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    This tip will explain How to open a file manager of the current directory in the terminal 

    To get its tutorial visit here 


    Libre Graphics Meeting: Cutting Edge Creative Tools Meet Free Culture

    The Libre Graphic Meeting will be held at the École Polytechnique Engineering School on May 10-13, 2011 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

    The Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM) brings together users and developers of free and open source creative software.                                             read more


     

    Red Hat Announces EMEA Partner Summit: Dublin Ireland

    Red Hat announces the fourth annual Red Hat EMEA Partner Summit will take place in Dublin, Ireland at the Convention Centre from June 5-8, 2011.                                                 read more

     

     

     

    Best Linux Distribution

     


    Times they are a changin' (just a bit) in the distribution department this year. Although Ubuntu in all its tasty flavors remains the Roger Federer-esque champion of Linux distros, the dynamics of this category have changed from the past two years. In 2008, Ubuntu was dubbed the “big distro...........................                                                                         read more

     

     

    Best Distribution for Netbooks/Limited Hardware

     

    New for the 2010 Readers' Choice Awards is the category Best Distribution for Netbooks/Limited Hardware.                                                                                        read more

     

    Best Mobile OS

    Last year, Android and the T-Mobile G1 smartphone took home Linux Product of the Year honors, despite being absent from every other category selected by us (point taken, dear readers). One year wiser, we present a new category for 2010.....                         read more

     

    Best Desktop Environment

     

    The results from the Best Desktop Environment make more intuitive sense to us (and to this KDE fan) than in the previous two bouts, .......                                                             read more

     

     

    Best Web Browser


    In the 2009 Readers' Choice Awards, 87% of you voted to seat the Mozilla Firefox browser comfortably on the throne of Best Web Browser. Meanwhile, Google Chrome was just making its debut on the Linux stage ......................                                                                read more

     

     

    Best E-mail Client

     

    In 2009, we suggested the apparently inevitable decline of the desktop e-mail client in favor of Web-based clients like Gmail. It looks like the official LJ Magic 8-Ball was in need of another shake, for ....................                                                                                    read more

     

     

    Best IM Client

     

    Despite our redubbing of this category from Favorite Communications Tool to Best IM Client, the results changed only slightly. For the third year in a row, .........                         read more

     

     

    Best IRC Client

     

    Although you have plenty of choices when it comes to IRC chat clients, the overwhelming majority of you stay put on .................                                                                                read more




    Best Microblogging Client


    This new category for 2010, Best Microblogging Client, ........................                         read more

     

    Best Office Suite

     

    No shake-ups here, gang. OpenOffice.org remains your uncontested choice for Best Office Suite, and no program even passed the 10% threshold to warrant honorable mention. Keep your eye on Google Docs though, because it showed up this year.....                          read more

     

     

    Best Single Office Program

     

    Given that there are many more office applications than office suites, we created this new category (Best Single Office Program) to understand the nuances of our community's work habits better............                                                                                                         read more

     

     

    Best Graphics/Design Tool


    This year's plebiscite features identical award winners in the Best Graphics/Design Tool category—......................                                                                                                   read more

     

     

    Best Digital Photo Management Tool


    The back-and-forth tussle between digiKam and Picasa is looking more and more like a WWE SmackDown. In 2008, the two photo apps were tied for your favorites in the crowded category of Best Digital Photo Management Tool.................                                          read more

     

     

    Best Audio Tool

     

    Audacity
    Runner Up: Ardour
    Third Place: LMMS
    Fourth Place: VLC
    Fifth Place: Jokosher
    In the Best Audio Tool category, the program Audacity becomes more dominant every year, winning the 2010 award with a resounding 81% of your preferences, up 8% from last year. The popular cross-platform sound recorder and editor has little competition—only 8% of you consider Ardour your favorite audio tool.

