The only other way to create a user other than the appropriate adduser or useradd command is to use a graphical frontend to these tools, such as GNOME's User Manager or KDE's KUser.
On Debian or Ubuntu systems, useradd is a command itself, and you can create users and define options to them using this command, and adduser is a perl script, that uses useradd to create the account, asking you the password, Full-name, phone and others .. On Fedora or CentOS systems, adduser is just a symbolic link to useradd, but may try to copy the script from a Debian system to the CentOS one, I have never tried it, and may need to modify it a little before using it. On Gentoo systems, is the same as in CentOS or Fedora, adduser is just a symbolic link to useradd.
On Debian or Ubuntu systems, useradd is a command itself, and you can create users and define options to them using this command, and adduser is a perl script, that uses useradd to create the account, asking you the password, Full-name, phone and others .. On Fedora or CentOS systems, adduser is just a symbolic link to useradd, but may try to copy the script from a Debian system to the CentOS one, I have never tried it, and may need to modify it a little before using it. On Gentoo systems, is the same as in CentOS or Fedora, adduser is just a symbolic link to useradd.
Redhat / Fedora 12 Answer: lp and lpr without arguments send their standard input to the printer.
First you have to mount it using the mount command. You should google "mounting filesystems" to read more about this.
There are two ways you can add a user on Fedora 9. The first is to use the User Manager tool. The second is to use the command line tool useradd.
The possessive form of the singular noun 'fedora' is fedora's.Example: The fedora's band is made of silk.
There is no command as such. Unlike in Windows, a program in Linux does not have to register it's existence in a list or registry. If you installed the program manually, or use a distro without a package manager, there is no way to determine what is installed. On distros that have package managers, such as Debian, Fedora, or Ubuntu, you can usually print an output of installed packages. In Debian / Ubuntu, use the commanddpkg --get-selections | lessto scroll through a list of installed packages. I do not recall offhand what you would do in Fedora or Red Hat.
As of today (05/15/2012), runlevel 2 on most RedHat and Fedora systems is multi-user without network support. [JMH]
If by 'fedora' you mean the hat, you use it as you would use 'hat' in a sentence. e.g. - I am wearing a fedora - I want to buy a fedora - Your fedora is so cute! Hope it helped :)
Linux is an operating system kernel. By itself, it can do very little. It needs to be combined with an interface and applications in order to be useful. When you take the kernel and add the parts to create a working system, you create what is called a "Linux distrbution", or "distro." Fedora is an example of a Linux distro. In summary, Linux is a kernel, and Fedora is a full operating system.
A fedora is a hat, you put it on your head.
No, fedora is a noun. It is a type of hat.