Familiarizing with the Command Line Interface
I'm beyond lucky to have been a successful applicant onto the Amazon re/Start programme.
This week on our intensive bootcamp we've been focusing on manoeuvring around the command line interface on Linux. Due to being computer active before YouTube (the delightful days of dial-up internet!) this wasn't all too unfamiliar to me for three specific reasons;
- Internet Relay Chat, or as the acronym goes - IRC.
Before the endless content on YouTube, if you wanted to have a copy of a music video you either had to rely on the artist putting a movie file on a CD single or you relied on a fan club setting a server/channel up on IRC. To get a music video on IRC, the wizkids of the era set-up a system identical to a Linux CLI. So there I was at 13, deploying my dir and get commands to get my own personal slice of MTV heaven! - Raspberry PiInspired by the super cool RetroFlag SNES case for the RaspberryPi and all amazing bespoke retro arcades I saw people posting online, I went ahead bought a Pi board and eventually this case.I dare not mention the countless hours I spent on this to reach my perfect set-up, but I definitely learnt a lot and typed SUDO more times then I care to imagine. 😁
- Seedbox
My university system admin's of course didn't want any P2P traffic over their network. But to continue my culture vulture ways I needed a way around this. Utilizing a seedbox allowed me to reach new heights on private bit-torrent trackers, as well as circumventing accessing the files as I used a FTP to access my files over the University network. However, I still would be required every so often to login using SSH and input commands via a CLI to restart the torrenting software whenever it crashed.
All these experiences have made getting comfortable with the CLI a breeze! Go Tux!!