Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze
[Top] [All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index] [Thread Index]
40.) You can remotely access the machine from anywhere in the world and do
anything you could locallly. IE... Compile a new kernel, reboot without
errors,
then completely reconfigure the system with new ip's and routing table,
add new users and completely manage the system all from the comfort of
your own bed.
(For the people who didn't know... I used to run/own a Linux based ISP.)
Jeremy.
On Tue, 27 Oct 1998, John Alexander wrote:
> I found this thread in com.os.linux.misc. Think we can take it to 101?
> > I'm talking about those things that make Linux a
> > better OS. I want everyone to add to this and we all may
> > learn something. Can we make it 101????
> >
> >
> > 1. You can hold down the shift key and press 'Page up' to
> > see 'x' number of screens that has scrolled up out of view.
> > 'x' is 8 on my system.
> >
> > 2. You can <left alt><F2>, etc, to switch consoles and do
> > real command line multitaksing. You can multitask more
> > than one task at a time (aka - preemptive).
>
> This might be better as:
> 2. You can <left alt><F2>, etc, to switch consoles and login
> as a different user without stopping any running programs.
>
> >
> > 3. You can kill off a nasty program without resorting to
> > the "big red switch" reboot.
> >
> > 4. You can install new programs without rebooting (unlike
> > MS's install-reboot-install-reboot process).
> >
> > 5. You don't have to worry about overwriting a new .dll
> > with an old one when you install an application. An
> > application install won't degrade your system to obsolete
> > libraries.
> >
> > 6. There is no device mangler (a Win95/98 thing). There
> > is no brain dead wizzard (another Win95/98 thing).
> > Yahooooooooooo!
> >
> > 7. You don't have to spend hundrends of $$ on a 2nd party
> > X Windows emulation package, like eXceed. X is free!
> >
> > 8. You can have arbitrary long filenames.
> >
> > 9. Read news while you burn CDRs.
> >
> > 10. No "out of environment" errors
> >
> > 11. No "stack overflow" errors
> >
> > 12 No this_is_my_file.txt as thmyfile.txt
> Windows 95/NT -> THISIS~1.TXT or TH3BD5~1.TXT, if your long file names
> get corrupted.
> >
> > 13. When mysterious things happen, if all else fails, you can look
> > at the source code.
> When we get 101, make this one #101!
>
> Here are some more:
>
> 14. You can change to root and do administrative tasks
> without closing all applications and logging out.
>
> 15. You can change the look and feel of the graphical user interface
> to match your preferences.
>
> 16. You can change your IP address without rebooting.
>
> 17. Applications that crash don't take down the operating system.
>
> 18. You can set up a server without a graphical user interface slowing
> it down.
>
> 19. You can run a program on one machine, displaying the output on
> another.
>
> 20. You can completely administer your machine without even having a
> keyboard, mouse, or monitor attached.
>
> 21. You can mess up while upgrading your operating system kernel,
> boot the old version, and redo the upgrade.
>
> 22. You can run multiple graphical user interfaces at one time on one
> monitor, each with different look and feel.
>
> 23. No 'Out of Disk Space' errors in the root directory if you
> use long file names.
>
> 24. Standardized locations for dynamic libraries, so you don't have
> 4 incompatible versions (WINDOWS, WINDOWS\SYSTEM, application
> directory, and who knows where else!) of the same library.
>
> 25. Lots of people who are willing to help you out if you have a
> problem, and who have better advice than "Reinstall Windows."
>
> 26. Bugs get acknowledged, fixed, and new versions distributed fast,
> at no cost.
>
> 27. More than 8 command line interfaces available, take your pick.
> (all of them better than COMMAND.COM)
>
> 28. You can customize the system to run the way you want it to.
>
> 29. If the graphical user interface dies, you can just restart it
> and go back to work without needing to reboot.
>
> 30. You can make use of almost all of your discarded computers
> to do useful work and take the load off of your main computer.
> (file servers, routers, etc.)
>
> 31. You can leave your computer on all year without worrying about
> it locking up or running out of memory.
>
> 32. If you don't like the way some portion of the system works,
> you can find a program you like better, rewrite that portion
> of the system, or write scripts to make it work better.
>
> 33. You have text-based configuration files that you can understand
> and edit. (as opposed to one, undocumented, binary file with
> configuration information about everything under the sun in it.)
> One disk error in the 95 or NT registry and your system is down.
>
> 34. You can type & after a command to run it in the background and
> get your command prompt back immediately.
>
> 35. You can type nohup before a command to allow it to continue to run
> after you have logged out.
>
> 36. 'ls *help*' displays all files with 'help' anywhere in them.
> In DOS, 'dir *help*' displays ALL files.
>
> 37. You can have FAT16, FAT32, HPFS, and NTFS partitions available
> at the same time, plus many more.
>
> 38. Your entire file system is in one tree, as opposed to having
> every partition and network drive be its own tree on a different
> drive letter. You can have more than 26 partitions/network drives
> mounted at the same time.
>
> 39. You can create a symbolic link to a file, so you can have access
> to the same file in two places, or by two names.
>
>
> John Alexander
> MCI/Worldcom LAN Administrator
> Wichita TeleMarketing Center
> VNET 780-1024, Local 631-1024
>
> ---
> This is the Air Capitol Linux Users Group discussion list. If you
> want to unsubscribe, send the word "unsubscribe" to
> aclug-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx. If you want to post to the list, send your
> message to aclug-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx.
>
---
This is the Air Capitol Linux Users Group discussion list. If you
want to unsubscribe, send the word "unsubscribe" to
aclug-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx. If you want to post to the list, send your
message to aclug-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx.
- [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, John Alexander, 1998/10/27
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Jesse Kaufman, 1998/10/27
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Jesse Kaufman, 1998/10/27
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Nate Bargmann, 1998/10/27
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Bob Deep, 1998/10/28
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, sohel, 1998/10/28
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Leon Do, 1998/10/29
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Jesse Kaufman, 1998/10/29
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Jesse Kaufman, 1998/10/29
- Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze, Jesse Kaufman, 1998/10/28
Re: [aclug-L] 101 things you can do in Linux, but not in Windoze,
Jeremy Johnstone <=
|
|