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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Which UNIX OS is going to give me the most versatility? I Want Total Control Post 302974336 by metacogitans on Saturday 28th of May 2016 10:08:03 AM
Old 05-28-2016
Haha. I started out typing trying to ask this as a serious question though, which OS would be best for tinkering around with but not overly burdening on a user?
I should mention I'm going to be using Unix for the first time, but I'm competent with computers, and the reason I want to use Unix is to because I want to learn more skills and I'm sick of Windows basically telling me I'm not allowed to.

Also, with the having two operating systems thing, how easy is it to use one operating to gut the other operating system to just the command line while keeping perks of that operating system (file types unique to that operating system, etc.)
I'd only want a second operating system if it didn't take up any CPU (as them various operating systems out there seem to like to do, all the time for little or no reason).

Anyways, I appreciate any help or advice, and yes, despite the jokes I am looking for advice, haha.

Also, my strategy with learning the various new commands and any coding or whatever is to just shamelessly speed-use google for the commands or whatever I'm looking for,
I always just google my code whenever I need code for something for whatever reason, and its never taken me more than 25 seconds to find the code I was thinking of

Last edited by metacogitans; 05-28-2016 at 11:14 AM..
 

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synos(1)							Mail Avenger 0.8.3							  synos(1)

NAME
synos - guess operating system from TCP SYN fingerprint SYNOPSIS
synos [--mtu mtu] [--db path] syn-fingerprint DESCRIPTION
synos takes a SYN fingerprint, in the format described for the CLIENT_SYNFP environment variable in the avenger(1) man page, and outputs a guess as to the type of the client operating system. synos makes use of the OpenBSD SYN fingerprint database (which is also repackaged with Mail Avenger). OPTIONS --mtu val Certain operating systems set the initial TCP window size based on the maximum transmission unit, or MTU, of the network. For such operating systems, synos usually checks the window size using both the client's MSS option plus 40 bytes (for TCP and IP headers), or a hard-coded MTU, which defaults to 1,500 bytes. If either value works, the fingerprint is considered to match the operating system. You can change the value 1,500 by specifying this option. A value of 0 tells synos to use only the value derived from the MSS option. --db file Specifies an alternate location for the SYN fingerprint database. FILES
/usr/local/share/pf.os Default location of SYN fingerprint database. SEE ALSO
avenger(1), asmtpd(8) The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>. The OpenBSD home page: <http://www.openbsd.org/>. BUGS
The operating system type is determined by heuristics that are not always reliable. Moreover, not all operating systems can be distinguished. The database may not even contain a client's particular operating system and version. It is not hard to fool synos deliberately by changing TCP socket options or injecting raw packets onto the network. AUTHOR
David Mazieres Mail Avenger 0.8.3 2012-04-05 synos(1)
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