Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? The most common passwords this year, 2018. Post 303027459 by bakunin on Sunday 16th of December 2018 04:30:48 AM
Old 12-16-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
Could you kindly explain your thoughts as to why I would have any feelings at all about what editors other people use when they work or write a post?

LOL
Well, i know you put in a lot of work to make this site better and enhance its usability for all. I really, really appreciate that (at this point a big THANK YOU is in order) but it is a "lost cause" on me personally. I am really, truly "old-school" to the bone:

- my mobile phone is not a smart phone
- my only editor is vi
- my "desktop" is mwm and no real desktop at all
- my web browser has tabs disabled and all icons removed (i like text-based GUIs, because it is easier for me to read "options" or "file" than to discern what "red thingie with green kringlet" means)

i could go on, but i think you know what i am getting at.

bakunin
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

passwords

Dear all, I need to automate/script a user password change process. I'm helpless cannot use expect since it's not installed and cannot install it either. Do i have an alternative. I can store the password in a file and that would be the password that would be set to all the users. If not i don't... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: earlysame55
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

When did UNIX start using encrypted passwords, and not displaying passwords when you type them in?

I've been using various versions of UNIX and Linux since 1993, and I've never run across one that showed your password as you type it in when you log in, or one that stored passwords in plain text rather than encrypted. I'm writing a script for work for a security audit, and two of the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Anne Neville
5 Replies

3. What is on Your Mind?

Football / Soccer World Cup 2018 draw.

What is on Your Mind? 2018 FIFA World Cup - Wikipedia I'm hoping that England are drawn into positions B2, D3, G3 or G4 so that all their games will be outside usual UK office hours and people will not desert the office with mystery illnesses to watch the games. Expecting failure, so I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rbatte1
1 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

Holiday Thoughts for the End of 2018

Happy Holidays. Here are my randoms thought at the end of 2018 in no particular order. You Are Truly Blessed IT people are lucky. We get to use our brains extensively to solve complex and challenging computer-technology related problems. This is very good for our brains. Programming,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
2 Replies
PROFILE-MANAGER(1)					      General Commands Manual						PROFILE-MANAGER(1)

NAME
profile-manager - starts the gui for configuring the metadata used by desktop-profiles SYNOPSIS
profile-manager DESCRIPTION
The desktop profiles package needs metadata about the available profiles in order to decide when to activate which profiles. This metadata is contained in the .listing files placed in the /etc/desktop-profiles directory. This convenience script will start a graphical interface for configuring that metadata. The gui is a kommander script, so you need to have the kommander package installed for the gui to work (the script will check if the neces- sary prerequisites are present, and tell you what's missing if necessary). OPTIONS
There are no options FILES
/etc/desktop-profiles/*.listing - Files containing the metadata about installed profiles BUGS
The gui currently barks at profile metadata containing a single quote in the description. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Bart Cornelis <cobaco@skolelinux.no>. SEE ALSO
desktop-profiles(7), list-desktop-profiles(1), update-profile-cache(1) desktop-profiles May 07, 2005 PROFILE-MANAGER(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:49 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy