0:00
Hello there and welcome to LinuxS2O and in this video guide I'm going to show you
0:08
how to install Avernote desktop client on Linux so as you can see this is the
0:13
official website for the Avernote and if you click on the download button over here you
0:17
will not get any options to download Avernode desktop client for Linux it is only
0:23
available for modern Microsoft operating system and for mobile operating systems like IOS
0:30
and Android. So officially these guys do not provide any desktop client for Linux but as the Linux community
0:37
is very enthusiastic, they build a desktop client for themselves by their own
0:42
So in this video guide I'm going to show you how to install the task and unofficial desktop
0:47
client for Avernote on Linux. So what you want to do is just head on to this URL
0:52
I'll provide the URL in the description and that URL will take you to this repository
0:57
link and from here you can download the different build files and these will files are available over here So as per your distributions and operating system even you can get the task
1:14
For example if you want to install at this task application on an arch based distribution then you can download the Pacman addition from here
1:22
For debon bay distribution you can go for dot dev file if you want to install on an RPM based distribution you can download the RPM file and
1:30
file and if you do not care about the different build files then you can simply download the
1:35
app ms file and it will run on any Linux distribution but in this guide i'm going to use an
1:41
easier way to install this application and which is using the snaps because this is Ubuntu
1:47
and Ubuntu comes by default with snap support some distributions also comes with it but in other
1:54
distribution you have to set up the snap support for that you can check out this guide this will
1:58
guide you how to set up a snap in your Linux distribution so this is the snap application and in order to install it you just
2:06
have to execute this simple command so I going to copy the command from here and open the terminal and simply paste the command in here
2:21
And that's it. It will do its magic and install the application in my system
2:28
If you do not want to install it as a snap application, then you can always go with the
2:32
build files like .dive.rpm file and install them in your distribution. Simply download those files, double click on it and it will open up in the software center, click install, it will get installed
2:43
Otherwise you can check out the different guide for the installation on the channel and learn how to install these different little files on different Linux distribution
2:51
So the installation has completed. Now simply search for task in your system
2:56
By the way, this is Buzzy desktop environment and you can install it using this guide on the channel
3:07
first time when we open the application in the system and you will be prompted to the login screen
3:13
So when you log into your account on AboNote it will show all of your notes So I already use this tool in my primary distro So this is the Ubuntu that I use and here is my test
3:27
And here you can see it works just fine. Even though it's just a web application, but having a different window, I mean its own
3:35
window gives me a lot of advantage over running it inside a web browser
3:40
And web browser has this bad support for. for the menu for example if i click on the notes it shows me the notes directly but in the
3:49
web addition it has some kind of hover effect and that is very annoying to me and you can simply
3:57
change the theme as well if you want to use dark and will turn dark so this is the task and
4:05
unofficial desktop client for ever note you can install it and use it in your favorite
4:11
rating distribution. I hope you find this guide helpful. Leave a like, hit the subscribe button if you haven't and let me know what you think about
4:19
it in the comment section below. I shall catch you in the next one. Till then, take care and keep enjoying Linux