    Best Audio Player

    Amarok
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: RythmBox
    Third Place: XMMS
    Fourth Place: Banshee
    Fifth Place: Songbird
    Your preferences for Best Audio Player this year are consolidating around two favorites, namely the winner, Amarok, and the sole honorable mention, Rhythmbox. Previously, this category was more crowded with contenders. However, Amarok is one of those apps that is riding the wave of resurgence we're seeing in KDE and its related applications. It doesn't hurt that Amarok is one kick-butt music app too.Amarok

     

     

    Best Media Player

     

    VLC
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: MPlayer
    Third Place: SMPlayer
    Fourth Place: Kaffeine
    Fifth Place: Totem
    After winning the Best Media Player award for 2009 by a single percentage point, there's no looking back for VLC, which won again in 2010, this time with more than triple the votes of its nearest rival, MPlayer. VLC's attraction could be the fact that it plays nearly any audio (or video) format you send its way, as well as its cross-platform capabilities. If you happen to find yourself in front of a Mac or Windows (or BeOS!) box, you're never far from “the cone”.VLC

     

     

    Best Bookmark Syncing Tool

     

    Xmarks
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Delicious
    Third Place: Weave
    Fourth Place: Google Chrome Bookmark Sync
    Nobody works on more machines than a Linux geek, so we're perfect guinea pigs for rating the product in this new category, Best Bookmark Syncing Tool. Your two favorites are Mitch Kapor's Xmarks (formerly Foxmarks) and Yahoo!'s Delicious (er, deli.icio.us). Firefox's own Weave tool fared well, but its Firefox-centricity may keep it from jousting at a higher level with its multibrowser-capable rivals.Xmarks

     

     

    Best On-line Collaboration Tool

     

    Google Docs
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Wikis
    Third Place: Google Wave
    Fourth Place: Zimbra
    Fifth Place: eGroupWare
    On the surface, it's somewhat counterintuitive how you love Google Docs as an on-line collaboration tool but merely like it as an office suite. (See the results for Best Office Suite above.) Perhaps it's because you use OpenOffice.org more for your day-to-day work tasks but use Google Docs when the task specifically calls for collaboration? Despite your penchant for Google's tools, a solid number of you turn to wikis to share information with your dispersed colleagues.Google Docs

     

     

    Best Cloud-Based File Storage

    Dropbox
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Ubuntu One
    Third Place: Amazon S3
    Fourth Place: ownCloud
    Fifth Place: SpiderOak
    For creating a redundant off-site backup copy of your important files, your tendency is to choose the popular Dropbox and Ubuntu One services. Knowing how we Linux geek cheapskates work, I bet you're signed up for the free 2GB accounts—40 separate ones to back up your 80GB drive.Dropbox

     

     

    Best Kid-Friendly Application

     

    Tux Paint
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: GCompris
    Third Place: Scratch
    Fourth Place: Tux Typing
    Fifth Place: Tux of Math Command
    The winner of the new category Best Kid-Friendly Application is Tux Paint, a gleefully fun drawing program for kids. Reading your comments, we also know good number of you have managed to get Linux into your local school, so you've probably installed Tux Paint free of charge for the students to use as a tool for art instruction. On that same install, a sensible companion would be GCompris, a somewhat more diverse set of educational applications for children.TuxPaint

     

     

    Best Game

    Frozen Bubble
    Honorable Mention/Runner Ups: Doom and Battle for Wesnoth (tie)
    Third Place: Battle for Wesnoth
    Fourth Place: Tux Racer
    Fifth Place: Enemy Territory Quake Wars
    It is beginning to seem that no game will ever knock Frozen Bubble from its lofty perch as Best Game. Bubble has won the title every time. Not only does Frozen Bubble lure you in with its pure simplicity, but those penguins are just too darn cute! Take note though that the Battle for Wesnoth has won honorable mention for the first time ever.Frozen Bubble

     

     

     

     

    Best Database

     

    MySQL
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: PostgreSQL
    Third Place: SQLite
    Fourth Place: Oracle
    Fifth Place: Firebird
    We'll have to do something about the LAMP acronym if you ever give up MySQL, which remains your choice for Best Database three years running. Nevertheless, we've seen a bit of erosion in support for MySQL toward your honorable mention pick of PostgreSQL, which has gained ground every year. SQLite may soon find itself on the board with the heavy hitters if it keeps climbing as well.MySQL

     

     

     

