|
Best Porn Sites | Live Sex | Register | FAQ | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
Linux Help For Linux users and nerds like TimmyW |
|
Thread Tools |
24th October 2011, 15:50 | #1 |
FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC
Addicted Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Permanent State of Confusion
Posts: 834
Thanks: 25,379
Thanked 2,637 Times in 719 Posts
|
Want to Learn Linux
Hi Folks,
I'm a longtime Win/PC user but I've just recently started playing with Ubuntu and I like it. As I understand it, the Linux + certification mostly tests the command line operations in Linux. Since I'm interested in getting that cert, I'm thinking that I could use a good book to start teaching me the various command and switches, etc. Can anyone recommend a good how-to book suitable for a beginner? Thanks in advance. CB
__________________
Rockin' with CB
|
|
27th October 2011, 15:45 | #2 |
In Vulva Veritas
Clinically Insane Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Here and Now
Posts: 4,131
Thanks: 46,975
Thanked 55,153 Times in 3,853 Posts
|
Hi CB,
maybe this online tutorial can help you starting: http://ee.surrey.ac.uk/Teaching/Unix/ Looks rather good. I also has a list of recommended books Greets lingam68 |
The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to lingam68 For This Useful Post: |
27th October 2011, 16:14 | #3 |
FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC
Addicted Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Permanent State of Confusion
Posts: 834
Thanks: 25,379
Thanked 2,637 Times in 719 Posts
|
That tutorial looks great. Thanks for the lead, lingam.
__________________
Rockin' with CB
|
27th October 2011, 17:24 | #4 |
In Vulva Veritas
Clinically Insane Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Here and Now
Posts: 4,131
Thanks: 46,975
Thanked 55,153 Times in 3,853 Posts
|
I always like helping people that want their freedom back
Have fun!! And be careful! The console is a powerful and sometimes dangerous tool Deleted most off my home directory just two month ago because of one (!) extra space |
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to lingam68 For This Useful Post: |
27th October 2011, 21:52 | #5 |
FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC
Addicted Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Permanent State of Confusion
Posts: 834
Thanks: 25,379
Thanked 2,637 Times in 719 Posts
|
I'm scared enough of doing exactly that, so I'm gonna stick with working with Linux in a virtual. Gotta love Virtual Box!
__________________
Rockin' with CB
|
26th November 2011, 19:39 | #6 |
Junior Member
Virgin Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 9
Thanks: 1
Thanked 27 Times in 6 Posts
|
do as much as u can from command line and when you learn you will see it's better than clicking mouse, except of course using multimedia like movies, browsing etc.
learn bash scripting so you can automate tasks, and after get linux from scratch and build your own linux. |
26th November 2011, 22:05 | #7 |
Virgin Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7
Thanks: 254
Thanked 26 Times in 6 Posts
|
I take the opposite approach on some things, Mutikasa.
If you're using a good distro you don't have to build from source unless you want to. I think the advice that OpenBSD gives is perfect; don't re-build the core system or kernel from source unless you really know what you're doing and know how what you _could_ screw up may affect your security. Automated tools and faqs to help one along are fine, but whatever OS you choose you better damned well make an attempt to understand what's up before asking google. Pie is for eating, not going on your face - with one exception. Even browsing and multimedia can be done from the command line. There are text-mode browsers that can in-line images, and mplayer is perfectly capable w/o a GUI as long as you know the keyboard shortcuts. Do whatever you want to build up that experience. Build a kernel, alias rm to rm -i until you don't need that net, learn screen or tmux, write a system backup script that will give you media to do a bare-metal recovery, find out the differences in the various shells. It's probably a good idea to start this in a chroot; if you screw that up you can just untarball your last backup of it. If you learn the concepts, you'll find that working on any other *nix system is a lot easier. Example: my monitor & video card died a few months ago. Another system which I could have used had a bad PSU that I hadn't replaced. I dug out an old serial terminal, attached it via a USB -> serial adapter, and was able to diagnose the card as gone and the monitor as a likely good. Got a new monitor & card delivered on a Monday and was so comfortable I waited til the weekend to swap the cards. |
The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to matachin For This Useful Post: |
27th November 2011, 04:50 | #8 |
Junior Member
Virgin Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 9
Thanks: 1
Thanked 27 Times in 6 Posts
|
i know there's text browsers but i always find some feature lacking. Lynx is my favorite but you can't download and browse at the same time. I tried to use ww3 which can inline images but something was wrong with it.
I didn't know u can watch videos without GUI. How's that working? |
1st December 2011, 01:10 | #9 | |
Virgin Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7
Thanks: 254
Thanked 26 Times in 6 Posts
|
Quote:
As for for mplayer - the default behavior depends on the executable called. /usr/bin/mplayer will just open the video window and expect you to control it via keyboard. I forget whether it's just my config or the distro's default, but mplayer closes automatically at the end of a file for me. As far as true command-line movie viewing, there is a text output filter for mplayer. One of these days I'm just going to fire it up on a real VT100 compatible terminal. It probably requires a bit more then 9600 8N1, but I think it does framedropping anyways. |
|
Thread Tools | |
|
|