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Automate EVERYTHING in Linux



Adding and automating all the tweaks I make in Linux. Chapters: 00:00:00 – Automate Everything 00:03:42 – Gaming Mod …

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  1. You know what I want to see in the Linutil that would get me to jump in and use it? Automating the initial setup of QEMU/KVM. I'd jump in and work on that myself, but it's really the one thing I really struggle with for whatever reason with Linux. Everything else is fine, but for whatever reason I just can't seem to get the network bridging to work as expected. Automating this would be killer for me. I don't actually care how that works, I just want it to work.

  2. I saw the first minute and had to laugh. I spent over a decade to two learning how "not to code" by automating everything (using tools of course). I took great pride in not "having to learn coding" to be 20x as productive as the "pros" as a systems applicator. I still stubbornly follow this path "as a principle"… but now that I truly find out why I feel this way… add that now it is a decade after that and EVERYONE is a "no-coder", and I am looking to hook up LLMs to inode graph objects for inference context window management using eBPF functions because I think the "newest LLM tools" are even worse than the wrappers that were used 25 ears ago to mIRC autochat with horny folk (look for words show + boob, check thesaurus… reply)… That part hasn't changed. It leads to Yahoo Chat. Is this progress?I think we can do better. Now I want to remove "the buttons". What happened?

    Actually I think my buy vs build realities have help formed this scenario. I started on Linux when Debian was a potato. I will be taking my second distro hop in years on my current project. I once ran RedHat (yes once). I am going to try Nix. What else was there bu code "to play with"?. I failed Cisco networking my first day (thought I needed to "learn for real"), for refusing to switch to MS office after asking the teach about macro compatibility and they found out I ran OpenOffice and I argued the idiocy of their policy rather then fork over $$$ and a piece of my hard drive and freedom *especially after how demeaned I would have been to believe the crazy reasoning they tried to apply – couldn't come clean that this was a licensing compulsion for cash grab and had nothing to do with "FOSS being unprofessional and will never be used in industry").

    20 years later, principles over TOS and Code restrictions won.

    Anyone here killing it in Cysco?

    Independent Linux?

    At least I wasn't a "fake it till you make it type"… I never wanted to be coder (cubical Bob). I wanted action, where is the button?

    Being a specialist is so blase… can you be an abstractionist?

  3. Does this currently pull all the bash scripts into the binary, so it's not depending on a runtime directory for calling the scripts?
    Might be cool if you could add a user category and look for scripts in "~/.config/linutil/user" so it's more extendable.
    IDK how useful that would really be, since a user could just call their script directly, but it might be a nifty organization layer over some more personalized configs.

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