**nakamoto** is the computer’s hostname and will show up on whatever network you may be connected to. Sometimes you’ll see it referred to as Terminal, Command Line, or just the shell. That’s just the name of the software specific to this desktop environment. At the top of the terminal window it says “Konsole”. Feel free to play around and get accustomed, but at some point navigate to the Application Launcher and run Terminal (Konsole).īefore we enter anything into the terminal let’s take a look at what we already see. Log InĪfter installation and a successful login, your desktop should look like the screenshot below. My username for this tutorial will be satoshi, and the computer name will be nakamoto. You’ll set up a computer name, user, and password. Install ISO image to USB or CDįollow Ubuntu’s official tutorial for Windows or macOS. Skip this section entirely if you’re already on Linux. This tutorial was semi-inspired by Grubles Lightning Network tutorial. If you run into any other issues, got confused somewhere, or think I should include something, just comment below or reach out to me on and I’ll try to assist or amend the article. We want to avoid complications, which is why I won’t be installing anything else first, just Bitcoin and the screen capturing software, so any dependency issues along the way we should both have. I’ll be making no major changes to the default install configuration except for encrypting my entire drive and importing my desktop preferences and theme. The only precursor knowledge I’ll assume you have is the ability to figure out how to download & mount the ISO image I link below, boot it, and follow the default install instructions. Most tutorials just give you the steps, and while some are actually pretty good at elaborating a bit this one is literally going to spoon feed you all the questions you might have, down to what each command does. Just copy and paste the commands at the bottom of this article. If you already know a thing or two and want to skip all the useless words: This will be as much a “Linux for Dummies” guide as it is a guide to setting up a Bitcoin node. I want you to learn Linux, and I want Bitcoin to motivate you to switch. Never used Linux? Don’t know what “prune” means? Perfect. I recently installed a new SSD so I wouldn’t have to prune on my laptop and figured I’d give creating a tutorial a shot. #19- 14 Patterns to Ace Any Coding Interview Question.#18- How to Hack Roblox and Should You Do it?.#17- How to Build a QR Code Generator in React.#16- How to Use DeepAR For AR Effects on Amazon IVS Live Streams.#15- The Ace Attorney Timeline: All Phoenix Wright Games in Chronological Order.#14- 3 Best Kotor Builds Even Vader Would Approve of.#12- 3 Ways To Get Free Robux in Roblox.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |