Linux offers many classic commands, but some are already outdated, insecure, or are now inefficient. We show you which commands you can leave behind and which you can switch to instead.
The tree command is perfect for viewing your entire directory structure at a glance. It shows folders and files in a clear, tree-like layout right in the terminal. You can control how deep it goes, ...
The find command is one of the strangest Linux programs you’ll use. It’s essential enough to be omnipresent, yet obscure ...
ZDNET's key takeaways Screen recordings on Linux don't have to be a challenge.With one of these apps, you can grab all the ...
One year after launching its flagship 63xx series of arbitrary waveform generators (AWGs), Spectrum Instrumentation now ...
If you follow any AI-obsessed types on social media, you know Gemini 3 has been wildly anticipated by that bunch, who kept ...
Google has offered several ways of generating and modifying code with Gemini models, but the launch of Gemini 3 adds a new ...
While the September 2025 Shai-Hulud attack focused primarily on credential harvesting and self-propagation, this new variant ...
Raspberry Pi Imager 2.0 has just been released with a revamped user interface with a wizard to enable easier navigation, as ...
Huginn is a fully open source, self-hosted tool, and IFTTT and Zapier alternative that supports just about any workflow you ...
We're living through one of the strangest inversions in software engineering history. For decades, the goal was determinism; building systems that behave the same way every time. Now we're layering ...
In Mönchengladbach, the world's largest Amiga festival took place: Amiga40. More than 2,000 visitors celebrated the 40th ...