Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-19 Thread Ade Malsasa Akbar
Hello jaisgossman, you are welcome. I am really glad to hear your opinion!


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-19 Thread jaisgossman
This a great list!  I only have clicked computerhope thus far, but by the  
titles, I can see these will be very helpful.

Thank you


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-06 Thread Ade Malsasa Akbar
> I'm looking for a catch-all terminology resource that is not necessarily 
> specific to Trisquel, but would fit well into a Trisquel auto-didact's 
> literature.

Hello jaisgossman!

There are some computer terminology resources I love and find out:
- http://foldoc.org (once recommended by The GNU Project's website)
- http://linfo.org
- https://www.computerhope.com/jargon.htm
- https://techterms.com
- http://www.osdata.com/kind/history.htm
- https://winworldpc.com/library/operating-systems
- https://www.operating-system.org

I understand your first email as I am also an auto-didact person. I
hope these links useful for you and please tell me what do you think
about them. Thank you.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-06 Thread jaisgossman
Goals are great.  My problem is I just end up writing poetry while I'm trying  
to learn.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-02 Thread ewindes
Right. These forums and the IRC channels are really helpful. You can do  
everything on Parabola that you can do on Trisquel. The main difference is  
after you install it, you literally just have a terminal. So you have to do  
everything "by hand" like creating user, installing your DE if you want that,  
setting up the internet connection (there's no network manager installed at  
the beginning). So if you use some kind of program to get the RSS feeds, you  
just install that and you can use it just like on Trisquel. I mean they are  
both Linux afterall so they are not really *that* different in terms of how  
you use them day to day. The Parabola IRC chat is also really really  
friendly. It's way more welcoming than the Arch community imo. Nonetheless  
you should expect it to be pretty time consuming at first.


I'm a PhD student and I don't have a  whole lot of free time. Sometimes you  
have to pick your battles. There are a lot of things I would love to try:  
learning to use VIM, learning Haskell, learning to use a different window  
manager like Xmonad or something like that, and I'm even really interested in  
learning about actually building circuits and things like that. For example,  
there are these tiny computers, Sony vaio something or other, and they are  
really cute and have a 3g modem. The problem is they were built in like  
2009/2010 and they have terrible battery life. But I don't get why we can't  
just wire in a modern cell phone battery that has like twice the capacity.  
I'd like to get into experimenting with things like that.


But I put it on hold because I have to finish my degree. I guess what I'm  
trying to say is, it helps to have a goal in mind when you're trying to learn  
something. For me it was trying to get rid of non free software in my life  
entirely because, among other things, it's distracting, and I was trying to  
make using my computer sort of like an extension of my brain. I think I have  
gotten really close actually. But a big part of that is making things  
automatic and convenient in ways specific to me and how I use my computer. 


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-02 Thread jaisgossman
Great sources.  Here's a thought.  I have encountered RSS as a way to take in  
information, a lot at a time and in a focused way, but I don't have the skill  
set to begin implementing this as a practice.  For instance, I learn the most  
from these forums, and everything else on the internet seems to generally  
just be a distraction.  rinakra, you are right, we often seem to learn the  
most after going against the wise advice and breaking some stuff on our  
system (facebook's adage "move fast and break things" didn't come out of thin  
air; I just want to be considerate and only implicate myself).


I will try Parabola.  So, the question is, can I use RSS feeds on Parabola?


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-02 Thread jason

"the directory structure of Trisquel"

Specifically for that, see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_Hierarchy_Standard


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-02 Thread ewindes
Yeah it would be easier to help if we knew what you're trying to learn in the  
first place.


My experience with Linux has mainly revolved around just kind of configuring  
my system. For example, I set up i3wm to be totally usable with just a  
touchscreen tablet or something like that. There was a huge learning curve.  
Just today I wanted to write a script to toggle my touchscreen on and off.  
It's really simple but I had to learn how to write a small program and it  
actually got really involved!


One time, I tried to make lightdm let me login as "root" so I didn't have to  
type my password for things... I edited one file and messed everything up so  
bad that I couldn't even open a TTY terminal... I had to learn to "chroot"  
into my system from a live USB and fix things.


If I just excepted Trisquel as it is and used the MATE desktop and didn't try  
to change everything none of these things would have happened but until you  
have a reason to learn about these various different topics, you kind of just  
don't. Reading about it all in some book woudl probably be incredibly dry.


In retrospect somethings that would have helped were learning basic Python  
coding language and the basics of Bash. Like how to create, edit, copy files,  
how "grep" works, what "awk" means... etc. There are all kinds of  
textbooks/pdf files on the internet for that kind of thing but I would never  
remember anything I read unless I applied it. And I don't know when I would  
apply it until I break something. Personally I never use emacs. I plan to  
start using vim to edit Latex files when I get around to it.


Another weird thing: The internet and the few people I know who use linux irl  
told me I should *not* use Parabola as a beginner. I ended up installing it  
on my other laptop. It took two days and I literally cried while doing it but  
that's when I really learned the most.


I got a new computer and didn't want to bother with the long installation  
process so that's how I started using Trisquel. Surprisingly enough, I have  
found Trisquel far more difficult to understand than Parabola. It is actually  
way more complicated mostly, it seems, due to the presence of a full desktop  
environment (MATE). On my Parabola installation I knew exactly where  
everything was and why it was all there and how my wifi and files and  
literally every other program worked. So anyway I actually highly suggest  
isntalling Arch/Parabola at least once because I think you learn a lot and it  
makes dealing with Trisquel easier. 


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-01 Thread trisquellist
I thought you were looking for a dictionary explaining the meaning of  
computing terms, but "something like" a list of shortcuts sounds very  
different.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2020-01-01 Thread jaisgossman
perhaps something specific I saw a while ago was a cheat card that gave  
shortcuts for using emacs (I think?).  maybe something like this, that can  
help me understand the directory structure of Trisquel.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2019-12-15 Thread strypey

Is this the kind of thing you're looking for jaisgossman?
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html


[Trisquel-users] Trisquel/General Computing Terminology Resource

2019-12-14 Thread jaisgossman
I'm looking for a catch-all terminology resource that is not necessarily  
specific to Trisquel, but would fit well into a Trisquel auto-didact's  
literature.  I am learning things, but I have often found myself further  
ahead than I should be, leading to problems and frustrations that set me back  
in terms of motivation.  I would like to be more methodical in my quest.  Any  
and all resources welcome.