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5 New RPG games for Linux

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Oct 11, 2012 12:27 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups
If you love RPG (role-playing game) and you think that there is no future for these games on Linux this post is for you. In this post I’ll show you 4 NEW RPG games, they are all developed from the scratch to run on our beloved Penguin: Questverse, Hale, Dawn, Flare and Arakion. Just a small warning they are projects in the making, so none of them is still ready to be fully played, but if you like this genre just read on, you’ll not be disappointed.

Best Free Content Management Systems 2012

  • linux-news.org; By Thilina Halloluwa (Posted by linuxaria on Oct 7, 2012 1:44 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups
There are a lot of CMSs available both commercial and non commercial. And really you can do a whole lot of things by using a free or non commercial content management system. Take a look at the list below and some of these might be familiar to you (Joomla, WordPress) and some might not. I’ll try give a comprehensive analysis of each and every CMS and It’s up to you to decide which is best. Please don’t forget to give us your opinion about the article and let us know if there are any more free content management systems that you think should be in this list and why?

Installing WINE, Winetricks And Playonlinux On Ubuntu

It may occur that the user needs to run a Windows application or game in Ubuntu and it finds that it cannot install windows programs. Wine is a piece of software that tricks programs to believe they are running in a Windows environment. In addition, this article will explain how to install Winetricks libraries needed to run windows, and PlayOnLinux applications to run games.

Linux is Full with Educational Software

If you are having problems with getting good educational software that is affordable, then think again because Linux is here for you. Okay what a lot of people are not aware of is that there is a lot of wonderful educational software that can be used on the Linux operating system. Of course Linux as you may already know is open source and freely distributed, which means that it is also free. Now here is a list of the different educational software that you can use on the Linux operating system.

Launchpad the first (?) bugtracker used to raise a polemic

Or should I say: “grep -R doesn’t automatically search amazon” ? This is becoming the most popular bug on launchpad, and if you are an Ubuntu user perhaps you have already seen it, for all the others..this is an interesting “bug” on a feature request, this is the original text of the bug posted by the user akeane

Download your favorite video on Linux with xVideoServiceThief

Sometimes I find a long and interesting video on youtube or vimeo about Linux events or presentations, documentaries or movies that I’d like to see in a second moment, maybe when I’m offline or from my TV that has an usb port but no wireless. There are dozen of extensions for Firefox and Chrome to do this kind of task, but today I’ve found an interesting program that can download a video from a long list of website and convert that video into another format: xVideoServiceThief. xVideoServiceThief (a.k.a xVST) is an open source tool for downloading your favourite video clips from a lot of video websites (currently supports 93 websites ) and it also provide you the ability to convert each video in themost popular formats: AVI, MPEG1, MPEG2, WMV, MP4, 3GP, MP3 file formats.

Linux shell, how to use the exec option in find with examples

  • linuxaria.com; By Linuxaria (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 25, 2012 1:09 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In a former article I’ve wrote about the command locate, an useful command to find quickly a file in your computer. An alternative to locate is the command find : GNU find searches the directory tree rooted at each given file name by evaluating the given expression from left to right, according to the rules of precedence, until the outcome is known (the left hand side is false for and operations, true for or), at which point find use the defined action and moves on to the next file name.

find can use many options to compose an expression and as standard action it print in the standard output the file name that match the expression.

How to properly use ‘dd’ on Linux to benchmark the write speed of your disk?

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 21, 2012 3:22 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
This article is written to address sometimes incorrect usage of the “dd” program to measure disk write performance on a VPS by some visitors of the lowendbox.com website. How to use dd to really benchmark your disk and not the cache ?

Parse the options of your bash script like a pro

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 20, 2012 2:17 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Today i was writing a bash script that should manage some input arguments, and so i studied getopt, this is a convenient and elegant way to manage input parameters in a bash script. With it you can define switch (present or not) or parameters with an option, thus making your simple bash script much more professional. Let’s see how to use this command and its options.

Top 10 Games for Linux in 2012

  • linuxaria.com; By Jason Phillips (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 16, 2012 10:06 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups
Techies and gamers seem to always be faced an unfortunate lack of video games available for the Linux operating system. While many techie gamers would prefer to move to a cleaner, leaner Linux environment, the Microsoft world it seems has held the monopoly when it comes to supporting great computer games. While Apple has made great strides toward supporting a wider variety of games, Linux clearly trails behind the big commercial operating systems in game support.

To help alleviate this unfortunate situation Linux aficionados find themselves in, here is a list of the top ten Linux games released or updated in 2012

Vi : Guides for Beginners

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 14, 2012 5:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Vi is an old screen-oriented text editor , the first release of this software is dated back in 1976, originally created for the Unix operating system. What I like of vi is that I can find it in any Linux and Unix system I’ve to work, so once I learnt how to use it I’ve used it everywhere, but there is small problem the software is user-friendly as could be a software wrote in 1976, so many new users find really hard to understand the shortcuts and so after some small test they decide that the software is too hard and return to some graphical editor like gedit, leafpad or perhaps libreoffice.

