Sorry for my mixed format posting.

> If you really need to read book ,then read book on 'operating system
> design and implementation: by tannenbaum' or  'operating system
> principle: by peter baer galvin' to get more detailed and theoretical
> conceptual knowledge, which otherwise would be difficult to gain.

I would suggest "Design of the Unix Operating System" by Pike.

> After this, you can go for the Unix book by Sumitabha Das. You can get it
at any book store.

Maybe "The Shell Programming Environment" is a better book.

On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 09:34, gajendra khanna <[email protected]>wrote:

> >> Why do you say not to learn from Google ?
> >
> > googling is best to find out solution for problems. but to learn
> something
> > new, one must stick to 1 or 2 best sources
>

It's been my personal (note the word) experience that in Unix/Linux there is
no learning, without experimenting/problems. So there's nothing like
"learning" here.

It's more like maths, you don't learn additions or multiplications, you "do"
them


>
> which are sometimes on the net itself.
>

Very true, one shouldn't reinvent the wheel, wasting as much time as it took
the first time.

Google ki Jai


> G
>
> --
> l...@iitd - http://tinyurl.com/ycueutm
>



-- 
Lots o' Luv,
Phani Bhushan

Let not your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right - Isaac
Asimov (Salvor Hardin in Foundation and Empire)

Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html

-- 
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