Software: Qikipedia, Code Editors, Cutelyst, Tor, Cockpit, Chrome
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Qikipedia – A Browser Extension To Display Wikipedia Summary
A while ago, we have written a guide that described how to display the summary of any Wikipedia article in Terminal using a command line utility named “Wikit”. Using this utility, we can get the wikipedia summary of the given text right from the terminal window. Today, we are going to discuss about a similar utility named “Qikipedia”. It is a google browser extension that allows you to highlight text from any website, and shows you a summary of the corresponding Wikipedia article, if one exists.
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6 Best Vi/Vim-Inspired Code Editors for Linux
Vim (short for Vi Improved) is a free, open source, powerful, highly configurable and extensible text editor. It has a large and dedicated community of users that are constantly creating useful new scripts and updates to the text editor. Vim supports hundreds of programming languages and file formats making it one of the best cross-platform code editor.
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Cutelyst 2.4.0 released
Cutelyst, the C++/Qt web framework got another up.
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Tor Browser and Selenium
Many of us use Python Selenium to do functional testing of our websites or web applications. We generally test against Firefox and Google Chrome browser on the desktop. But, there is also a lot of people who uses Tor Browser (from Tor Project) to browse the internet and access the web applications.
In this post we will see how can we use the Tor Browser along with Selenium for our testing.
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Cockpit 169
Cockpit is the modern Linux admin interface. We release regularly. Here are the release notes from version 169.
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Chrome 67 Now Available For Linux Users
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Google Chrome 67 Rolls Out to Linux, Mac, and Windows with 34 Security Fixes
Google has promoted today the Chrome 67 web browser for Linux, Mac, and Windows platforms to the stable channel, a release that will be available to users in coming days or weeks.
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Chrome 67 Released, New Version of RaspAnd, SEGA Mega Drive and Genesis Classics Now Available for Linux and More
Chrome 67 has been released, and it includes several security fixes as well as default support for WebAuthn, which provides "a way to sign up to websites using biometrics like fingerprints or facial images stored in a smartphone, or USB hardware like Yubikey's authentication device", ZDNet reports. Chrome 67 also features new APIs for augmented and virtual reality.
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