You can find the podcast version of this issue below:
Embark on the start of a new journey in Linux with our shiny new Dell XPS 13”. Let’s get started.
As the year draws to a close, it’s time to gaze into the crystal command line and see what 2020 might hold.
Includes full interview with Kin Lane, the API Evangelist.
My predictions on what will happen in open source in the next year.
A few years ago, I wrote about attempting a switch from my 20-year relationship with macOS to Windows and Linux. I ended up switching back to macOS, but as I was joining the recent throngs of many who felt that Apple was abandoning power macOS users, I was determined to try again.
Emperor Palpatine is back with a fleet of planet-killing Star Destroyers, the masses are scared to fight the Final Order, and the last glimmer of hope for the rebellion is nearly stamped out by … overbearing DRM?
Until recently, Kari Ann Owen ran a therapeutic horse ranch in Montana. Now focused on writing and political activism, she isn’t much interested in video games. But she takes her late husband’s legacy very seriously. “He was a genius,” she says of Silas Warner.
Command-line interface is one of the oldest, yet commonly used human-computer interface, where users type textual commands with arguments to get desired results. Developers often provide command-line options for software applications along with graphical user interface.
For a product to really work for us, and for it to work well, it needs to be jam-packed with high functionality, and promise to solve at least some critical issues for us.
It's common for enterprises to leave the technical writer's role out of the DevOps discussion. Even the marketing department joins the discussion in some DevOps-first organizations—so why not the writers? Our industry doesn't ask enough of its technical writers. Documentation is an afterthought.