Link: How to make unprivileged programs listen on privileged ports

Here’s a quick tutorial on how to make unprivileged programs listen on privileged ports. The trick here is to make the unprivileged program to listen on an unprivileged port and redirect the privileged port to the unprivileged through iptables.

Full article here:
How to make unprivileged programs listen on privileged ports (catonmat.net)

Link: The Ultimate Wget Download Guide With 15 Awesome Examples

wget utility is the best option to download files from internet. wget can pretty much handle all complex download situations including large file downloads, recursive downloads, non-interactive downloads, multiple file downloads etc.,

In this article let us review how to use wget for various download scenarios using 15 awesome wget examples.

Full article here:
The Ultimate Wget Download Guide With 15 Awesome Examples (The Geek Stuff)

Link: How to mount Google Drive on Linux

As I speak, more than 22,000 people signed up for a petition, desperately wanting to have an official native Linux client for Google Drive, and yet their voice is still being ignored by Google. Perhaps when it comes to boosting their bottom line, Linux desktop market is not a priority for Google.

They can ignore Linux desktop market all they want, but they cannot ignore the power of FOSS. Faced with the frustration, the open-source community responded, producing unofficial Google Drive clients such as Grive or SyncDrive. These clients are file synchronization tools which sync files and folders between local file system and remote Google Drive. As such, you cannot mount Google Drive using these tools.

If you want to mount Google Drive on Linux, you can try google-drive-ocamlfuse, which is a FUSE-based file system backed by Google Drive. Using this user-space file system, you can mount your Google Drive account on Linux, and have full read/write access to files/folders in Google Drive as if they were local files/folders.

In this tutorial, I will describe how to mount Google Drive on Linux with google-drive-ocamlfuse.

Full article here:
How to mount Google Drive on Linux (Xmodulo)

Collection of links: Setting up a PPTP VPN server in Ubuntu Linux

Just a collection of pages we found on this topic, in no particular order:

How to Setup a VPN (PPTP) Server on Debian Linux (How-To Geek)
Configure a PPTP VPN Server on Ubuntu Linux (Networking Howtos)
Setting up a PPTP VPN Server on Debian/Ubuntu (Jesin’s Blog)
Steps to setup VPN in Linux using Graphical User Interface (Mr. VPN)
How to setup PPTP VPN on Linux (How To Install VPN)
Set-up PPTP virtual private network (VPN) server on Ubuntu Linux (Open Source Hacker)

Link: How To Install Cinnamon 2.0 On Ubuntu 13.10, 13.04, 12.10, 12.04, Linux Mint 15, 14, 13

Cinnamon is a fork of the Gnome 3 desktop environment, created by the Linux Mint developers. The latest version available is Cinnamon 2.0, which brings improvements and new features to the previous version, Cinnamon 1.8. For a full list of changes and new things, see the official announcement.

Full article here:
How To Install Cinnamon 2.0 On Ubuntu 13.10, 13.04, 12.10, 12.04, Linux Mint 15, 14, 13 (LinuxG.net)

Link: Here’s Where You Can Learn Linux Online For Free

At times Linux is considered as a complex computer operating systems, but these free online tutorials provide great help in clear in-depth understanding on how to use it. We bring to you four useful sites that comes with free Linux programming guides.

Full article here:
Here’s Where You Can Learn Linux Online For Free (EFYTimes)

Link: Best Password Managers for Linux

A password manager helps you manage all your passwords in one safe place so that you won’t have to remember them individually. It makes your job easier by letting you look up any stored password instantly and then use it. Furthermore, you also get to create new, secure passwords that are very hard to break. And here’s the best part: all these features are at zero cost. Absolutely free!

So, if you’re looking for some of the best password managers for your Linux desktop, here’s a list of the best ones:

Full article here:
Best Password Managers for Linux (TechSource)

Link: Our Favourite Linux Cheat Sheets

Most Linux system administrators spend their days at the command line, configuring and monitoring their servers through an SSH session. The command line is extremely powerful, but it can be difficult to keep all the options switches and tools in your head. Man pages are only a command away, but they’re often not written for quick consultation, so when we’re stuck for some of the more arcane options, we reach for the collection of cheat sheets that we’ve curated over the years.

Even command line masters occasionally need a litte help, and we hope that terminal beginners will find these concise lists useful too. All of these tools are installed by default on a standard Linux box except for Vim and Emacs, which may or may not be available (see the package manager cheat sheets for how to get them).

Full article here:
Our Favourite Linux Cheat Sheets (Everyday Linux User)

Link: Create Screencast Videos With Ease Using Kazam

Not surprisingly, there isn’t any shortage of screencasting tools in Linux. What sets Kazam apart from the rest is its omnipresence across repositories of popular Linux distros, which makes it a breeze to install. Furthermore, the tool has a simple, unintimidating and intuitive user interface that helps new users get started, and offers just the right number of tweakable controls to experienced users.

Full Article here:
Create Screencast Videos With Ease Using Kazam (Make Tech Easier)

Link: Diffpdf – Compare two PDF files textually or visually

DiffPDF is a GUI application used to compare two PDF files.By default the comparison is of the text on each pair of pages, but comparing the visual appearance of pages is also supported (for example, if a diagram is changed or if a paragraph is reformatted). It is also possible to compare particular pages or page ranges. …

Full article here:
Diffpdf – Compare two PDF files textually or visually (UbuntuGeek)