5 Awesome Linux Terminal Tools You Must Know
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Related videos
5 Awesome Machine Learning Project Ideas For Your Resume
NeuralNine
27.5k views
9 AI TOOLS You Must Know In 2024
Silicon Valley Girl
38.2k views
100+ Linux Things you Need to Know
Fireship
2.5m views
Why I Switched To Linux! And How It's Going...
NeuralNine
107.7k views
60 Linux Commands you NEED to know (in 10 minutes)
NetworkChuck
2.2m views
TOO COOL FOR SCHOOL! AWESOME SCHOOL CRAFTS YOU WILL LOVE
5-Minute Crafts
2.0m views
you need to HACK faster!! (Linux Terminal hacks YOU NEED!!)
NetworkChuck
350.2k views
Jupyter Lab is AWESOME For Data Science
NeuralNine
91.8k views
ARE YOU A SMART PARENT? Awesome Parenting Hacks You Should Know
5-Minute Crafts
441.7k views
Progress Bars in Python Terminal
NeuralNine
110.6k views
Top Comments (10)
1:42 top, htop and btop 7:02 fzf 10:26 ffmpeg and tldr 16:05 neovim 19:30 neofetch 21:08 cmatrix
How did I not know about tldr!? It's amazing, I learn better by example so this is perfect, thanks for sharing!
This was a good list. I would like to say that when you get good with it, neovim is way more viable for large projects than you give it credit for. There is a steep learning curve to get there though. When you get there though you will be so much faster and more efficient than any other editor like vscode. Some other tools you might like Zoxide - fuzzy find over commonly visited directories. Zellij - terminal multiplexing like tmux but way better, and very user friendly. Ripgrep - grep on steroids! 😮
Personally I'm still a fan of Webmin. Sure some modules aren't worth using, but majority of the basic modules like it's file browser, and status dashboard are definitely worth it's use/installation, while the latest versions feature a revised in-browser terminal emulator that's pretty solid so that when you factor in all the features mentioned, I tend to use these when editing and working with semi-production scripts in Linux, especially on headless systems.
tldr is a good starting point before you actually RTFM, which you should.
It would be useful to mention locate/updatedb together with fuzzy find - running "raw" find on a large disk can be rather slow.
I was able to use most of these tools on my Termux Terminal 😊
Great video. I've used Linux for decades and didn't know about some of these tools. Thanks for sharing!
i am using pdfunite for merging pdfs. its great to know
Thanks. This is good stuff. Also, getting more great info/tips from the comments, which YOU inspired! ha--I love it!
Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge
- Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
- Chat with videos, export text & PDF
- $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research
Free forever plan • All features unlocked
Top Comments (10)
1:42 top, htop and btop 7:02 fzf 10:26 ffmpeg and tldr 16:05 neovim 19:30 neofetch 21:08 cmatrix
How did I not know about tldr!? It's amazing, I learn better by example so this is perfect, thanks for sharing!
This was a good list. I would like to say that when you get good with it, neovim is way more viable for large projects than you give it credit for. There is a steep learning curve to get there though. When you get there though you will be so much faster and more efficient than any other editor like vscode. Some other tools you might like Zoxide - fuzzy find over commonly visited directories. Zellij - terminal multiplexing like tmux but way better, and very user friendly. Ripgrep - grep on steroids! 😮
Personally I'm still a fan of Webmin. Sure some modules aren't worth using, but majority of the basic modules like it's file browser, and status dashboard are definitely worth it's use/installation, while the latest versions feature a revised in-browser terminal emulator that's pretty solid so that when you factor in all the features mentioned, I tend to use these when editing and working with semi-production scripts in Linux, especially on headless systems.
tldr is a good starting point before you actually RTFM, which you should.
It would be useful to mention locate/updatedb together with fuzzy find - running "raw" find on a large disk can be rather slow.
I was able to use most of these tools on my Termux Terminal 😊
Great video. I've used Linux for decades and didn't know about some of these tools. Thanks for sharing!
i am using pdfunite for merging pdfs. its great to know
Thanks. This is good stuff. Also, getting more great info/tips from the comments, which YOU inspired! ha--I love it!