I'm not currently a KDE user—I prefer GNOME, but I'm happy to give kudos where kudos are due. I've used KDE on and off over the years, and Dolphin remains the cream of the Linux file manager crop.
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
Instead of re-creating your tar archives when you need to add files, why not simply append those files? Jack Wallen shows you how from the command line and a GUI file manager on Linux. If you’re a ...
Yeah, it's striking me as an almost direct rip of the Finder. Sidebar on the left for bookmarking volumes and folders. Item preview on the right. Back/forward and view option buttons on the top.
You’ve been sleeping on everything that you can do from our Linux terminal.
If you’re tired of having to jump through hoops to open files with sudo privileges in the GNOME File Manager, Jack Wallen has just the trick you need. Not all Linux file managers are created equal.
In the realm of modern data management, few technologies hold as much promise and versatility as the ZFS file system. Originally developed by Sun Microsystems for their Solaris operating system, ZFS ...