I use awk all the time, nothing too fancy, but when you need to pull out elements of text it's usually way easier than using cut.
awk {' print $3 '} will pull the third element based on your IFS variable (internal field separater, default is whitespace)
awk {' print $NF '} gets you the last element, and awk {' print $(NF-1) '} gets you one element from the last, and so on.
Basic usage but so fast and easy for so many everyday command line things.
Wow! That's amazing, let me try ************* Did that show up for you?
What would you use it for? Honest question.
I can't see using it for work. Writing a long email with an onscreen keyboard is not realistic.
It doesn't really play games.
So it's for watching YouTube on your face? I have a TV and couch that do that, and a phone in my pocket 24/7 that will do that. I honestly can't figure out the use case.
What's a good solution for a remote control and "TV like" interface for browsing accessing things? I really just want a good YouTube and jellyfin interface with a normal remote.
I ran it as my primary distro on my main machine for a while way back when. I don't recommend that.
What I do recommend is going though the entire process even if it's just in a VM. It's incredibly educational and will teach you a ton about Linux and OS construction in general. I used to recommend it to everyone I was teaching linux/ Unix too and all the students who actually went through it and completed it now have successful IT careers. 100% an incredibly valuable teaching resource, you will look at all OS's with new eyes after you've built one bit by bit from source by hand.
Ok cool, if I may take a swing at summarizing what you said?
What you are really talking about are the potential applications of AR (Augmented Reality), which I will totally agree with, that is a future state that is coming, unfortunately those apps mostly don't exist for the consumer space yet, but they will.
The apple headset being the first commercially available headset that does AR well.
I really like AppImage, but so far my experiences with flatpak have all been pretty terrible.
So... did he die?
You mean Twitter.
Thank you very much for your thoughtful and detailed replies, it is much appreciated. This headset finally makes some kind of sense for what it is.
Hell yes, see you at K sky.
Well there's your problem right there.
Please, not in front of everyone.
LLMs don't make decisions or understand things at all, they just regurgitate text in a human like manner.
I say this as someone who sees a lot of potential in the technology, though, but like this, or like most people are claiming we can use them.
Thank you for not being the rare rational outlook on AI and buying into the AI fear mongering, or the AI hype train.
AI is the new auto hammer, it can do things faster and sometimes better. Why you can build a house faster and with less effort! Or you can bash someone's skull in faster and with less effort! It's just a new tool we can use, for better or for worse, like every other new tool before it.
I like you.
Just another beautiful day in the neighborhood.
I assume you are using an orange pi successfully? Which version exactly?
Check out openconnect to connect to anyconnect VPNs
I prefer FreeLager myself.
Soon.
I have an old laptop hooked up my tv already, but using the Bluetooth keyboard and TouchPad to navigate traditional desktop focused applications is such a cumbersome activity that both my husband and I never bother to use it, we just grab the remote and use the default tv interface.
I was specifically asking about the remote control and more tv- like interface software. I've never managed to get kodi to be anything good, not sure what I'm missing with that but it's always super clunky and bad to use.
Someone else suggested plasma big screen, I'm going to install and try and get that configured up today, see how it goes.
Android TV is what I'm trying to escape 😀
Thanks for the suggestions, I guess I'll look around for a pre-configured Kodi setup, people say that can be good.
I did give plasma bigscreen a try, but overall it seems to be not working well on straight x86 hardware, it's intended for ARM devices mostly it seems.
This is a great take on a very subtle moment with an underappreciated character.