today's howtos

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How to Add and Manage Identities in Thunderbird
As soon as you set up a Thunderbird email account, you can send the email from a different email address or alias. Thunderbird defines them as “identities,” which the recipients see as your various name-associations. This capability of Thunderbird is quite similar to a Gmail feature called “Send mail as,” which uses your primary Gmail account to send messages from your other email addresses.
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Install NVIDIA Driver 460.39 In Ubuntu / Linux Mint Via PPA | Tips On UNIX
This tutorial will be helpful for beginners to install NVIDIA Driver 460.39 in Ubuntu 20.04, Ubuntu 20.10, Ubuntu 18.04, and Linux Mint.
Nvidia released a new production branch version 460.39 for the Unix systems which includes FreeBSD, Solaris, and GNU/Linux.
The latest version of Nvidia driver 460.39 comes with support to the new GPUs except for Solaris and a few bug fixes.
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ffmpeg – convert mkv to mp4
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GNU Linux (Debian 10) – run gui program as root (without sudo) – E233: cannot open display
some gui programs like gparted (very nice harddisk partitioning program) won’t start as root.
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How to Install Jupyter Notebook on Centos 8 and Use Vim In It
First, update the CentOS 8 package repository cache with the following command.
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SeaMonkey 2.53.6 compiled for aarch64 Pi4
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IBM/Red Hat: Kafka Monthly Digest, Red Hat Upselling, and Cockpit 239
| LibreOffice 7.1.1 Community available for download
LibreOffice 7.1.1 Community, the first minor release of the LibreOffice 7.1 family, targeted at technology enthusiasts and power users, is available for download from https://www.libreoffice.org/download/. LibreOffice 7.1.1 includes over 90 bug fixes and improvements to document compatibility.
For enterprise-class deployments, TDF strongly recommends the LibreOffice Enterprise family of applications from ecosystem partners, with long-term support options, professional assistance, custom features and Service Level Agreements: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/libreoffice-in-business/.
LibreOffice Community and the LibreOffice Enterprise family of products are based on the LibreOffice Technology platform, the result of years of development efforts with the objective of providing a state of the art office suite not only for the desktop but also for mobile and the cloud.
Products based on LibreOffice Technology are available for major desktop operating systems (Windows, macOS, Linux and Chrome OS), mobile platforms (Android and iOS) and the cloud. They may have a different name, according to each company brand strategy, but they share the same LibreOffice unique advantages, robustness and flexibility.
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croc Is A Tool For Resumable, Encrypted File And Folder Transfers Between Computers (Command Line)
croc is a free and open source command line tool for secure file transfers between computers. It uses relay-assisted peer-to-peer transactions and end-to-end encryption via password-authenticated key exchange. The program is written in Go and is available for Microsoft Windows, macOS, Linux and *BSD.
The idea behind croc is being able to transfer files and folders between cross-platform computers securely, fast and easy. With support for resumable, peer-to-peer transfers. As a bonus feature, croc is also able to securely transfer a short text or URL directly.
The data transfer is done using a relay, either using raw TCP sockets or websockets. When the sender and the receiver are on the same LAN, croc uses a local relay, otherwise a public relay is used. Thanks to this, croc can send files between computers in the same LAN, or over the Internet, without having port-forwarding enabled.
The data going through the relay is encrypted using a PAKE-generated session key. For this, croc uses code phrases, a combination of three random words. By default, a code phrase can only be used once between two parties, so an attacker would have a chance of less than 1 in 4 billion to guess the code phrase correctly to steal the data.
| Linux distributions: All the talent and hard work that goes into building a good one
I regularly read the Linux Mint Blog, not only because it is useful to keep up with what is happening with the Linux Mint distribution but also because it occasionally gives very interesting insights into the development and maintenance of a Linux distribution in general, and the Linux Mint distribution(s) in particular.
To be honest, I was disappointed some years ago when Clem (Clement Lefebvre) discontinued his Segfault blog, because it always contained good technical information and interesting insights.
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