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= Testo inglese = | |
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= Traduzione italiana = Questo è il mio desktop. Ho un notebook, un Toshiba Equium a100-055 comprato nel 2007. Processore Intel Core 2 Duo T5200, con 1 GB di RAM e un HDD da 120 GB. |
Letters |
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Utilizzo Ubuntu dalla versione 9.04 e ora ho installato Ubuntu 10.04 con Compiz e Conky. Sono un grande fan di 2001: Odissea nello spazio e ho riprodotto un sistema simile a HAL9000. Ho impostato Conky per somigliare ai monitor del sistema del film. Mi piace molto la semplicità, ma anche avere il sistema sotto controllo. | Where is FOSS? |
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Matteo Masini | Apps for sale everywhere. Google Play, Apple's App Store, and now Ubuntu Software Centre. Now, I have nothing against paying for a very good application, and I also realize that it takes a lot of time and effort to create an application. But, there are a lot of applications out there that shouldn't cost a cent. Now just look at Ubuntu Software Centre and the number of applications that aren't free that have sprung up over the last year. My challenge to the developers out there who want to create great programs for Ubuntu and the soon-to-be Ubuntu phone is: Keep it free and Keep it open. Then people will want to use Ubuntu over other devices. Chris Love |
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In questo desktop la mia distribuzione è Ubuntu 10.10 (con Gnome). Ho utilizzato screenlet e avant window navigator. Qui ho usato il tema Shiki-wise e il tema di icone Elementary; entrambi si trovano nel repository di Ubuntu. | Cron + GUI |
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Le specifiche del mio portatile sono: - Modello: Toshiba Satellite-L510 - CPU: Intel Centrino 2.1 GHz - RAM: 2 GB - Scheda Grafica: ATI HD Mobility Raedon 4530, 1 GB - HDD: 320 GB |
I read Jeremy Boden's interesting article on cron, a useful and sometimes under-appreciated tool. For those who prefer to use GUI editors rather than vi or nano, readers may be interested to know how to do this. As Jeremy already wrote, the way to edit cron is: |
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Mohammad Zunayed Hassan | crontab -e However, you can change the default editor to a GUI one as follows: VISUAL=gedit crontab -e You can replace gedit with leafpad, or whatever your preferred editor is. Or, you can set VISUAL in your .bashrc file to make this permanent and avoid having to type it each time. The two find commands as used can also be simplified to avoid using the -exec option, as follows. find ~/.thumbnails -type f -atime +7 -delete find ~/.thumbnails -type f -atime +7 -ls | more You could substitute -print for -ls in the second command – depending on how you prefer the output. In certain cases, the commands as shown are safer than the original, although this is unlikely to happen in the thumbnails folder. Paddy Landau |
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Sono un nuovo arrivato come utilizzatore di Ubuntu, perciò, il 10 ottobre ho installato la versione 10.10 sul mio portatile (Thinkpad). Ogni cosa sembra essere perfetta finora. Tramite Ubuntu software center ho aggiunto docky al mio desktop, così da poter avviare velocemente le applicazioni – quali qq, Firefox, Rhythmbox e, naturalmente, il software center, ecc. Allo stesso tempo, ho spostato la barra dei processi in alto. Questo dovrebbe renderlo più simile a MAC-OS. | SolydXK |
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Prima di Ubuntu, ho usato spesso Windows. Adesso ho tre sistemi (XP, Win7 e Ubuntu) sul mio computer. Non ho utilizzato Win 7 per molto tempo, ma non posso abbandonare completamente XP ancora. La configurazione del mio computer è: CPU T4400, scheda grafica Intel graph 4 series, 1 GB RAM, 250 GB hard disk, display da 14’’. La videocamera e il microfono integrati funzionano benissimo entrambi. | I saw your facebook post the other day, and downloaded SolydK to try it out. |
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Logan | I am not a Linux guru, but I do like trying new Distros. I have been using various Linux distros exclusively for the last 3 years (hint, NO Windows). I think Solyd is a great distro. I am using the live version on my home-built desktop, after trying it out on my Toshiba laptop (which worked great). I like it so much I planned to install it alongside my Zorin 6, which has not impressed me much. Zorin 6 doesn't seem that much different from version 5, so I was looking for something new. One thing that really appeals to me is the fact that, when I hover over a file, I get a lot more info than any Ubuntu version I've tried. I have six old Windows virus infected hard drives that have music I want to keep. I used the recovery disk to get what ended up being recovered files with not much info on them. A different and much, much better info with Solyd. I read today