmail and rsyslog insta…
Fedora dropping default Sendmail and rsyslog install for the 20th release. Reading through the reasoning makes all the sense. But I’m still emotional.
The US government has betrayed the internet. We need to take it back
The US government has betrayed the internet. We need to take it back
We can make surveillance expensive again. In particular, we need open protocols, open implementations, open systems – these will be harder for the NSA to subvert.
