Want to impress your friends? Fond of learning new tips and tricks? Looking for things you can copy and paste into the "Terminal" app on your Mac to reveal the insights of the universe?
If so, the website oneliners.sh is something you'll want to bookmark!
Described as "one line BASH commands that you can't remember anyways," it's a collection of single line commands that you might find useful in different scenarios. Only a few of them are even peripherally email related, but that's okay! Email campaign designers might find the image conversion bits useful (and the compression/archive bits, too). Deliverability folks trying to troubleshoot DNS and connection issues may find nslookup and wget. The others, well, maybe they'll be useful to impress your friends at a party, or maybe not. But if you want to learn a bit more about different commands you can run from the Unix command line (and that includes from the Terminal app on your mac), you'll want to check it out.
(While BASH, aka "Bourne-again Shell" refers to a specific command-line interpreter, and the default one on MacOS is actually zsh, these commands will work just fine under zsh and you won't blow anything up due to the difference.)
Want to impress your friends? Fond of learning new tips and tricks? Looking for things you can copy and paste into the "Terminal" app on your Mac to reveal the insights of the universe?
If so, the website oneliners.sh is something you'll want to bookmark!
Described as "one line BASH commands that you can't remember anyways," it's a collection of single line commands that you might find useful in different scenarios. Only a few of them are even peripherally email related, but that's okay! Email campaign designers might find the image conversion bits useful (and the compression/archive bits, too). Deliverability folks trying to troubleshoot DNS and connection issues may find nslookup and wget. The others, well, maybe they'll be useful to impress your friends at a party, or maybe not. But if you want to learn a bit more about different commands you can run from the Unix command line (and that includes from the Terminal app on your mac), you'll want to check it out.
(While BASH, aka "Bourne-again Shell" refers to a specific command-line interpreter, and the default one on MacOS is actually zsh, these commands will work just fine under zsh and you won't blow anything up due to the difference.)
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