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From: Stephen Samuel <samuel@bcgreen.com>
To: Eve Atley <eatley@wow-corp.com>
Cc: linux-admin@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Slightly OT: Taking Unix/Linux class?
Date: Thu, 05 Feb 2004 16:19:13 -0800	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <4022DD81.7060403@bcgreen.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <GNEPLLCIIBHICCOGIAKPCEIFCBAA.eatley@wow-corp.com>

Having taught courses, I'd say that you could find them useful, especially
if you have a good instructor. The course should give you some directed
hands-on experience with a live system, teach you some stuff you hadn't
considered and hopefully even disabuse you of some bad practices.

On the other hand, do NOT presume that the course will turn you into
an overnight guru.  Time energy and, as someone else pointed out, "Just
Playing Around" are what you need for something like that.

Some suggestions:
  1: get yourself a machine (home or work) that you can play with.  It
doesn't have to be an expensive new box.   An old P3/500 with a 10Meg
hard drive is a fine start.  If you want to play with networking get
a couple more .. A couple of P2s with 64 meg of ram will do OK.  With
that and a KVM switch, you're ready to play.

If you get the hardware second hand (or out of an old store room), it'll
probably be a good bit less expensive than the course, and will give you
a leg up during the course and after (before, even).

man man is your friend

Eve Atley wrote:
> I'd like to get opinions on possibly taking a linux/unix course. We run a
> Red Hat 9 linux server in a small business, and I come from a primarily
> windows environment (though I do use a little Unix on Mac OS X). I was
> debating taking a unix/linux course at a local community college. We also
> own "Red Hat Linux Networking and System Administration", but obviously I
> need the time to read this book. I don't have the luxury of playing with our
> server to learn and get hands-on feel.
> 
> So based on this course description...is it worth it? How in-depth do
> community college courses of this nature go? Is there another, perhaps
> better way to go about learning what I need to know?
> 
> 
> CIT-220 Unix Operating System
> ------------------------------
> Section AW60 R
>  06:15PM-09:20PM
>  (3 credits)
> Dates: 01/26/04 - 05/01/04
> Prerequisite(s): PREREQUISITES: CIT111, CIT115
> This course introduces students to the UNIX and LINUX operating systems.
> Lecture and classroom labs using a UNIX/LINUX operating system
> environment cover the following topics: internal design concepts, command
> line
> interface, text editing, shell scripting, and file maintenance tools.
> Additional topics include tools and facilities used in administering a
> small network including user account management, file system permissions,
> printer management, system monitoring, backup/restore of files, and other
> administrative tools.
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> Eve

-- 
Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426                samuel@bcgreen.com
		   http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
    Powerful committed communication. Transformation touching
      the jewel within each person and bringing it to light.

  parent reply	other threads:[~2004-02-06  0:19 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2004-02-04 16:06 Outgoing mail filters Scott Taylor
2004-02-04 15:45 ` urgrue
2004-02-04 19:12   ` Scott Taylor
2004-02-05  8:39     ` urgrue
2004-02-05 16:27       ` Scott Taylor
2004-02-05 21:12         ` Slightly OT: Taking Unix/Linux class? Eve Atley
2004-02-05 19:25           ` Joakim Ryden
2004-02-05 19:37           ` Glynn Clements
2004-02-05 21:29           ` Jay Goodman
2004-02-05 23:07             ` terry white
2004-02-05 22:46           ` terry white
2004-02-06  0:19           ` Stephen Samuel [this message]
2004-02-04 21:52 ` Outgoing mail filters Glynn Clements
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-02-06 15:53 Slightly OT: Taking Unix/Linux class? Aleksander Kujbida

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