Originally posted by maximus
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From my POV, any app that one has on their system and does not use is bloatware. When Linux initially began it's central theme was "utilities". Small bash scripts or ELF binaries that did one thing and did it very well. dd, cat and less are good example. There are many, many others in /usr/bin. So many, in fact, that about once a week or so I learn of other utilities. Last week Veronica mentioned "fuser". Never heard of it.
"fuser displays the PIDs of processes using the specified files or file systems."
It has 18 parameters. Therein lies my problem with utilities, especially as I've reached 82 yrs old. I can't remember them. If I do use dd, for example, I always have to run man on it and review the syntax. That's why, as I've gotten older, I began using more GUI front ends to utilities than the bare utility itself. That led me to KDE (Plasmadesktop), the best GUI on the planet. As I approach closer to senility I think it will be easier to use KDE than the underlying utilities they replace. But then, I won't know because I probably won't remember!
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