4 Vim features to use to improve productivity
Mar01

4 Vim features to use to improve productivity

There’s always Vim. Vim is one of the most popular text editors in use today. This is in large part because it’s available everywhere. When you SSH into another system, you may not find Emacs, Nano, or VSCodium installed, but you can rest assured that Vim is there for you.  read more Powered by...

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Boost your home network with DNS caching on the edge
Mar01

Boost your home network with DNS caching on the edge

If you’ve been hearing a lot of talk about “the cloud” over the past several years, then you may also have heard rumblings about something called “the edge.” read more Powered by...

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Put sticky notes on your Linux KDE desktop
Feb28

Put sticky notes on your Linux KDE desktop

I remember the first time I went to an “un” conference. It was a chaotic event at first, with lots of socializing and sharing of personal projects, but it gradually coalesced into a mostly self-organized technical event. It didn’t happen with magic, but with sticky notes. People wrote ideas for talks and presentations on those colorful adhesive notepads, and stuck them to a common wall, and other people grouped...

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A visual map of a Kubernetes deployment
Feb28

A visual map of a Kubernetes deployment

When you work with containers on Kubernetes, you often group applications together in a pod. When you launch a container or a pod into production, it’s called a deployment. If you’re using Kubernetes daily or even just weekly, you’ve probably done it hundreds of times, but have you thought about what exactly happens when you create a pod or a deployment? read more Powered by...

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Math is fun with this Linux graphing calculator
Feb27

Math is fun with this Linux graphing calculator

If you spent your high school years gazing at TI-80 series calculators but lost track of the device somewhere along the way, then you might sometimes yearn to relive those thrilling years of algebra and calculus. Somebody on the Linux KDE project must have felt that way, too, because one of the KDE Framework libraries, Analitza, provides syntax and widgets to enable you to perform advanced math functions with K apps like the graphing...

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My favorite casual games to play on Linux
Feb26

My favorite casual games to play on Linux

I love a good game that you can immerse yourself in for hours, but I don’t always have the luxury of ignoring daily tasks to disappear into a video game. Still, I do love a fun challenge from time to time, and two of my favourite applications to launch when my computer gets busy doing something that I need to wait on are games from the KDE Games package: KBlocks and Kolf. read more Powered by...

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