Linux Pocket Guide

By on July 30, 2010, 7:55 am

  • ISBN13: 9780596006280
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Product DescriptionLinux Pocket Guide you get up to speed quickly on using Linux on a daily basis. He organized the way you use Linux: by function, not just alphabetically. This is not the “Bible of Linux, a guidance for practical and concise options and commands you need most. It starts with general concepts like files and directories, the shell, and X-Window, and then presents detailed overviews of the most essential commands, with clear examples. You learn because each command. . . More>>

Linux Pocket Guide

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5 Responses to “Linux Pocket Guide”

  1. Chad Perrin says:

    It’s full of small concise notes that could be useful to a relatively new Linux user or system administrator. On the other hand, I found it depressing Fedora-centric. I made some use of it in the months after the first two or three that I bought the book, but then did not open. In fact, I went to try to refresh my memory of this review, and could not even find, thanks to my lack of interest in using it now. There are better books to use as references cela.edit Linux: In response to requests for comment on this review, I’ll provide a list of some books I found most useful for general purpose administration Linux. These are roughly in descending order of quality and usability, in my opinion at least. The assumed level of expertise of these books varies somewhat, and choosing what is most appropriate for its own use is left as an exercise for the lecteur.1. A Practical Guide to Linux commands, editors, and Shell Programming (Prentice Hall): This book will teach you the skills (if you have not already) that will serve you well for the OS type Unix.2. The Complete FreeBSD (O’Reilly): Yes, I know, this is not technically a “Linux” book, but it is still one of the most useful books I saw for general use and administration Linux.3. Linux Cookbook (No Starch Press) 4. Running Linux (No Starch Press) 5. BSD Hacks (O’Reilly): Another book not strictly for Linux, it is nevertheless full of information that is trivially applied to Linux and BSD systems Unix.6. Running Linux (O’Reilly) 7. Automating UNIX and Linux Administration (Apress): While it is best to enter the automation of simple administrative tasks, consideration of these tasks can teach a user or an administrator a lot about what tools are useful and for what purposes, in typical type Unix.C is almost the top of my head. There are many other great books for Linux users and administrators out there that I found better than the Pocket Guide for Linux, but many of them do not measure the utility long term and the initial value of those listed, or are not very versatile, and perhaps too restrictive applicable (such as Linux Pocket Guide) for distribution or a small collection of specific distribution level despite a very general, the title sounds universel.J hope it helps. Rating: 3 / 5

  2. I guess you have to invest in the Pocket Guide O’Reilly IPTABLES too. A handy reference beginner anyway. Rating: 3 / 5

  3. I tried Linux on and off at just 10 years. What I mean by an off and on, I used it for two months, then returned to win32 for 10 others. Rinse and repeat this cycle a little over 10 years maintenant.Ce was that I needed to start using C + + again that I finally left the ship completely to Linux (Kubuntu to be exact). There were other things of course. As the office had come to be fairly stable and packages finally come to be a long decade of trials and errors throughout the world. The shell environment (s) are always much higher. But back to this “reference”. . . This book (reference) essentially assumes that you have read something _NEVER_ _EVER_ on Linux. In addition, it appears the lack of vivid examples, you just woke up one day and Linux has been installed and that you were left sitting on your hands only to reach for anything with the controls. What has been referred to this book. Ok fine, you move, but you’ll soon larmes.Maintenant, unless you do not run a desktop computer (In this case, you’re probably running vanilla Debian or BSD), this book provides only a few work orders to replace the daily use of a machine (and not just Linux). At the end of the book you read GIMP and other graphics programs, but the office to run them has never been covered. Would it not seem that you should know at least one context menu right click look like? On anything? Or at least how to access a graphic file to be opened in one of these graphical interfaces? Paradigm typical file system is in the book, but what does that really mean for you if you already know? What does this mean for you if you do not know? Nothing at all or not enough, I suppose.J ‘I thought for 10USD I could not go too badly, but I was wrong. Use only _ANY_ tutorial on the net and you come full circle with this livre.Enfin, I wish to express, I do not blame _NOT_ the author of this book, or an editor or publisher, or whatsoever. Trying to give reference to a complete operating system in this small amount of text is simply not going to travail.Passer this book. If you do not want to buy a book (and I do not blame you), use the net. I recommend a book, but as we all know, no book is never as effective as the use and discovery of Linux on your own to suit your needs via the Internet as a learning resource. Rating: 1 / 5

  4. I received the statement in large and less time than I thought it would take. Rating: 5 / 5

  5. P. Brutus says:

    This book helped me get a better understanding of Linux commands. Rating: 5 / 5

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