On Sat, 30 Sep 2000, Arun Shrimali spewed into the ether:

> I want to have a formal, and detail traning of Linux and to be
Detailed, I know where to refer you. Formal, I think Redhat does offer 
training, but check out their pricing first :). 

The best training would be by working with your system, reading the man 
pages, the documentation that comes with the programs, and if necessary 
source code. There is plenty of documentation available. Check out 
/usr/docs in your system. 

About the formal part, I wouldn't bother too much about it. AFAIK, NIIT 
offers some courses for Linux, but they don't seem to cover much in 
depth. Nothing that you can't do on your own in a week's time anyway.
The list is good for help whenever required.

If you need books for reference:
http://www.ora.com
www.sybex.com (IIRC)

These are just two of the most popular publishers, there are more.

Also: Don't ever train for any particular distro, you will harm 
yourself more. Learn about a couple of distros, focus on one at a time. 
When you think you are comfortable with it, learn about another.
Try to learn as much cross platform stuff as you can.

Devdas Bhagat
--
I'm very good at integral and differential calculus,
I know the scientific names of beings animalculous;
In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,
I am the very model of a modern Major-General.
                -- Gilbert & Sullivan, "Pirates of Penzance"

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