Neofetch System Information Tool
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Neofetch is a free and open-source command-line system information tool written in Bash that displays a visually appealing summary of system hardware, software, and operating system information alongside an ASCII art logo of the operating system or distribution. Created by Dylan Araps in 2015, Neofetch quickly became one of the most popular system information tools in the Linux community, widely used in screenshots shared on forums, Reddit, and social media to showcase desktop configurations. Key features: ASCII art logos: displays the logo of the detected operating system or Linux distribution (over 150 supported including Arch Linux, Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, and many more), rendered as ASCII art next to the system information. Customizable logo size and colors. System information displayed: OS name and version, kernel version, uptime, package count (for package managers like apt, pacman, dnf, emerge, xbps, pkg, brew, portage, apk, rpm, pip, gem, npm), shell (bash, zsh, fish, etc.), resolution and display information, desktop environment (GNOME, KDE, XFCE, etc.) and window manager (i3, sway, bspwm, etc.), terminal and terminal font, CPU model and core count with current frequency, GPU model (NVIDIA, AMD, Intel), total and used memory (RAM), disk usage, local IP address, and locale. Image support: instead of ASCII art, Neofetch can display an actual image (wallpaper or custom image) using w3m-img, kitty, ueberzug, or sixel protocols. Highly customizable: nearly every aspect of the output can be configured via a config file (~/.config/neofetch/config.conf), including which information fields to display, their order, colors, separators, and formatting. Backend functions for custom information. Print mode (neofetch --p) for scripting. Cross-platform: Linux, macOS, BSD, Windows (via WSL or Cygwin), Solaris, Android (via Termux). MIT.
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