Studying Linux

Prawnapple

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Hi All,

What would be the best place in South Africa or online to learn more about Linux. I am looking for basics and nothing too indepth as I need the basics first. I understand that actually using it is a good idea, just looking for some suggestions. Thanks!
 
What are you planning on using Linux for?
Just day to day sort of stuff, we have clients with Linux OS's. I just want to know the basics, how to move files from 1 folder to another folder, how to change the system time for instance. Really basics.

id imagine doing a udemy course would be easiest,
dont think their is a dedicated beginner to advanced linux course locally. similar to boston/CTU.
I found two, I guess the best-seller one would be best?
https://www.udemy.com/learn-linux-in-5-days/
https://www.udemy.com/linux-mastery/
 
Just day to day sort of stuff, we have clients with Linux OS's. I just want to know the basics, how to move files from 1 folder to another folder, how to change the system time for instance. Really basics.


I found two, I guess the best-seller one would be best?
https://www.udemy.com/learn-linux-in-5-days/
https://www.udemy.com/linux-mastery/

Or start using linux as your day to day OS [while studying]?

You can just as well start with ubuntu / mint and work towards a distro you prefer e.g. fedora, arch, debian, manjaro, bsd*, ..

:edit
You have options here. Dual boot, Virtual Machines or if possible native install.
 
Just day to day sort of stuff, we have clients with Linux OS's. I just want to know the basics, how to move files from 1 folder to another folder, how to change the system time for instance. Really basics.


I found two, I guess the best-seller one would be best?
https://www.udemy.com/learn-linux-in-5-days/
https://www.udemy.com/linux-mastery/

Yip, Id imagine thats a good way to go,
do wonder how basic it is? IE is it geared to an average "techie" or something more than that?

as the price is almost free, cant see how they make money from any of their courses.
 
I have a basic course that covers using Linux in a developer context. Covers the basics - creating directories, moving files, copying right up to GREP and Regular Expressions.

I will happily download the content and mail it to you
 
Yip, Id imagine thats a good way to go,
do wonder how basic it is? IE is it geared to an average "techie" or something more than that?

as the price is almost free, cant see how they make money from any of their courses.
At the discount prices and sold to 10 000+ students they would make some money. And remember, the content creator has an almost passive income stream as they only create the course and sit back and watch the money roll in. Udemy as a platform probably have more costs to contend with than the content creators, but it must be profitable still for them.
 
I recommend following along at https://linuxjourney.com/ . I found this series of tutorials when looking for something simple and informative for our juniors to get up to speed on coming from a Windows background. I have personally worked through a couple of them to vet them and they are pretty good information wise, but I'm not sure learning from scratch wise (I know the answers and the juniors never took the initiave to do the course).
 
Step 1) Install Ubuntu on a spare machine/virtual machine and try to use it. Anything you don't know, you Google.
Step 2) Once you are comfortable in the OS, you can get a pair of lucky socks and recompile the kernel. :p
 
Slightly off topic, but learning Linux now days just feels like easy mode compared to when I was a kid. A lot of the inner workings of linux are now hidden from people who learn linux today.

I remember the good old days, when I was 15 and couldn't get windows 98 to stay connected to the internet all weekend for the R7 telkom dial-up fee. I briefly touched mandrake before I decided I wanted to learn linux and threw myself right into Slackware where there was no package managers or easy tools. You had to go compile everything from scratch, search the internet without google and find all the dependencies and their dependencies and there dependence and compile them all until you got a working application. Eventually moved onto Gentoo, which blew my mind with emerge and the chroot style installation where you could configure the gcc flags to optimize the compiler for your PC. Taught myself iptables to protect myself again other IRC users (# +++ATH0 ftw).

Without google, a lot of what I learned was trial and error and RTFM repeatedly.

I remember bringing down the kernel source, patching it GRSecurity and also performance patches and then compiling the kernels from scratch. Using enlightenment as a GUI when Xwindows was still around instead of Xorg, lmstats for pretty graphs on the desktop, which were useless come to think about it now.

Using linux on a daily basis as the primary OS like this is what taught me more about linux than any other source of reading. 20 years later and I still know more about linux than I do about windows.

</nostalgia>
 
Best way to learn an OS is to USE the OS. Be prepared for many re-installs as you learn and break stuff
 
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