ror, scala, jetty, erlang, thrift, mongrel, comet server, my-sql, memchached, varnish, kestrel(mq), starling, gizzard, cassandra, hadoop, vertica, munin, nagios, awstats
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<meta charset="utf-8"> | |
<title>Multicelldesign CSS Ribbon</title> | |
<!-- Don't forget to add an HTML5 polyfill for IE --> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<div class="wrapper"> | |
<nav role="navigation" aria-label="main menu"> |
/* Flatten das boostrap */ | |
.well, .navbar-inner, .popover, .btn, .tooltip, input, select, textarea, pre, .progress, .modal, .add-on, .alert, .table-bordered, .nav>.active>a, .dropdown-menu, .tooltip-inner, .badge, .label, .img-polaroid { | |
-moz-box-shadow: none !important; | |
-webkit-box-shadow: none !important; | |
box-shadow: none !important; | |
-webkit-border-radius: 0px !important; | |
-moz-border-radius: 0px !important; | |
border-radius: 0px !important; | |
border-collapse: collapse !important; | |
background-image: none !important; |
#!/bin/sh | |
### BEGIN INIT INFO | |
# Provides: btsync | |
# Required-Start: $local_fs $remote_fs | |
# Required-Stop: $local_fs $remote_fs | |
# Should-Start: $network | |
# Should-Stop: $network | |
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 | |
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6 | |
# Short-Description: Multi-user daemonized version of btsync. |
[global_config] | |
title_transmit_bg_color = "#4c4c4c" | |
title_inactive_fg_color = "#afafaf" | |
title_inactive_bg_color = "#2d2d2d" | |
[keybindings] | |
copy = <Primary>c | |
paste = <Primary>v | |
[profiles] | |
[[default]] | |
palette = "#000000:#f92672:#6cc72c:#fe9720:#5f91ef:#9358fe:#36af90:#8c8c8c:#4c4c4c:#ff80f4:#a7e22e:#ffee99:#5fd9ef:#ae82fe:#66efd5:#c7cece" |
Many of us spend many hours of our days using their terminal. Plus, we all have different tastes when it comes to color schemes. That's why the ability to change the color scheme of a terminal is one of its more important featuresl. Throughout this tutorial, I'll teach you how you can change the looks of your terminal, step by step.
This tutorial is aimed at elementary OS users, but it also works for any Ubuntu user. Start by installing dconf-tools:
sudo apt-get install dconf-tools
Secondly, you need to decide which theme you're going to apply. You can find dozens of terminal color schemes online, you can even design your own using this web application. Design the color scheme, hit "Get Scheme" and choose "Terminator". You'll get a raw text file with a background color, a foreground color and a palette. Those strings define your color scheme. In this tutorial, I'll post an
This gist assumes:
- you have a local git repo
- with an online remote repository (github / bitbucket etc)
- and a cloud server (Rackspace cloud / Amazon EC2 etc)
- your (PHP) scripts are served from /var/www/html/
- your webpages are executed by apache
- apache's home directory is /var/www/
# Install ARCH Linux with encrypted file-system and UEFI | |
# The official installation guide (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Installation_Guide) contains a more verbose description. | |
# Download the archiso image from https://www.archlinux.org/ | |
# Copy to a usb-drive | |
dd if=archlinux.img of=/dev/sdX bs=16M && sync # on linux | |
# Boot from the usb. If the usb fails to boot, make sure that secure boot is disabled in the BIOS configuration. | |
# Set swedish keymap |