1. meld
2. kompare
The X Windowing System is the "de facto" standard for graphical shells in Unix and Linux. Desktops use it as a client as well as all the graphical applications.
The most often used X Window (graphical) desktop environments are KDE and GNOME. There are many others.
Sure can. VBA has been ported to Linux and has even a number of graphical frontends to make it easier to use.
linux isn't an operating system, per se, but most operating systems (if not all) based on the linux kernel have the ifconfig tool
This is a Super's merge tool.
This is a Super's merge tool.
There are several different graphical interfaces for Linux, each of which have their features in different locations. You must specify what interface you are using.
Many Unix and Linux servers come without a graphical user interface, and the text mode interface is the default. For those systems using a GUI, there is a 'terminal' tool that you can select from the menu to allow text interactions.
Many distributions have documentation or builtin graphical installation utilities.
It's a command to start the X server for running Linux in graphical mode, if you have any of the desktop environments and/or window managers installed.
yes it is it is usely used in architectural things - like building buildings
Linux Security Tool Distribution (STD) is really good.