Gitlab is quite good and used by a lot of open source developers.
Hi, I’m Shauna! I’m a 37 year old transgender woman from Ontario, Canada. I’m also a Linux enthusiast, and a Web Developer by trade. Huge Star Trek fan, huge Soulsborne fan, and all-around huge nerd.
Gitlab is quite good and used by a lot of open source developers.
But then why is it available in my command line terminal as a command that I can use? Like when I type do
and then hit TAB
twice to list commands that match the output is do done dofsck etc...
but when I just enter do
in the command line or do --help
I get bash: syntax error near unexpected token 'do'
I would assume that since I can run sudo apt update
that I could also run do apt update
where it would run it not as a super user. I know just apt update
would do that too, but I’m just so curious if it’s possible to use do
as a user-level sudo
or what else it might be able to do.
Serious question, what exactly does do
do? In my terminal I can see that do is a command but all I get is bash: syntax error near unexpected token
do’and obviously with such a common name it's hard to find information on google about what
do` actually does.
There is HDMI CEC which allows a single remote control to control all of your devices, so it must be possible for devices connected by HDMI to receive a signal back from the TV.
We’re not enemies as soon as a Windows user walks in. Or… Uuuugh… A Mac user.
I think upgrading the RAM as you mentioned is going to make a big difference. While the physical RAM might be soldered to the motherboard, you could buy a fairly cheap SD card or USB and set the system up to use that as virtual memory. It won’t be as fast as actual RAM but it might help and large SD cards are honestly really cheap these days.