On Sun, 4 Jul 1999, Jeremy Hoyland wrote:
> the way you've worded the labs, I assume they're for people with at least
> unix user experience, and probably a basic sysadmin course under their
> belts - if not, you're gonna have a job explaining concepts such as
> "partitioning" and "swap parti
Mike,
the way you've worded the labs, I assume they're for people with at least
unix user experience, and probably a basic sysadmin course under their
belts - if not, you're gonna have a job explaining concepts such as
"partitioning" and "swap partition" to windows users!
consider these additi
On Sat, 3 Jul 1999, Mike wrote:
pico is NOT a good editor, although simple, since it tends to break long
lines, (although -w can be used) and also tends to create other mess.
In general, vi is not hard to learn, and is worth while. I once too a ANSI
C course, under Unix environment, and they ac
Well, i think that i will show them the use of vi in a edqouta (i hope the
spelling is right). but for a text editor i will show the the pico (as i
belive that the target ppl for this cource are not much of unin ppl (mybe
even not
windows ppl).
The shell commands that i will show then will be bash
Mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi ppl.
> I got this little (or maybe not so little) project of designing lab
> lessons for linux.
> So far i have 6-7 labs :
> 1. installation and global environment.
> 2. basic environment parameters.
> 3. advance environment parameters and security.
> 5. inst
Hi ppl.
I got this little (or maybe not so little) project of designing lab
lessons for linux.
So far i have 6-7 labs :
1. installation and global environment.
2. basic environment parameters.
3. advance environment parameters and security.
5. installing and configuring FTP server.
6. installing a