linux starters manual
Janina Sajka
janina at afb.net
Thu Feb 1 09:01:09 EST 2001
I have two suggestions:
1.) RFB&D has at least one good title that I'm aware of. The book is
"Understanding Unix," and it's available in electronic text. While it's a
bit old, it's still very useful;
2.) The Internet is your best friend in learning about linux.You might
want to start at:
http://www.linux.org
Select 'documentation' and then select 'general information.'
>From there you might want to select 'linux newbie' which will take you to:
http://www.linuxnewbie.org
where you'll find simplified how-to documents that will explain Linux in
plainer English.
You can and should also look at the online manuals for linux distributions
like Redhat which is at:
http://www.redhat.com.
Lastly, I want to offer a tip that has helped me a lot.
When I find an article that I want to keep and reread, I save it, but I do
not save the text. Rather, I retrieve the html and save that. That way, I
can pull it up in my browser and have access to all of the links. Also, if
I want, I can go in and clean out all of those garbage links at the
binning of many html files that most of us just plow through patiently.
Enjoy and explore. Everything you need is available in accessible form
somewhere, and one source of information will lead you to the next.
On Wed, 31 Jan 2001, Jack wrote:
> this has probably come up before but, where can i find a good looong book
> that explains just how to get started, why things do what, and how to
> operate linux in general.
> thanks
>
>
>
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Janina Sajka, Director
Technology Research and Development
Governmental Relations Group
American Foundation for the Blind (AFB)
janina at afb.net
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