mknod
Run this command to see the documentation for it:
In current systems you don't have to make devices, because udev does it for you.
Usually they are stored in /dev
The device manager UDEV manages device nodes in /dev in Linux. It is a generic kernal device manager originally was introduced in Linux 2.5, and is still in the current version of Linux.
It is a kernel version that enables realtime.
Windows and Linux use device letters to identify each storage device on a computer.
Windows and Linux use a device letter to identify each storage device.
Microsoft Connect
The principal of Claroline enables schools and other organizations to create and teach courses collaboratively and in a unified fashion on the internet. The platform can be used with Mac OS, Windows and Linux.
Android is a Linux based operating system means you are already running Linux over your smart device ! And you can switch Android with some other Linux version !
Linux 5 ? give up now.
mkdir aptech/Linux
Android is based on the Linux Kernel. A kernel is a program that handles I/O and basically all the hardware stuff. So Android OS is device specific. (However there are some linux distributions which are device specific and you have to compile the kernel yourself.) That's why you can't install KitKat for Sony on an HTC device. You have to make it (compile) to suit your device's hardware specs.
Docker is an open-source program that enables a Linux application and its dependencies to be packaged as a container.