that, on March 1st, SolydK is coming out with another version. I will happily use the live version till March 1st at which time Ill install it on my hard drive next to Zorin 6, and, hopefully, replace it. I'm not badmouthing any Ubuntu distro, but am hoping the best for SolydXK. Dennis McClellan Ronnie says: Check next month’s FCM for a full review of SolydXK from long-time reviewer Art. Table of Contents I have been reading this magazine for many years now and I keep older issues on my laptop for reference. But...sometimes, I want to read again an article about something specific I remember having read in a former issue. Finding the article again in my collection of FCM issue is... very tedious and time consuming! That is why I had this idea: how about building a compilation of all articles published, let's say on a yearly basis. The list could be sorted out by themes, making it easy to find the specific FCM issue containing that article. Gilles Tournier Ronnie says: Good idea, but we beat you to it. At the top of the FCM site is a button marked 'Table of Contents' which links to: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuMagazine/FullIssueIndex. It's not bang up-to-date, but it's close! Gord has also just released a Google Docs file which lists all articles and even questions answered since the beginning of (Full Circle) time: http://goo.gl/C6JiI. |
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Utilizzo Linux solamente dal 1999 e leggo Full Circle dal numero 26, sebbene avessi anche scaricato qualche precedente uscita. Qualche mese fa ho fatto un aggiornamento online a Ubuntu 10.04 dal 9.10 sul mio portatile e recentemente ho installato l’interfaccia Ubuntu netbook. Prima dell’interfaccia Ubuntu netbook, c’era solo cairo-dock in fondo al mio desktop. Questo c’è ancora e sullo sfondo c’è la mia Audi rossa preferita. Le icone sono Azenis, il bordo delle finestre è Clearlooks e i controlli sono Crux. Le specifiche del mio notebook: HP Compaq CQ40 Intel pentium dual core T4200 @2.0GHz 2GB RAM Lucid Lynx con kernel 2.6.32-25-generic Abhishek Mathur == Note alla traduzione == = Revisione = Questo è il mio desktop. Ho un notebook Toshiba Equium a100-055 comprato nel 2007. Processore Intel Core 2 Duo T5200, con 1 GB di RAM e un HDD da 120 GB. Utilizzo Ubuntu dalla versione 9.04 e ora ho installato Ubuntu 10.04 con Compiz e Conky. Sono un grande fan di '2001: Odissea nello spazio' e ho riprodotto un sistema simile ad HAL9000. Ho impostato Conky per somigliare ai monitor del sistema del film. Mi piace molto la semplicità, ma anche avere il sistema sotto controllo. Matteo Masini |
= Traduzione italiana = |
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In questo desktop la mia distribuzione è Ubuntu 10.10 (con Gnome). Ho utilizzato screenlet e avant window navigator. Qui ho usato il tema Shiki-wise ed Elementary come tema icone; entrambi reperibili nei repository di Ubuntu. Le specifiche del mio portatile sono: *Modello: Toshiba Satellite-L510 *CPU: Intel Centrino 2.1 GHz *RAM: 2 GB *Scheda Grafica: ATI HD Mobility Raedon 4530, 1 GB *HDD: 320 GB Mohammad Zunayed Hassan Come utente Ubuntu sono una matricola, perciò, lo scorso 10 Ottobre, ho installato la versione 10.10 sul mio portatile (Thinkpad). Ogni cosa sembra andare perfettamente finora. Ho aggiunto docky al mio desktop usando Ubuntu Software Center, così da poter lanciare velocemente le applicazioni – qq, Firefox, Rhythmbox e, naturalmente, software center, ecc. Allo stesso tempo, ho spostato la barra dei processi in alto. Questo dovrebbe renderla più simile a MAC-OS. Prima di Ubuntu, ho usato spesso Windows. Adesso ho tre sistemi (XP, Win7 e Ubuntu) sul mio computer. Non ho utilizzato Win 7 per molto tempo, ma ancora non riesco ad abbandonare XP del tutto. La configurazione del mio computer è: CPU T4400, scheda grafica Intel graph 4 series, 1 GB RAM, 250 GB hard disk, display da 14’’. La videocamera e il microfono integrati funzionano benissimo entrambi. Logan Utilizzo Linux solamente dal 1999 e leggo Full Circle dal numero 26, sebbene avessi scaricato anche qualche numero precedente. Qualche mese fa ho fatto un aggiornamento online a Ubuntu 10.04 dal 9.10 sul mio portatile e recentemente ho installato l’interfaccia Ubuntu netbook. Prima dell’interfaccia Ubuntu netbook, cairo-dock era l'unico oggetto nella parte bassa del mio desktop... ed è ancora lì con la mia Audi rossa preferita come sfondo. Le icone sono Azenis, il bordo delle finestre è Clearlooks e i controlli sono Crux. Le specifiche del mio notebook: *HP Compaq CQ40 |
== Note alla traduzione == |
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*Intel pentium dual core T4200 @2.0GHz | = Revisione = |
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*2GB RAM | == Note alla revisione == |
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*Lucid Lynx con kernel 2.6.32-25-generic Abhishek Mathur == Note alla revisione == |
|
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Testo inglese
Letters
Where is FOSS?
