right
direction.
Thanks All
Alex
> -Original Message-
> From: Tino Ionescu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 02 December 2000 19:04
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: [UNIX help]
>
>
> Did you try what is available free? Downlo
Did you try what is available free? Download courses from internet these are
2 places where u can start :
http://www.linuxtraining.co.uk/
http://www.oase-shareware.org/shell/links/index.html.
Also, many universities have very good specific application
Florentin
"Alex Horsnell" <[EMAIL PROT
The Unix Administrator's Handbook by Evi Nemeth, et al is the way and the
light for learning Unix Administration. O'Reilly's Unix Power Tools (2nd ed)
is excellent for learning neat tricks for basic commands.
On Thursday 30 November 2000 10:07, Robert Guthrie wrote:
> If you have the budget for
Jonathan D. Proulx wrote:
> Get a cheap machine, free if possible (486DX2 or so.th)
> Install it with Debian
> configure it
> break it
> read the HOWTOs
> read the man pages
> re-install it
> re-configure it
> break it
> email debian-user with your questions
> fix it
> repeat as often as possible
Hi,
What worked for me (starting from zero Un*x experience):
Get a cheap machine, free if possible (486DX2 or so.th)
Install it with Debian
configure it
break it
read the HOWTOs
read the man pages
re-install it
re-configure it
break it
email debian-user with your questions
fix it
repeat as often
One thing I do is make /home the last partition on the hard drive so that
when I start mucking around and break everything or just whimsically feel
like reinstalling I can keep my home dirs happy. Note that this is not
necessarily the most efficient use of disk structure, just a handy bit I
like
on Thu, Nov 30, 2000 at 12:34:49PM -, Alex Horsnell ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> Hi
>
> I have just started learning UNIX and unfortunatley my 'teacher' has been very
> busy lately and unable to show me anything.
>
> I have started on our company printers and am using putty, I don't have any
On Thu, 30 Nov 2000, Griffith Feeney wrote:
> Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2000 05:21:05 -1000
> From: Griffith Feeney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: UNIX help
> Resent-Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2000 07:38:22 -0800
&g
The Unix Programming Environment, Kernighan and Pike. Amazon.com or the
nearest bookstore for many, many more. Perhaps better yet, try google.com >
Google Web Directory > Computers > Operating Systems > Unix > Tutorials (or
other stops along the way).
At 04:37 AM 11/30/00, you wrote:
>Hi
>
>I have
If you have the budget for it, check out
http://www.ora.com
They have some of the most constently excellent books on the various unix
tools and tasks (such as andministration, DNS configuration, Programming)
that I've seen from any publisher.
YMMV, but I swear by them, and have 8 paper books a
http://docs.my-box.org/
some good pointer once you have a system.
-Original Message-
From: David Teague [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 30 November 2000 06:38
To: Alex Horsnell
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: UNIX help
On Thu, 30 Nov 2000, Alex Horsnell wrote:
> D
On Thu, 30 Nov 2000, Alex Horsnell wrote:
> Does anyone out there have any prefered methods/books on learning UNIX?
Alex
I (think I) recall that Linus used two books, Bach's The Design of
the Unix Operating System and Sobel's Hand's on Unix --
Sobel, Hands on Linux is for Linux what Hands On
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