RSH has been obsolete for over 20 years. You would need to find the source code for it, along with the (equally obsolete) libraries and compile it yourself. Nowadays, the rsh command is usually symlinked to ssh. Using SSH just requires installing the SSH client package for your distribution (apt install openssh-client on Debian/Ubuntu, yum install openssh-clients on CentOS). It can't be used to connect to legacy RSH servers, though.
You get a command not found. Linux is case sensitive. So, for example: The command "systemctl" will not be the same as "SystemCTL" to a shell in Linux. One will work, the other will return an error saying there's no such command.
Either, you need to increase the volume in Linux or Linux did not recognize your sound card.
Type exit to leave a terminal.
No, Linux and windows both work fine
If you mean on the command line, then the command is: clear Of course, if your encoding's been messed up, you can also clear up this little problem with the command: reset
quicker answer is which linux distro does not work? Pretty much all will work
In Linux, the utility used to display the pathname of the current working directory is the pwd command, which stands for "print working directory." When executed, it outputs the full path of the directory you are currently in. This command is commonly used in terminal sessions to confirm your location within the file system.
You can work archos 5 android on Linux through a tablet.
The ones that are listed as part of a standard (such as Posix) will work in all UNIX systems (but not all systems, such as Windows command prompt). A lot of UNIX vendors add commands that only work in their version of UNIX, so they aren't as portable across systems as others.
No.
instead of windows you can have linux or mac. they are different, but you will know whats best for you when you try them, linux is free to download.but you need an operating system (windows, mac, linux or any other OS) for the computer to work
I don't think so.