This may be a silly question, but I ask it still. If I have declared a shebang
#!/bin/bash
in the beginning of my_shell_script.sh, so do I always have to invoke this script using bash
[my@comp]$bash my_shell_script.sh
or can I use e.g.
[my@comp]$sh my_shell_script.sh
and my script deter...
I don't think it would help :) Only if it slightly moved backwards in time would it probably be reasonable :)
the problem with both ideas, though, is that for the world to stand still you also need the speed of light to be equal to 0 :)
which would mean that even if you were exempt from the normal flow of time and space, you wouldn't be able to even start reading the first letter of a tutorial on *nix commands :)
unless there were a bubble of sorts where the space-time is normal while everything else stands still
the problem is that then you would definitely die before you learn everything there is to know about *nix as the time will march on for you :)
I suppose the takeaway is that if one wants to learn *nix is that you need to be (A) immortal (B) have a time-machine
Another funny thing is that if one was to be able to reach the speed of light, one would also experience the end of the universe immediately :) Unless one gets into a collision and reduces speed.
@Scratte I think colliding with something at a speed of light and experiencing the end of the universe is pretty much indistinguishable in terms of consequences :)
@OlegValter Probably :) But technically it's not.. one would die before the end of the universe. Which would be a bummer if speed was reached just to see the end of the universe :)
I never got it. They cheated me.. It's just typical! Since it's been acting more and more wonky lately. Unless I did get it, but forgotten about it.. hmm..
well, wave-particle, more precisely, methinks :) But if you are moving with a speed of light, your eyes would not be even capable of registering the input, I suppose, should you somehow survive the acceleration
That is not true.. I go from earth-speed to 50 km/hour relative to 0 on the planet all the time, and either one of those is a fraction of light-speed ;) And if I died, I'm completely ignorant about it.
@OlegValter I think Einstein says something about energy being related to mass and speed of light. But that last bit is constant. I suppose there's another one about inertia that would cover colliding with something going very fast.
@Scratte I've been using Linux actively(-ish) for close to 10 years. Almost 11, in fact. I don't think I know "properly" about it. I can install it, I can use it. I know some of how to administer it. I know how to use some of the common *NIX tools. I'm certainly not anywhere close to an expert. I haven't ever recompiled the kernel and that's even some of the low-hanging "advanced" tasks.
@Scratte No, I'm not. I have some basic Linux administration knowledge but others would make daemons and restart services like it's nothing. They'd know which config to change for which thing and so on and in general how to keep a Linux machine in peak operating condition.
I'm more of a power user. I know how to write some basic scripts to do what I want and know enough to google for the piece of code or config change I probably need.
The biggest problem is to unlearn what you know about Windows. Because Windows trains certain things in a different way which isn't always bad but it's also not applicable for the general case. E.g., in Windows partitions are C:, D:, etc while in Linux you have a single directory tree, not one for each partition.
Yes. Well, it has one per partition but still. It's a difference which can catch you off-guard if you just a Windows power user who tries out Linux for the first time.
I've "used" *nix systems before, but generally never with any privileges. So I've only ever used it to log in, check out a file.. usually deleting some huge log fig that I created by using another system, and log out.
I'll have to try giving my parents my Linux laptop to use for a while. I suspect they'd not really mind. They know enough to get around Windows to do what they need. So, it's not a big change. Probably less of a change than when Windows 7 updated to Windows 10.
@VLAZ I'm not sure my years of being a Windows user is going to be a problem much, because I've only really ever used the Windows graphical user interface. I don't even know how to check out file permissions or any other information using the command line.
The Linux Mint graphical user interface seems like it's not really very difficult. I just point and click and it does what I expect it to do. The only problem is that I got very confused about how to install software on it. And how to maintain that software.
The fact that I couldn't figure out where it installed it, didn't help either. And that it tends to not even warn when the disk is getting full had me a bit miffed with it.
@Scratte Yep. Honestly, the UI part is amazing. The problem is that historically, it wasn't always there. So a lot of guides for "how to do X" just tell you to use the command line. And there are probably multiple GUIs for administering the same thing. They'd do the same operations at the end but you cannot really write a guide that shows a specific GUI.
I'm not even sure the learning curve for Linux is any different than for Windows. If you compare GUI's on both, or if you compare bash versus PowerShell.
But I think most people compare the Windows GUI versus the linux bash.. and then surely linux is hard, because you need to remember all the command names, whereas a GUI gives you options.
Not sure for the learning curve to "power user". But nowadays, ironically, might also be the same because Windows makes all the power options harder with each update.
The Software Centre in Mint is honestly amazing. It's similar to Apple's one (forget the name) and more recently Windows added the marketplace (also forget its name). It's very similar to the appstore on mobile - you have a central location where to search for and install applications.
Some things on any computer just trips me up. When I need to know what the options are, and I don't.. then I get tripped up over it. Like when I want to start a VM, I have 3 options, 1. Normal start, 2. headless mode and 3. detached mode. I have no idea what 2 and 3 even means.
"hardware acceleration" or "3D acceleration" is the same thing. I think it comes from way back to when graphics cards started to show up. Before them everything would be done via the CPU. With a graphics card, you'd be able to offload that processing. And hence the option to "accelerate" by using dedicated hardware for it.
And, to be honest, I don't know what 2D acceleration would be. It's not a term I've seen elsewhere. 3D/hardware acceleration shows up in games and other applications.
But if I were to understand all the options, I'd probably have to spend quite a bit of time researching. I think a lot of users kind of feel like this and just go with the default, because knowing about all of this is just too much.
Toggling "turbo" changed the clock speed of the processor. And it actually underclocked it. The problem is that some software was written to only work at certain clock speed and newer processors were too fast, so certain applications didn't work right. That's where "turbo" came in - it would underclock so you could use that software. And turning the underclock off (which the computer case claimed is "turning turbo on") would actually run the CPU at normal speed.
It's like claiming that a car has "turbo mode" when you disengage the handbreak.
Nice :) Let's hope the one that created the test know what they are doing :D
Hmm.. viewing a tutorial that starts by saying "In order to create shell scripts, you have to know how to use vim, because shell scripts are made in vim" :O
I just think of all the times that name is on an undeleted meta post. And the haunting of the previously suspended user. And 5 long comments in a row on meta posts.. doesn't sit well with me.
"In the case of code-only answers, a few of these do indeed have value".. hmm