    Best Backup Solution

     

    rsync
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: tar
    Third Place: Bacula
    Fourth Place: Amanda
    Fifth Place: Simple Linux Backup
    Here's one case where we retrenched and reduced our categories, namely combining Best Backup System and Best Backup Utility into a single category called Best Backup Solution. Your choice for champion in this category was rsync, the winner of Best Backup Utility in 2009, followed by tar. Last year's winner and honorable mention in the Best Backup System category, Amanda and Bacula, respectively, also fared well in the votes.rsync

     

     

     

    Best Virtualization Solution

     

    VirtualBox
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: VMware
    Third Place: KVM
    Fourth Place: Xen
    Fifth Place: QEMU
    If we had an award for Most Upwardly Mobile Linux Solution, it just might be VirtualBox. You've been favoring VirtualBox more and more with each passing year, such that a full 55% of you chose it as Best Virtualization Solution this year, which is up an impressive 23% from last year and more than double VMware's result of 23%.Virtual Box

     

     

    Best Monitoring Application

     

    Nagios
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Zabbix
    Third Place: Zenoss Core
    Fourth Place: Hyperic
    Fifth Place: Ganglia
    When speaking of upwardly mobile Linux apps, we should include Zabbix in the same breath, the classic monitoring application that could. Coming out of the tiny country of Latvia, the enterprise-class monitoring solution Zabbix went from also-ran last year to contender this year in the category Best Monitoring Application. Of course, let's not forget that 34% of you still favor the winner Nagios. However, Nagios is down 17% from last year's tally. Zabbix definitely is worth keeping on your radar.Zabbix

     

     

    Best Revision Control System

    git
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Apache subversion
    Third Place: cvs
    Fourth Place: bazaar
    Fifth Place: mercurial
    Your two top picks for the Best Revision Control System are this year's winner, git, and last year's winner (and this year's sole honorable mention), Apache Subversion. In case you haven't done so already, you might want to investigate the origins of git, which was created by Linus Torvalds. The source of its name will give you a chuckle.

     

     

     

    Best Programming Language

     

    Python
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: C++
    Third Place: Java
    Fourth Place: C
    Fifth Place: Perl
    Despite the tough field of contenders, Guido van Rossum's Python won Best Programming Language for the second straight year. Your votes came down nearly exactly the same as last year, with C++ in second place.Python

     

     

    Best Scripting Language

     

    Python
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: PHP
    Third Place: bash
    Fourth Place: Perl
    Fifth Place: Ruby
    Two years ago, we tried to make our own distinction as to which languages were programming languages and which were scripting languages. We set up an elaborate set of criteria and attempted to justify our position. Well, you didn't appreciate our micromanagement, so we scrapped that idea for good. Now you decide which is which, and you have decided that Python is both the best programming language and scripting language out there.

     

     

    Best IDE

     

    Eclipse
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: KDevelop
    Third Place: NetBeans
    Fourth Place: Qt Creator
    Fifth Place: vim
    Eclipse is batting 1.000 in the Best IDE category, winning both of its two years in existence. You've told us you like how Eclipse lets you work in a lean environment and add and subtract an incredible array of functionality via plugins.Eclipse

     

     

     

    Best Open-Source Configuration Management Tool

     

    Puppet
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: OpenQRM
    Third Place: Cfengine
    Fourth Place: Chef
    Fifth Place: Bcfg2
    The new category Best Open-Source Configuration Management Tool turned out to be one of the most crowded fields, yet Puppet Labs' Puppet application managed to pull ahead of the pack. Perhaps it's how Puppet considers each piece of infrastructure as code that has helped you simplify new configurations and helped reduce the time you spend on mundane tasks.Puppet

     

     

     

    Best Platform for Developing Rich Internet Apps

    Adobe AIR
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: JavaFX
    Third Place: Google Gears
    Fourth Place: OpenLaszlo
    Fifth Place: Mono Moonlight
    Adobe AIR seems to be solidifying itself as your choice for Best Platform for Developing Rich Internet Apps, winning the category both this year and last. AIR is trending upward, rising a few percentage points this year vs. 2009.

