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WebRTC based video conferencing – Howto Setup jitsi debian mate – OpenSource alternative to Skype. (for Debian/Ubuntu but also rpms for Fedora/RedHat/CentOS!
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Hey guys, I just started a new repo on Github. It's all about applications and some other things in Ubuntu/ Linux.
Just gonna leave it here as I desire feedbacks and seek for contributions. Thank you.The story: 2 years ago I migrated from Windows to Linux, I soonly realized how powerful and awesome this OS is. However, finding applications for all my need as a user and developer took a long time.
Therefore, I decided to gather all my own experience and wrote this as an all-in-one guide. I hope it helps you guys out there, who are beginners/novices or migrating from Windows to Linux or choosing linux as your main environment/OS for developing. Learning Python is a very good start. A lot of applications for Ubuntu are in Python and it is generally a great language to start studying programming. It's easy to start with, powerful, with a lot of available libraries for doing all sorts of things, and there are tons of books and resources about Python online.
And it's equally good both for writing a short script, and for writing a super complex application.If you want to develop GUI applications or generally work on user-facing stuff, probably the JavaScript/HTML/CSS tech stack is the most important one to learn, as it can work on practically all major platforms, both desktop and mobile. JavaScript is basically a must for everyone who wants to develop UIs.Alternatively for building applications that look 'native' on Linux, you need to get familiar either with GTK or Qt. These are both 'graphical toolkits' - they provide stuff for creating and working with windows, buttons, labels, etc.
all the components that make the application's user interface. For GTK there is a tutorial.