If so then there is no point in any lecture...
I think that the lectures we see here in the staying in linux series may be interesting to many people, for example, the CVS lecture, many people that use linux for a long time are not always familiar with CVS.
Also the shell lecture, if it includes basic scripting might be interesting for many people.
In summery, I think It is good that we have these lectures.
-- Ori Idan
Shlomi Fish wrote:
On Thu, 22 Jan 2004, Orna Agmon wrote:
Staying in Linux - How to Install a New Driver (cont) by guy keren on 2/2/04 Linux Device Drivers - 9/2/2004 Staying in Linux - Multimedia in Linux by Alon Altman on 16/2/04 Multilingual TeX by Ron Artstein 23/2/04 Staying in Linux - Shell by Orna Agmon 1/3/2004 Staying in Linux - CVS by Tzahi Fadida on 15/3/2004 Culmus and fonts by Maxim Iorsh on 22/3/2004 Ingo Molnar's O(1) scheduler by Erez Hadad on 19/4/2004 Staying in Linux - Firewall with IPtables by Adir Abraham 3/5/04 Firewall with IPtables by Adir Abraham 10/5/04 Web hacking for fun and profit Alon Altman 17/5/2004 Linux kernel 2.6 by Muli Ben-Yehuda 7/6/04 User Mode Linux by Muli Ben-Yehuda 21/6/04
Pardon my query, but why do we need so many more Staying in Linux lectures? What are we trying to achieve with them, precisely? It's bad enough that we had the W2L series with dwindling attendance, now we have to have the SiL for the rest of the year. The best way to learn about Linux and to stay there, is by experimenting on your own, and reading web resources. People who've been to the W2L series can post messages to the mailing list or other resources asking for questions and people can answer them.
Other than that, I don't think we need to guide them by the hand from now until infinity.
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