     

     

    Best Package Management Application

    apt
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Synaptic
    Third Place: yum
    Fourth Place: aptitude
    Fifth Place: PiSi
    Despite your continued overwhelming preference for Ubuntu and siblings, the success of package managers typically associated with these distros is a tad enigmatic. Let's parse it. You prefer Ubuntu's default apt as Best Package Management Application but a full 10% less than last year. At the same time, 8% more of you like Synaptic than last year to give it honorable mention again, so it's reasonable to assume that a good number of the Ubuntu-ite tribe are trying Synaptic and digging it. We can comprehend all of that, but KPackageKit, Kubuntu's default package manager, wasn't even on the radar despite KDE's surge to tie GNOME for Best Desktop Environment. What's going on here?

     

     

    Best Content Management System

    WordPress
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Drupal
    Third Place: Joomla!
    Fourth Place: Alfresco
    Fifth Place: Plone
    Your narrator had a total blast building a sweet, slick Web site with WordPress, so he's totally in agreement your decision to grant it Best Content Management System for 2010. My experience was positive, and I put together a great design despite nearly no skill in graphic design. We at Linux Journal also gave our vote to honorable mention winner Drupal, the platform we have used for the previous and the recently updated LinuxJournal.com.WordPress

     

     

     

    Best Linux-Friendly Web Hosting Company

     

    GoDaddy.com
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Contegix
    Third Place: Dreamhost
    Fourth Place: 1&1
    Fifth Place: Rackspace
    Although we have a clear winner for the Best Linux-Friendly Web Hosting Company for 2010, GoDaddy.com, the reality is that five companies have been jockeying for the title. Although GoDaddy.com won in 2008, it fell out of the winner's circle in 2009. Then, there's your honorable mention pick, Contegix, which was the winner last year. Companies like Dreamhost, Rackspace and 1&1 also have been in contention every year.Go Daddy

     

     

     

    Best Linux Laptop Vendor

     

    Dell
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Lenovo
    Third Place: ASUS
    Fourth Place: Acer
    Fifth Place: EmperorLinux
    For years, Dell (at least in the US) avoided Linux-based PCs like the plague. We kept hearing how the market wasn't ready yet. We kept saying “Sheesh, guys, build it and they will come.” Well, now they've built it, and we have come—in droves! Dell dips its influential toe in the water and suddenly gets more votes than anyone for Best Linux Laptop Vendor. We're very curious to know how many of you are buying Dell laptops preinstalled vs. self-installation. Are we right to assume you're doing more of the latter? Our own hats are tipped graciously to Lenovo, who has taken arguably more risks than any other Windows-dominant laptop maker to put out great Linux-based laptops and make them mainstream. Also, we salute the Linux PC specialists who have been configuring our machines since the Precambrian. We hope you don't forget them.Dell

     

     

    Best Linux Desktop Workstation Vendor

     

    Dell
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Hewlett-Packard
    Third Place: System 76
    Fourth Place: Penguin Computing
    Fifth Place: ZaReason
    The world's two biggest PC makers, Dell and HP, are your two top choices for Best Linux Desktop Workstation Vendor. This makes perfect sense, as installing Linux on desktops remains more trouble-free than doing so on laptops. Note that a spunky company, System 76—which proudly peddles Linux machines and doesn't make you enter through some backdoor link, only to find you've accidentally ordered a Windows machine—also did well in the voting.

     

     

    Best Linux Server Vendor

     

    IBM
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Dell
    Third Place: Hewlett-Packard
    Fourth Place: Sun Microsystems
    Fifth Place: System 76
    In the Big Iron category, Best Linux Server Vendor, you gave more votes to IBM than any other company. It makes sense given IBM's long-term business strategy involving Linux. In 2009, Dell was the winner here, and this year, it placed a close second behind Big Blue.

     

     

     

    Best Linux Book

     

    Linux in a Nutshell
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Running Linux
    Third Place: Linux Bible
    Fourth Place: Linux for Dummies
    Fifth Place: Understanding the Linux Kernel
    Given the hundreds of books on Linux-related topics, it was a Herculean task for any single book to win the category Best Linux Book. Nevertheless, we asked you to write in your favorite title, and the classic work Linux in a Nutshell (E. Siever, et al., O'Reilly) was your top pick, acquiring more than double its nearest competitor,Running Linux (Dalheimer and Welsh, O'Reilly). We're wondering though, why more of you didn't write in Just for Fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary(Torvalds and Diamond, Harper) or The Cathedral and the Bazaar (Raymond, snowballpublishing.com). Who needs another copy of the syllabus for official Linux geeks?

