How to make your own GNOME terminals
These days, in Linux, we must almost never access the raw command line — a bare prompt in a text-only environment. We have terminal emulators; that is, special windows that host both the line(s) in which you type commands, and the hidden interpreter (shell) that actually executes them. These emulators can be customized and preconfigured to speed up your work in several ways. Here I’ll show you how to do it with the GNOME terminal, the default one in many Gnu/Linux distributions targeting novice users.
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