I know you've already talked about it a decent amount, but I am still a bit confused about what ~ means in the different contexts. I would also love a bit more detail about Emacs and vim. I think personally I would like a bit more review about the ~ because its a bit confusing how I can go to someone else's directory, but it's also not that big of a deal! I honestly might re-read the reading and go over the slides on my own :) I would like to talk more about the directories and wildcards, especially the wildcards since they can be so dangerous. I thought the * to match file names was really interesting and helpful. I would like to know more about how to use them properly. x 4 I would also like to know more about how we identify relative and absolute pathnames. tar and scp tar and gzip and drop. and possibly some practices of making files and directories tar and gzip I would like a bit more clarification on tar. thanks. I would like to talk more about the tarfiles and gzip files and how they work. I would like to talk more about how we manage files and directories, especially with using the commands. I think seeing how we use them will help me better see how they work.I also want to discuss the wildcards I kept re-reading it and was still unsure as to what it does. I know that the asterisk character matches any character and as many as possible but I am still unsure of how it works or how I can use it. I would like to learn more about the "man" page. The reading stated how every command has a "man" page but it would be interesting to what exactly it's purpose it and in what situations we would need to access it. I would like to practice talking about unix a bit more - I think I understand some parts, but I'm a bit confused about how they apply to what we will be working with. I would love to have more examples of moving and removing directories, so I can have a context of when and how to use the commands. Some real-world examples to see how the commands are used, or what are some scenarios where we will need them in this course. home directory