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David Corking

Reconnecting your SSH agent to a detached GNU screen session | tolaris.com - 3 views

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    This is almost perfect!  For me, on Debian 7.1, Remi's code needed a small tweak. I put backticks around `whoam`i It allows me to use git push/pull after I have disconnected and reconnected to a screen session. SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$(find /tmp/ssh-* -user `whoami` -name agent\* -printf '%T@ %p\n' 2>/dev/null | sort -k 1nr | sed 's/^[^ ]* //' | head -n 1)
Scott Beamer

Pinguy OS - 4 views

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    Pinguy OS an out-of-the-box working operating system for everyone, not just geeks This OS is for people that have never used Linux before or for people that just want an out-of-the-box working OS without doing all the tweaks and enhancements that everyone seems to do when installing a fresh copy of Ubuntu or other Linux based Distro's.
Djiezes Kraaijst

Howto: Set up Hardy for speed, v1.0 « Motho ke motho ka botho - 0 views

  • Howto: Set up Hardy for speed, v1.0
  • This guide is a collection of tips and tweaks for Ubuntu Linux 8.04. The content comes from tutorials and speed suggestions found on the Ubuntu Forums and elsewhere. The material has been collated and narrated, and arranged with links to external resources or supplemental information.
  • The current versions can be downloaded by clicking on the links below. Howto: Set up Hardy for speed, v1.0, Zim Howto: Set up Hardy for speed, v1.0, HTML
Sandra Nowakowski

Cisco SNMP - 0 views

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    |mg| Cisco Snmp Tool 2.2.0 Download Freeware And Shareware Software Utilities. Download Files For Your Computer That Tweak, Repair, Enhance, Protect Majorgeeks.com/cisco_snmp_tool_d5488.html Cisco: Cisco Network And Configuration Management; Spe...
Maluvia Haseltine

Moblin : The other netbook OS - 0 views

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    Moblin is just an Intel distribution of Linux (based on Fedora), although it's one that benefits from some unique tweaks and a newly designed user-interface. Moblin is based on the familiar GNOME/GTK desktop, like distros such as Ubuntu, but this is largely invisible because of the UI improvements.
yc c

Welcome - netboot.me - 1 views

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    netboot.me is a service that allows you to boot nearly any operating system or utility on any computer with a wired internet connection - without having to know ahead of time what you'll want to boot. Once you can netboot.me, you never need to update your boot disk again! In order for your computer to know where to find the netboot servers, you need to change your DHCP settings to return some extra information. The two relevant pieces of information: next-server, which should be "tftp.netboot.me", and "filename", which should be "netbootme.kpxe". How to set these settings depends on your DHCP server. For dhcpd, simply add the following to the relevant 'subnet' section of your configuration: next-server "tftp.netboot.me" filename "netbootme.kpxe" For dnsmasq, the following line in /etc/dnsmasq.conf will achieve the same effect: dhcp-boot=netbootme.kpxe,tftp.netboot.me netboot.me works through the magic of netbooting. There are a number of ways to boot a computer with netboot.me. The simplest is to download a bootable image and burn it to a CD, USB memory stick, or floppy disk. Boot off it on any networked computer, and it will automatically fetch the latest boot options from netboot.me and let you choose from dozens of installation, recovery, testing, portable desktop and other tools. You can also start netboot.me from any computer running gPXE, or from any netbootable computer with some simple tweaks to your DHCP server.
Marco Castellani

Linux.com :: KDE 4.1 rocks the desktop - 0 views

  • I'm happy to announce that KDE 4.1 simply rocks.
  • As far as eye candy, KDE 4.1 looks simply stunning. While its theme uses the same foundation as 4.0, the developers have improved it with many tweaks.
  • KDE marks a triumphant return to full usability with the 4.1 release.
ismael guillen

integrando Gnome 3 en ubuntu 11.04 - Taringa! - 0 views

  • dejar mas pequeños los iconos del la pantalla de aplicaciones, son enormes el tamaño por defecto. Para eso necesitamos cambiar una cosita desde el terminal abrimos una terminal sudo su (como root ) gksu gedit /usr/share/gnome-shell/theme/gnome-shell.css (esto abrirá un gedit) Buscamos las lineas: /* Apps */ .icon-grid { spacing: 18px; -shell-grid-item-size: 118px; } .icon-grid .overview-icon { icon-size: 96px; } Y al encontrarlas no serán iguales varían un poco, y cambian datos, debería quedar algo así: /* Apps */ .icon-grid { spacing: 18px; -shell-grid-item-size: 35px; } .all-app { padding: 16px 25p16px 16px; spacing: 20px; } .all-app .icon-grid { -shell-grid-item-size: 59px; } .all-app .overview-icon { icon-size: 48px; } Con este guardamos y recargamos el Shell, Alt+F2 y escribimos r y damos enter Ya deberán los iconos ser mas pequeños y por tanto menos feos Para reducir el tamaño de la barra y de las letras de todo el sistema, es que son enormes, buscamos Ajustes de Retoques avanzados, que normalmente esta en Aplicaciones/otros/ o lo pueden encontrar como Tweak Tool, y vamos a Fonts y en la primera barra movemos asta que el tamaño de letra este al gusto. Tambien aqui pueden habilitar los iconos en el escritorio desde la pestaña interface y al mismo tiempo regresarle los iconos al menú clásico así como regresar los botones de maximizar y restaurar de las ventanas.
    • ismael guillen
       
      Funciona ok yo lo probé I try it. Its OK!!
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    reducir iconos a gusto
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