Sponsored by: do.co/dl Hosts of Destination Linux: Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com Want to Support the Show? Support on Patreon or on Ko-Fi Order Destination Linux Apparel Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You […]




Sponsored by: do.co/dl


Hosts of Destination Linux:

Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com

Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com

Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss

Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com


Want to Support the Show?

Support on Patreon or on Ko-Fi

Order Destination Linux Apparel


Want to follow the show and hosts on social media?

You can find all of our social accounts at destinationlinux.org/contact



Topics covered in this episode:


Antergos Linux Project Ends

Blackarch Linux New Release

openSUSE Leap 15.1 Released

Xfce 4.14 Pre-Release

Peppermint 10 Released

Firefox 67 Released

Huawei In Trouble

Canonical Making Nvidia Drivers Integration Even Easier

Eagle Island

Irkalla Stunning Pixelated Game



Software Spotlight:

Deja Dup


Tips & Tricks:

Use ‘tail’ to monitor logs real-time for bug reporting or system analysis. This will provide you updates that occur and could be invaluable for bug reports or monitoring of user activity or changes on your system.


As an example:


For openSUSE, Rhel you can use:

sudo tail -f -n 6 /var/log/messages


For Debian based distros

sudo tail -f -n 6 /var/log/syslog


The ‘f’ switch tells it to follow

The ‘n’ switch tells it to display last N’th number of lines