toote-old
Toote
toote-old

If you use any GNU/Linux distribution derived from Debian (like Ubuntu) you already have one; it's called "your repository". Andriod uses a similar thing and alternative app stores for iPhones actually use APT infrastructure.

I rather use a text editor on steroids (like kompozer) but that is not KDE. I just use emacs or geany.

Wonderfur article!

Vote: FireFTP

VOTE: emacs .org mode

Vote: Thunar

Vote: Google Reader

If you want to learn how to program there are different motivations to do so and, thus, different languages:

Vote: Pidgin

Despite the fact that I chose the "I can't live without my hosted web space" I could have answered "I'm rolling my own home server" (mostly used for testing) too.

The one and biggest problem of this is that, in order for them to do this, they register the domain themselves so as to provide you with this service.

For Linux users the Free Software equivalent is called gromit. It's available in official Debian and Ubuntu repositories for those insterested.

Having a laptop with 1Gb RAM I had to open like 40 instances of Inkscape to get it to swap. Linux is incredibly good in memory management so this wouldn't be needed.

@Madd_Matt: indeed. For those there trying to build a text-editor-war, emacs has a similar tutorial too.

This extension has an issue with Linux as it does not populate the Groups nor lets you add new ones.

@jarmod: you should really look at the "man" and "info" commands for in-depth usage or help on other commands' usage.

@ChamPro: not that I know of. I've not used synaptic ever (started on apt-get and moved to aptitude on it's early versions) so I don't know if you're refering to latest packages installed or to packages that were installed but you uninstalle. In either case I know of no similar features in aptitude though they may

@Kyle: The description you pasted as softpedia's is not so. It's the description that comes on the package, surely one that was written by the authors of the software or the ones that packed it into Ubuntu/Debian

As some have said already, the fact that spam comes as if they were originated in other TLDs doesn't mean they actually come frome there. It's just that the spammers spoofed that e-mail address to send them to you.

@h2oford: Not correct. I've always been in Argentina and could register perfectly.