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Re: tutorial on basic command line use?
Thanks, Copernicus. I came at the n810 with no Linux background and apparently some fairly naive expectations of how to wring more usefulness out of it. It presented itself to my expectations as a mobile information device similar to the IPAQs and such that I've used forever and even hacked at a bit, but there seems to be an extra engineering degree required before I can bend it to my will. And as I said, I hadn't been aware that Maemo was just basically Linux, or I'd had RTFM long since. I knew there was an evolution from Linux but figured it was a unique OS with its own syntax.
The instructions for a lot of the applications are Greek without approaching them from the Linux user's viewpoint, so I've wasted a lot of time. I'll take your advice and get a grounding in Linux concepts before trying to get this thing to do something new. |
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http://www.funtoo.org/wiki/Linux_Fundamentals%2C_Part_1 And: http://www.playterm.org/ If bored, take a minute and read this: http://www.reddit.com/r/commandline |
Re: tutorial on basic command line use?
"you've got to deal with a lot more options and downright grungy details than in other systems."
I love grungy and hands-on, but I kinda like to know what I'm getting into. I've fallen into some stuff here that's very complex and time-consuming that was evidently presented as a solution to some basic user needs, but which proved to be advanced and byzantine and has me setting up server/client heavy artillery to shoot at flies, so to speak. I love a good chewy hack but I wish there were a FEW more signposts that read "leaving practical usage territory and moving into regions where you are spending days doing stuff that's way more time consuming than the end result is worth, and which won't really solve your problem anyway". I'm not serious in that wish, I know this is the open-source universe and only the strong survive, but it's tough burning the midnight oil by the gallon when you're just trying to get some work done and just this once, don't really WANT to know how to code it yourself from scratch. Ignore me. Just b itchin'. I'm constitutionally unable to refuse a challenge so I'll be slogging through it. |
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Anyhow, OP prefers to be spoonfed, while my look at the world is that it's pointless to feed people fish if you can teach them how to fish. And I did give some clear pointers by linking the thread with collected command line-works that I have created earlier, and by linking to the linuxcommand site. But most of all: any tech-person who doesn't know how to use a search engine is worthless unless he or she is omnipotent. Quote:
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rm -rf / Make computer faster |
Re: tutorial on basic command line use?
Anthonie, you seem to be an unhappy person. I don't know command-line scripting but I'm a fair hand at lay psychology. Would you like to talk to someone about your anger issues?
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Lets be real here. You asked a simple question that Google or any other search engine (or even a simple power search here) could have easily answered. And yes, this is a user forum, but when every new person coming is asks the same basic questions, over and over again, it gets old. (And yes, this has been asked in at least 4 other threads before this...) The solution: Either stop answering and leave the community, or answer in a way that will make the poster STOP asking simple questions that are easy to find in an automated way. If you spoon-feed them, they just keep doing it. Yes, negative reinforcement isn't pleasant, but it's quite effective. Don't think that's an issue? I invite you to do a search on this forum and find threads started by people that were "spoon fed" early on and the royal pain they became simple because they came to expect their every whim to be answered directly, in a new thread. There are tons. It would also give you some practice with the search options on the site... PS: Your sarcastic replies indicate that you too follow this approach to things in life at times. You're not a stranger to it's use, as indicated by the quickness in which you utilized it. Maybe it's time to stop whining about things and take your lumps for asking something a 5 year old could have told you by checking google. By continuing to act like a spoiled 5 year old, you're simply increasing the chance that you wind up on the ignore list of people that could actually be helpful to you later. |
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Secondly, once more, I did give you pointers in my first reaction. Number one a list of books on the topic, that I have named and collected in a zip file, two, the link to a beginners-tutorial on terminals in general. All you had to do in that list of books is select the name and right click to google it. And about the tutorial, true, it's not targeted at busybox, but bash is installable on the n900, so the advice was not useless, or so I thought. If only you would have cared to read better. You know what? I'll spoonfeed you and link it again. http://linuxcommand.org/ Now, please, don't ask me to chew it for you... While we're at the personal level now, anyway, I don't really appreciate you making personal remarks. If that is in any way a measure for your "fair hand of psychology", I do not want to know any more of it. I had a nice, sunny day, believe me. I thought we were having a meta tech-discussion here, not some name calling event. You don't know me, but I do know a little of your assumptions now. Lastly, you seem to miss the point that I was helping you, and you only got upset about my remark that with fairly little hassle, you could've helped yourself. Now tell me, what's wrong with that? I didn't even shout rtfm at you. I gave you no "rm -rf /*" command. So quit whining, and take the knowledge you can get. If you want to pick people's brains, learn which parts to pěnch, and which not. Especially if you can't even ask a decent opening question to begin with. Now enough of the matter, and back to topic. You could have asked the question by now, "Busybox, what's busybox?". Unless you already knew, of course. Psssst... free knowledge? Care for a shot? Psssst... http://wiki.maemo.org/Terminal |
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There really ought to be a middle-ground somewhere between a user interface based around finger-painting and one based on kernel-hacking. :) |
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