robie1373's feed

  • 8 years ago
    Achievement robie1373

    Rock Star

    Followed by 2/2 members! Congratulations robie1373 on this achievement!

    +1310 XP
  • 8 years ago
    Level Up robie1373

    Level 5

    robie1373 is now level 5 with 10,315 XP.

     View Unlocks  
    • Image Submission The maximum amount of images you can submit to a unique social gallery has been raised by 1 to a total of 6.
    • Custom Banner You now have the ability to upload your own custom profile banner.
    • Following The maximum amount of users you can follow has been raised by 20 to a total of 140.
  • 8 years ago
    Achievement robie1373

    Busy Bee

    Maintained a 7 day login streak 2/2 times! Congratulations robie1373 on this achievement!

    +1310 XP
  • 8 years ago
    Level Up robie1373

    Level 4

    robie1373 is now level 4 with 8,355 XP.

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    • Tribe Membership The maximum amount of tribes you can join has been raised by 5 to a total of 60.
    • Pattern Banner You now have the ability to select a pattern for the banner of any of your tribes.
    • Snapzine The maximum amount of snapzine editions you can create has been raised by 1 to a total of 6.
  • 8 years ago
    Achievement robie1373

    Hat Trick

    Maintained a 3 day login streak 5/5 times! Congratulations robie1373 on this achievement!

    +2625 XP
  • 8 years ago
    Comment robie1373

    Blazing Saddles? 'nuff said.

  • 8 years ago
    Achievement robie1373

    Red Eye Jedi

    Viewed 50/50 snaps! Congratulations robie1373 on this achievement!

    +1310 XP
  • 8 years ago
    How-to robie1373

    Making wootz steel

    Part 1 of 2. A class on how to make wootz steel from "scratch".

  • 8 years ago
    Comment robie1373

    I spend so much time running find with the -name and -exec switches is silly. Syntax is a bit funky but once you get a handle on it, there isn't much you can't do. ~ # find . -name foo -exec "cat {} >> ~/bar.txt" \; [read all the file under the current directory who's name matches (regex) foo and write their contents into a file named bar.txt in your home directory.]

    Also grep. ~ # grep -r monkey / [search inside every file under / for text matching "monkey" and print out the matching line]

    These are from memory, (I'm at a winows box right now) so I apologize if there are errors in the examples. To hedge here is a bonus tip.

    Bonus: try -h or --help switches to pretty much any command for a quick reminder of how it works. Save that brain real estate for more important things than memorizing switches!

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