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munna1357

ssh key and DHCP configuration linux commands step by step - YouTube - 0 views

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    One fundamental instrument to ace as a framework overseer is SSH. SSH, or Secure Shell, is a convention used to safely sign onto remote frameworks. It is the most widely recognized approach to get to remote Linux and Unix-like servers.  There are two or three ways that you can get to a shell (summon line) remotely on most Linux/Unix frameworks. One of the more established courses is to utilize the telnet program, which is accessible on most system skilled working frameworks. Getting to a shell account through the telnet strategy however represents a risk in that everything that you send or get over that telnet session is obvious in plain content on your neighborhood system, and the nearby system of the machine you are associating with. So any individual who can "sniff" the association in the middle of can see your username, secret key, email that you read, and charges that you run. Therefore you require a more refined system than telnet to associate with a remote host.  SSH, which is an acronym for Secure SHell, was planned and made to give the best security while getting to another PC remotely. Not just does it scramble the session, it gives better confirmation offices, and in addition highlights like secure document exchange, X session sending, port sending and all the more with the goal that you can build the security of different conventions. It can utilize diverse types of encryption extending anywhere in the range of 512 piece on up to as high as 32768 bits and incorporates figures like AES (Advanced Encryption Scheme), Triple DES, Blowfish, CAST128 or Arcfour. Obviously, the higher the bits, the more it will take to produce and utilize keys and in addition the more it will take to disregard information the association.
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    One fundamental instrument to ace as a framework overseer is SSH. SSH, or Secure Shell, is a convention used to safely sign onto remote frameworks. It is the most widely recognized approach to get to remote Linux and Unix-like servers.  There are two or three ways that you can get to a shell (summon line) remotely on most Linux/Unix frameworks. One of the more established courses is to utilize the telnet program, which is accessible on most system skilled working frameworks. Getting to a shell account through the telnet strategy however represents a risk in that everything that you send or get over that telnet session is obvious in plain content on your neighborhood system, and the nearby system of the machine you are associating with. So any individual who can "sniff" the association in the middle of can see your username, secret key, email that you read, and charges that you run. Therefore you require a more refined system than telnet to associate with a remote host.  SSH, which is an acronym for Secure SHell, was planned and made to give the best security while getting to another PC remotely. Not just does it scramble the session, it gives better confirmation offices, and in addition highlights like secure document exchange, X session sending, port sending and all the more with the goal that you can build the security of different conventions. It can utilize diverse types of encryption extending anywhere in the range of 512 piece on up to as high as 32768 bits and incorporates figures like AES (Advanced Encryption Scheme), Triple DES, Blowfish, CAST128 or Arcfour. Obviously, the higher the bits, the more it will take to produce and utilize keys and in addition the more it will take to disregard information the association.
mikhail-miguel

What Debian version are the different Ubuntu versions based on? - Ask Ubuntu - 0 views

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    bash-cgi CGI em Shell Script Bash Shell CGI
Ricardo Jorge

Atalhos do Unity o shell padrão do Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal - 0 views

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    Baseado na pergunta feita no askubuntu, segue os atalhos para serem usados no Unity. (Nota, por algum motivo estranho a tecla Super vem com um símbolo de uma Janela.)
anonymous

Death of the command line revisited - 0 views

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    "Death of the command line revisited Five years ago I wrote a little blurb called Death of the command line. As it happened, that article was misunderstood by many who read it - I don't know if it was my fault or theirs, but somehow many readers ended up thinking I was either predicting the demise of CLI's (Command Line Interfaces) or hoping for that demise or both. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. I remain a big fan of CLI's and use them daily. And yet, just five years later and still at risk of angering yet another batch of folk who won't read carefully, I'm going to suggest that predicting the death of the CLI may not be such a bad bet after all. What triggered this was that I happened to be doing a bit of editing to another article - Using the shell (Terminal) in Mac OS X. As I made some corrections, I thought "Nobody cares about this nowadays". That's not entirely true. That particular page still gets five thousand or more visitors every month and has even been "plussed" a few times, so obviously a few people still care. On the other hand, in the greater world of folks I run into daily, nobody uses the CLI and most don't even know that they could. But why would you use the CLI?"
larry hill

Gnome 3.8 Released : Available for Ubuntu Based Distribution - 0 views

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    Gnome 3.8 released and announced by GNOME development team, Its final version 3.8 of desktop environment dedicated for Linux Distribution. This version brings several new levels and flows 6 months of work with nearly 36,000 contributions made by 960 members of the community.
Dan McCrea

Unix Toolbox - 15 views

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    A collection of Unix/Linux/BSD commands and tasks which are useful for IT work or for advanced users, a compact and practical reference.
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