RE: Good Linux book for MS sysadmin

2005-03-01 Thread Michael Sternberg
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Michael Sternberg Sent: Monday, 28 February, 2005 16:46 What book on modern Linux administration you will recommend to a seasoned Windows system administrator ? No answers at all ?? Maybe I did not asked right:

Re: Good Linux book for MS sysadmin

2005-03-01 Thread Alan Yaniger
Linux Administration - A Beginner's Guide by Steven Graham and Steve Shah is aimed at strong Windows users who know something about the Windows networking environment (from their intro). My copy is the third edition, which is from 2003, so it's a little old. I'm not a system administrator, I

Re: Good Linux book for MS sysadmin

2005-03-01 Thread Ira Abramov
Quoting Alan Yaniger, from the post of Tue, 01 Mar: Linux Administration - A Beginner's Guide by Steven Graham and Steve Shah is aimed at strong Windows users who know something about the Windows networking environment (from their intro). My copy is the third edition, which is from 2003, so

Good Linux book for MS sysadmin

2005-02-28 Thread Michael Sternberg
What book on modern Linux administration you will recommend to a seasoned Windows system administrator ? Thanks -- Michael = To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word unsubscribe in the message body, e.g., run the

Re: linux book

1999-09-11 Thread Omer
On Fri, 10 Sep 1999, the rookie wrote: :hi, can someone recommend a book to start using linux? :(and that's mean: programming in linux, communication :stuff, and the shell commands) : Programming: C programming language second edition is a good book to start programming using C . This

Re: linux book

1999-09-11 Thread Alexander L. Belikoff
Omer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: On Fri, 10 Sep 1999, the rookie wrote: :hi, can someone recommend a book to start using linux? :(and that's mean: programming in linux, communication :stuff, and the shell commands) : Programming: C programming language second edition is a good

Re: linux book

1999-09-11 Thread Omer
On 11 Sep 1999, Alexander L. Belikoff wrote: :None of the books above explains 4.xBSD. The "Magic Garden" book deals :with pure SVR4. For BSD, check out "The design and implementation of :4.4BSD Operating System." My apologies for misinformation. : :Cough, choke Since when is Perl a "subset of

Re: linux book

1999-09-11 Thread Omer
On 11 Sep 1999, Alexander L. Belikoff wrote: :Omer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: : : :Cough, choke Since when is Perl a "subset of LISP?!" McCarthy would : :sure laugh his guts off if he heard that... : Since perl supports closures, anonimous functions and first order : functions, it is surely

Re: linux book

1999-09-11 Thread Alexander L. Belikoff
Omer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Do not forget that Perl uses a viirtual machine and garbage collection, BTW. This makes it another bit like LISP. LISP doesn't have a "virtual machine." CLTL2 and ANSI CL leave the actual representation of compiled code up to the implementation. This usually

Re: linux book

1999-09-10 Thread Nadav Har'El
On Fri Sep 10 23:09:04 1999, Nimrod Mesika wrote about "Re: linux book": the rookie wrote: hi, can someone recommend a book to start using linux? (and that's mean: programming in linux, communication stuff, and the shell commands) Not a Linux specific boot but a good read

Re: linux book

1999-09-10 Thread Alon Kadury
(there are a few errors in the hebrew installation guide). yours, alon kadury From: the rookie [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: linux book Date: Fri, 10 Sep 1999 14:02:29 -0700 (PDT) hi, can someone recommend a book to start using linux? (and that's mean: programming in linux