Surfraw – Surf the web from the CLI

Surfraw stand for: Shell Users’ Revolutionary Front Rage Against the Web and is a funny way to query Search engines and other services on the net from the terminal; well, is funny for people who think that working on the CLI is funny ;) , ah and have I told you that Surfraw was originally written by Julian Assange ? yes that one, so it must be a good tools to get information from the net…

How to install NSD Instead of BIND as name server on Linux to save Memory

  • linuxaria.com; By Linuxaria (Posted by linuxaria on Sep 2, 2012 8:06 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
A name server is a server that hosts a network service for providing responses to queries against a directory service. It maps a human-recognizable identifier to a system-internal, identification or addressing component, the program BIND is the most famous name server available on Linux, it can be used to do everything you need from a name server, but sometimes you need less.

Maybe you have a VPS and you want just to manage your DNS name, for this use you could check NSD a great alternative to BIND, it does not do DNS forwarding, it only serves its own domains. but this could be enough for your project.

Understanding the Top command on Linux

  • linuxaria.com; By AlexioBash (Posted by linuxaria on Aug 29, 2012 11:20 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Know what is happening in “real time” on your systems is in my opinion the basis to use and optimize your OS. On ArchLinux or better on GNU/Linux in general the top command can help us, this is a very useful system monitor that is really easy to use, and that can also allows us to understand why our OS suffers and which process use most resources. The command to be run on the terminal is:

$ top

Let’s see now every single row of this output to explain all the information found within the screen.

3 Tower defense games for Linux

This is a genre I like and usually I play this kind of games in their flash/java online version but there are some nice Tower Defense games that can be downloaded and installed on Linux systems, today I’ll present you 3 of my favorites: Creeptd, Target Defense and Revenge of the Titans

Linux Forums Etiquette

  • Linuxaria.com; By Megatotoro (Posted by linuxaria on Aug 22, 2012 7:25 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
This is a really good article on etiquette to use on Linux forums, for everyone that wish to post on them, the original article was written by Megatotoro and published on http://linuxmigrante.blogspot.it As a relatively new migrant to Tuxland, I’ve come to learn that Linux forums are a rich source of advice, useful information and help. They have also let me find wonderful people. Some of them are very knowledgeable of the penguin’s intricacies and others are not so seasoned, but their will to help is indeed contagious. However, some people have had negative experiences when entering a Linux forum and asking for help. These disgruntled new migrants get a bitter flavor of Linux and a number of them leave and never return.

Cacti Makes Device Monitoring Simple

  • linuxaria.com; By Linuxaria (Posted by linuxaria on Aug 22, 2012 1:26 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Every organization must monitor its infrastructure’s uptime and performance. While the popular Nagios application is a good general-purpose monitoring program that you can extend with plugins to handle just about any task, you may do even better by employing Cacti as a graphical front end to RRDTool‘s data logging and graphing functionality. Cacti was developed specifically to monitor and collect performance information, while Nagios is more oriented toward state changes, such as noting whether a daemon is up or down.

RRDTool stores all of the necessary information to create graphs and populate them with data in a MySQL database. Cacti provides templates to gather and show information such as system load (CPU, RAM, disks), users connected, MySQL load, and Apache load, all of which can affect the performance of your site.

How to query a DNS server from Linux with DIG, by examples

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Aug 18, 2012 2:56 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In the past I’ve published articles on how to do a benchmark with namebench to see what’s the fastest DNS server for you and how to crypt your DNS traffic if you use Opendns but I’ve never done a comprehensive guide of the command dig, probably the best command you can have on the command line to query a DNS server, so today I want to show you the basic usage of this command and some trick, using examples that you can re-use for your goals.

Easily manage your PPA in Ubuntu with Y PPA Manager

Ubuntu software repository is one of the bigger, and this means that you can easily install a lot of software with the Ubuntu Software Center or from the command line with a simple sudo apt-get install softwarename, but sometimes you want a software that is not present or perhaps a newer release of the one available in the main repository, in this cases you can use a PPA.

A Personal Package Archive (PPA) is a special software repository for uploading source packages to be built and published as an APT repository by Launchpad or a similar application, once is published anyone can use it and install software from there, just keep in mind that once that you add a PPA you “trust” the software published from that source, so add PPA only when really needed and only from known and safe sources.

Y PPA Manager is a software that can help you in manage,add,remove and search easily PPA in your Ubuntu.

7 hidden features of bash

  • Linuxaria.com (Posted by linuxaria on Aug 10, 2012 5:01 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Today I want to share with you some of my favorite features of bash, I called them hidden because I’ve discovered that a lot of people don’t know or don’t use them, but to be honest they are not so hidden after all, they are in the man page of bash, but how many of us have read it all ?

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