Intel announces 12th generation Intel Core and 50 new processors at CES 2022 And this particular administrator understanding the need to remove the GUI shows he is aware of the penalty that might accompany having such an interface on a server ( might being the operative term). If a GUI is what they need to help them move to Linux, more power to them. However, some admins are migrating from Windows and are accustomed to a GUI interface. The default response from many a Linux admin might be something akin to, “Why not just learn the command line for admin purposes?” And that’s a great response. But they wanted to then remove the GUI interface for the sake of security and to ensure the OS wasn’t wasting precious resources on a now-unnecessary GUI. I recently received a question from a reader who said they’d installed GNOME on one of their data center CentOS 7 machines (so they could get the platform configured to their liking). If you've installed GNOME on CentOS 7 and now want to remove it, you'll be happy to know the process is quite simple.
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