Checks whether your power supply is still plugged in. If not it will trigger an alarm at maximum volume. Show Sample Output
Get windows version with servicepack and hostname Show Sample Output
This will, for an application that has already been removed but had its configuration left behind, purge that configuration from the system. To test it out first, you can remove the last -y, and it will show you what it will purge without actually doing it. I mean it never hurts to check first, "just in case." ;)
apt-show-versions is a program that shows what packages in the system may be updated and several useful information. The -u option displays a list of upgradeable packages: From: http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/apt-howto/ch-helpers.en.html Show Sample Output
these are some aliases you can use in bashrc to shorten the amount of typing needed to use apt-get, also can be used as reference if you can't remember alot of commands or command parameter variations,etc... Please comment with more apt-get aliases if I missed any, thx Show Sample Output
Useful for removes a package and its depends, for example to remove the gnome desktop environment, also configuration files will be removed, you should be carefully and sure that you want to do this. Show Sample Output
apt-get must be run as root, and it is useless to run it as your own user. So just run it as root. Saves you the "sudo !!" every time you're adding a package.
I put this line in my ~/.bashrc file (which I source via ~/.bash_profile). Now, when I need to install a package, I typed *install* instead of the longer version.
replace apt-get with your distro's package manager. Where 'something' is the package name, and 'specific' is what you're specifically looking for. This helps if your query is 2+ words long. Show Sample Output
The legend in the first column: i = installed p = installable Show Sample Output
Work only with bash and apt-file installed. When it found an unknow command, it will search for a file named "scribus" (in my example), in a folder named bin and then install the corresponding package. After installation, it will run the command. Usefull juste after reinstalling linux and missing lot of package. Show Sample Output
This is the first version of the Sublime Text 2 packaging so there might be bugs.
Gets you the latest of everything, and removes any remaining junk. The "sh -c" part is so that you'll only run a single sh command, so you won't get asked more than once for the password.
this application monitors the apps you use most often and load them into memory with their libraries and other dependencies. So now, when you launch Firefox or Thunderbird or OpenOffice, the display is immediate as on Mac.
Can't remember what that one package was called? Search for it!
It's also a good idea to run
apt-get update
first.
Show Sample Output
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