You don't edit inodes manually. They are managed by the file system driver.
man fdisk
"crontab -e".
crontab -e
You do not need a license to edit Linux's source code. The GPL applies only to how you distribute it. End users do not license Linux in any way for use or modification, they're allowed to do anything they like, so long as if they try to redistribute the result they do so under the terms of the GPL.
System restore does not edit any files or documents which you have changed or created since the checkpoint.
You can use a program called GParted to add, edit, and delete partitions.
The source of the Linux kernel, as well as most programs that run on it, is publicly available. You can edit the source with any text editor, although you may prefer one with syntax highlighting. The configuration files necessary to actually operate Linux are also editable with a standard text editor.
Since you don't specify what tool you are using to edit your Web page, I don't think anybody can guess what the problem is.
Edit the /etc/hosts file, and redirect the site's name (ie. www.google.com) to 127.0.0.1
The Picasa application is a photo-editing software that allows a user to organize, edit and store their photos. Downloading the application allows you to access the picasa software to edit your photos.
No, as of April 2008, Ipod Linux does not work ipod nano generations 2 - 4. It does work with the 1st generation though. edit: Now you can it is fully supported
By using whatever tool is associated with that file type. There are dozens of text, graphics, audio, and video editors.