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communities company blog Stack Exchange Inbox Reputation and Badges sign up log in tour help Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might http://askubuntu.com/questions/593512/download-no-machine-v-3-5 have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with https://developer.valvesoftware.com/wiki/SteamCMD us Ask Ubuntu Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only error no takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top download no machine v 3.5 up vote 0 down vote favorite I am looking for no machine version 3.5 for Ubuntu 14.10 64 bit. I did install v4 before and error no subscription it's not stable and watching videos is a little bit slow. I read that 3.5 is better and is there a solution to play sound in the vpsremote desktop because it doesn't play sounds. I found this code but don't understand how it works: MAJOR_PV="$(get_version_component_range 1-3)" FULL_PV="${MAJOR_PV}-$(get_version_component_range 4)" DESCRIPTION="Free edition NX server from NoMachine" HOMEPAGE="http://www.nomachine.com/" SRC_URI="amd64? ( http://64.34.161.181/download/${MAJOR_PV}/Linux/FE/nxserver-${FULL_PV}.x86_64.tar.gz ) x86? ( http://64.34.161.181/download/${MAJOR_PV}/Linux/FE/nxserver-${FULL_PV}.i386.tar.gz )" 12.04 vps share|improve this question edited Mar 6 '15 at 16:02 Fabby 15.4k1240114 asked Mar 6 '15 at 15:43 Ibrahim Bedoui 111 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 0 down vote As stated on NoMachine website version 3 it is no longer officialy provided and they link to some open source alternatives (FreeNX, NeatX, X2Go, 2X and Xpra). If you really want 3.5, you can download it from Web Archive - choose DEB packages for Ubuntu. There are installation instructions under links, and here - https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NomachineNX Keep in mind that 3.5 version is no longer supported and can contain security vulnerabilities. s
using a command-line interface. It works with games that use the SteamPipe content system. All games have been migrated from the deprecated HLDSUpdateTool to SteamCMD. Contents 1 Downloading SteamCMD 1.1 Windows 1.2 Linux 1.3 OS X 2 Running SteamCMD 2.1 Windows 2.2 Linux/OS X 3 SteamCMD Login 3.1 Anonymous 3.2 With a Steam account 4 Downloading an app 4.1 Validate 4.2 Supported Servers 5 Automating SteamCMD 5.1 Command line 5.2 Creating a script 6 Cross-Platform Installation 7 Windows Software/Scripts 7.1 condenser 7.2 SteamCMD AutoUpdater 7.3 SteamCMD GUI 7.4 SteamCMD Guardian 1.2 8 Linux Scripts 8.1 Linux Game Server Managers 8.1.1 Features 8.1.2 Supported Servers 8.1.3 Links 8.2 Steam-cmd-installer 8.3 SteamCMD Guardian 1.2 9 Known issues 9.1 ERROR! Failed to install app 'xxxxxx' (No subscription) 9.2 32-bit libraries on 64-bit Linux systems 9.2.1 Debian based distributions (Ubuntu, Mint, etc.) 9.2.2 Red Hat based distributions (RHEL, Fedora, CentOS, etc.) 9.2.3 Arch Linux 9.3 Login Failure: No Connection 9.4 SteamCMD startup errors 9.4.1 Unable to locate a running instance of Steam 9.4.2 ulimit Linux startup error 9.5 Only the HLDS engine is downloaded 10 See Also Downloading SteamCMD Windows 1. Create a folder for SteamCMD. For example C:\steamcmd 2. Download SteamCMD for Windows: https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/client/installer/steamcmd.zip 3. Extract the contents of the zip to the folder. Linux 1. Before you begin, you must first install the dependencies required to run SteamCMD: Ubuntu/Debian 64-Bit sudo apt-get install lib32gcc1 RedHat/CentOS yum install glibc libstdc++ RedHat/CentOS 64-Bit yum install glibc.i686 libstdc++.i686 2. Create a user account named steam to run SteamCMD safely, isolating it from the rest of the operating system. Do not run steamcmd while operating as the root user - to do so is a security risk. As the root user, create and escalate to the steam user: useradd -m steam su - steam If you're not logging in as root and you instead use sudo to perform administration, create and escalate to the steam user as follows: sudo useradd -m steam sudo -iu steam 3. Create a directory for SteamCMD and switch to it. mkdir ~/steamcmd && cd ~/steamcmd 3. Download and extract SteamCMD for Linux. curl -sqL 'https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/client/installer/steamcmd_linux.tar.gz' | tar zxvf - OS X 1. Open Terminal.app and create a directory for SteamCMD. mkdir ~/steamcmd && cd ~/steamcmd 2. Download and extract SteamCMD for