Apps for sale everywhere. Google Play, Apple's App Store, and now Ubuntu Software Centre. Now, I have nothing against paying for a very good application, and I also realize that it takes a lot of time and effort to create an application. But, there are a lot of applications out there that shouldn't cost a cent. Now just look at Ubuntu Software Centre and the number of applications that aren't free that have sprung up over the last year. My challenge to the developers out there who want to create great programs for Ubuntu and the soon-to-be Ubuntu phone is: Keep it free and Keep it open. Then people will want to use Ubuntu over other devices.
Chris Love
Cron + GUI
I read Jeremy Boden's interesting article on cron, a useful and sometimes under-appreciated tool. For those who prefer to use GUI editors rather than vi or nano, readers may be interested to know how to do this. As Jeremy already wrote, the way to edit cron is:
crontab -e
However, you can change the default editor to a GUI one as follows:
VISUAL=gedit crontab -e
You can replace gedit with leafpad, or whatever your preferred editor is. Or, you can set VISUAL in your .bashrc file to make this permanent and avoid having to type it each time.
The two find commands as used can also be simplified to avoid using the -exec option, as follows.
find ~/.thumbnails -type f -atime +7 -delete find ~/.thumbnails -type f -atime +7 -ls | more
You could substitute -print for -ls in the second command – depending on how you prefer the output. In certain cases, the commands as shown are safer than the original, although this is unlikely to happen in the thumbnails folder.
Paddy Landau
SolydXK
I saw your facebook post the other day, and downloaded SolydK to try it out.
I am not a Linux guru, but I do like trying new Distros. I have been using various Linux distros exclusively for the last 3 years (hint, NO Windows). I think Solyd is a great distro. I am using the live version on my home-built desktop, after trying it out on my Toshiba laptop (which worked great).
I like it so much I planned to install it alongside my Zorin 6, which has not impressed me much. Zorin 6 doesn't seem that much different from version 5, so I was looking for something new.
One thing that really appeals to me is the fact that, when I hover over a file, I get a lot more info than any Ubuntu version I've tried.
I have six old Windows virus infected hard drives that have music I want to keep. I used the recovery disk to get what ended up being recovered files with not much info on them. A different and much, much better info with Solyd.
I read today that, on March 1st, SolydK is coming out with another version. I will happily use the live version till March 1st at which time Ill install it on my hard drive next to Zorin 6, and, hopefully, replace it. I'm not badmouthing any Ubuntu distro, but am hoping the best for SolydXK.
Dennis McClellan
Ronnie says: Check next month’s FCM for a full review of SolydXK from long-time reviewer Art.
Table of Contents
I have been reading this magazine for many years now and I keep older issues on my laptop for reference. But...sometimes, I want to read again an article about something specific I remember having read in a former issue. Finding the article again in my collection of FCM issue is... very tedious and time consuming!
That is why I had this idea: how about building a compilation of all articles published, let's say on a yearly basis. The list could be sorted out by themes, making it easy to find the specific FCM issue containing that article.
Gilles Tournier
Ronnie says: Good idea, but we beat you to it. At the top of the FCM site is a button marked 'Table of Contents' which links to: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuMagazine/FullIssueIndex. It's not bang up-to-date, but it's close! Gord has also just released a Google Docs file which lists all articles and even questions answered since the beginning of (Full Circle) time: http://goo.gl/C6JiI.
Traduzione italiana
Note alla traduzione
Revisione
Note alla revisione