     

     

     

    Best Linux Journal Column

     

    Hack and / by Kyle Rankin
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Paranoid Penguin by Mick Bauer
    Third Place: Work the Shell by Dave Taylor
    Fourth Place: At the Forge by Reuven Lerner
    Fifth Place: diff -u by Zack Brown
    Choosing the winner for Best Linux Journal Column is just as Herculean as with Best Linux Book, except the problem is not the abundance of quantity but rather extreme quality of each offering. Kyle Rankin's Hack and / column has become the page that more of you flip to first than any other. (Incidentally, Kyle's column has been trending upward for some time—he tied for winner last year.)Kyle Rankin

     

     

     

    Best Brand of Video Chipset

     

    NVIDIA
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: ATI
    Third Place: Intel
    Fourth Place: VIA
    Before wrapping up, let's get back to some of your favorite gear. This year, we introduced the new category Best Brand of Video Chipset, which was won handily by NVIDIA. Although we as a community are frustrated with NVIDIA's proprietary drivers, we can rejoice in the performance and Linux support, which is better than most.NVidia

     

     

     

    Best Linux Smartphone

     

    Nokia N900
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: HTC Nexus One
    Third Place: Motorola Droid
    Fourth Place: HTC Droid
    Fifth Place: HTC Evo
    No Linux Journal award show would be complete without a Nokia N-series device, and the 2010 Readers' Choice Awards is no exception. The Nokia N900 takes the award for Best Linux Smartphone. We're not too surprised that you chose the N900 given that it's the most early-adopter phone out there. That's us. The honorable mention in this category is an Android: HTC Nexus One.Nokia N900

     

     

     

    Best Linux-Based Gadget

     

    Amazon Kindle
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: Tom Tom Navigation System
    Third Place: Nokia N810 Tablet
    Fourth Place: Sheeva Plug
    Fifth Place: Archos
    The device that made reading an e-book a viable option is the Linux-based Amazon Kindle, your winner for this year's Best Linux-Based Gadget.Kindle

     

     

     

     

    Best New Open-Source Project (released in 2009 or 2010)

     

    MeeGo
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: OwnCloud
    Third Place: Android
    Fourth Place: CoffeeSaint
    Fifth Place: rekonq
    For the category Best New Open-Source Project released in 2009 or 2010, we asked you to write in your favorites without any prompting from us. Although the responses were numerous, the winner is MeeGo! A little bit of Moblin in your Maemo, or Maemo in your Moblin, this merger of two mobile operating systems is quite exciting. It's fairly new, but will this open-source powerhouse become the next big thing? Your votes seem to imply it, we'll have to wait and see.MeeGo

     

    Best New Commercial Application (released in 2009 or 2010)

    Fluendo DVD Player
    Runner Up: CodeWeavers CrossOver Office for Linux
    Third Place: Nero Linux
    Fourth Place: Zenoss Enterprise
    Fifth Place: SoftMaker Office Suite
    The race for Best New Commercial Application was neither as crowded nor closely fought as the one for Best New Open-Source Project. The hands-down winner was Fluendo DVD Player. Although we Linux geeks hate to pay, the product makes playing any DVD possible, fully functional (and legal).Fluendo

     

     

     

    Product of the Year

     

    Android
    Honorable Mention/Runner Up: KDE
    Third Place: Fluendo DVD Player
    Fourth Place: zabbix
    Fifth Place: Pardus
    We close with the category that requires a drumroll (drumroll, please): the 2010 Linux Journal Readers' Choice Product of the Year. And, the winner is Android! The open-source operating system from Google has proven to be a formidable opponent in the mobile-phone world. Because it's getting Linux into the hands of people who don't even realize they're using Linux, we can see why it's your choice for Product of the Year. We look forward to Android's 3.0 release, which Google claims will support tablet computers as well. Perhaps when version 4.0 rolls around, we'll have androids running Android!
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