today's howtos

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How to start writing macros in LibreOffice Basic
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How To Easily Correct Misspelled Bash Commands In Linux
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How to Create a Sudo User on CentOS 7
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Deploying new releases: Feature flags or rings?
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Avoiding Windows rsync permission problems with Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio
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Minimal React.js Without A Build Step (Updated)
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Pour holy Web Compatibility in your CSS font
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Thinkpad X1 Carbon
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Exporting EventCalendar data to ical
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JBoss Data Virtualization: Integrating with Impala on Cloudera
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Advanced Dnsmasq Tips and Tricks
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How to Enable Passwordless SSH Logins on Linux
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How To Install Apache CouchDB on CentOS 7
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Attempt of evaluation TripleO QuickStart (Master) overcloud containerized HA deployment on 32 GB VIRTHOST
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Don’t Fear the Regex: Getting Started on Regular Expressions
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How to Minimize the Meltdown Patch Performance Penalty
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How to Dock and Undock Toolbars In LibreOffice
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JIT Compilation for Emacs
There have been a few efforts at writing an Emacs JIT — the original one, Burton Samograd’s, and also Nick LLoyd’s. So, what else to do except write my own?
Like the latter two, I based mine on GNU libjit. I did look at a few other JIT libraries: LLVM, gcc-jit, GNU Lightning, MyJit. libjit seemed like a nice middle ground between a JIT with heavy runtime costs (LLVM, GCC) and one that is too lightweight (Lightning).
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You Can Now Install Xtreme Download Manager In Any Linux Distribution Easily
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How To Easily Correct Misspelled Bash Commands In Linux
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How to Install and Configure XWiki on Ubuntu 16.04
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How To Install DNF On CentOS 7
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How to install PHP 7.1, 7.2 and 5.6 as PHP-FPM & FastCGI for ISPConfig 3 on Debian 9
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How to Install Turtl Server - Evernote Alternative - on Ubuntu 16.04
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Improve LibreOffice interface fonts in KDE
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Kubuntu 17.10 Guide for Newbie Part 3
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Resolve MySQL error “Too Many Connections”
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Server: HTTP Clients, IIS DDoS and 'DevOps' Hype From Red Hat
| Purism's Privacy and Security-Focused Librem 5 Linux Phone to Arrive in Q3 2019
Initially planned to ship in early 2019, the revolutionary Librem 5 mobile phone was delayed for April 2019, but now it suffered just one more delay due to the CPU choices the development team had to make to deliver a stable and reliable device that won't heat up or discharge too quickly.
Purism had to choose between the i.MX8M Quad or the i.MX8M Mini processors for their Librem 5 Linux-powered smartphone, but after many trials and errors they decided to go with the i.MX8M Quad CPU as manufacturer NXP recently released a new software stack solving all previous power consumption and heating issues.
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Qt Creator 4.9 Beta released
We are happy to announce the release of Qt Creator 4.9 Beta!
There are many improvements and fixes included in Qt Creator 4.9. I’ll just mention some highlights in this blog post. Please refer to our change log for a more thorough overview.
| Hack Week - Browsersync integration for Online
Recently my LibreOffice work is mostly focused on the Online. It's nice to see how it is growing with new features and has better UI. But when I was working on improving toolbars (eg. folding menubar or reorganization of items) I noticed one annoying thing from the developer perspective. After every small change, I had to restart the server to provide updated content for the browser. It takes few seconds for switching windows, killing old server then running new one which requires some tests to be passed.
Last week during the Hack Week funded by Collabora Productivity I was able to work on my own projects. It was a good opportunity for me to try to improve the process mentioned above.
I've heard previously about browsersync so I decided to try it out. It is a tool which can automatically reload used .css and .js files in all browser sessions after change detection. To make it work browsersync can start proxy server watching files on the original server and sending events to the browser clients if needed.
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