Or just hang out at Barnes & Noble a while (and take notes!). ;) -- -Eric 'shubes' Ariel Gold wrote: > Spent money on books? I guess if you like to have them sitting on your > shelf. > > No, I buy books too. But I mostly rely on the internet, and I love the > library. The library has plenty of good books on linux, from beginner to > more advanced. > > > 2010/9/29 James Dugger > > > Thanks Steve, > > You know I was thinking back on the last 3 months and added up how > much money I have spent in books on Linux and I can say that I have > spent more money than a single user license upgrade to Windows 7 > from Vista. > > Has it been worth it? I would say now, absolutely. However there > have been a lot of very very frustrating nights were I almost > scrapped the whole thing and reverted back to M$. But I still no > very little and have many questions. > > The biggest frustration is simply not knowing what I don't know > about what I need to know to ask the right question. The internet > is filled with step by step Linux configuration procedures that are > so narrowly focused with little or zero insight into WHAT and more > important WHY you are actually changing something. There is no > context and no back drop to the configuration and therefore nothing > is really learned. It just poses more questions. > > I think there needs to be a series of presentations that answer "I > Just installed Linux ... What now?" Start with general concepts for > configuration such as: > > What key configuration files control network interfacing with > hardware devices and present examples of how they interact. > > An overview of the more prominent file servers that can be > installed? What are there strengths and weakness, how are they > typically used? what key configuration files in Linux are needed > how does the file server interact with there config files? > > What are the different methods of file permissions, and how do they > work? What are the strengths and limitations of each method. What > are the basic config files that interact with permissions. Examples > of when and were to apply and use them. > > These are just a start. > > Computers are designed to be tools. They are a means to an end. > Usually that end is not spending all of your valuable time > fiddling with your operating system. Unfortunately in the desktop > realm M$ and Apple are King and they set the pace for zero to > configured and usable for the average novice to basic user. > > Well all get down off my soapbox now and shut up. Thanks > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss