I think you mean "LPI Certification in a Nutshell"? This book is
great, actually, it can be your main reference to prepare for the
L1/L2 test.
Don't know if it included L3 stuff, though.


On Sun, Jul 13, 2008 at 5:34 AM, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 13 July 2008, Ross Brunson wrote:
>> I am partial to the Lpic1 Exam Cram, and from talking to my favorite
>> boot camp trainer Evan I hear it is still the most accurate of the
>> guides in print.
>
> I find that they are both great books and cover the basics nicely. There
> will always be some sections that are wrong, omitted or out op date,
> but that's because Linux is a dynamic thing constantly being changed
> and improved.
>
> New stuff is cool, but it's the basics that give you the grounding to
> succeed and that's what LPI tests for the most part. Either book (plus
> the smarts in your own head) should work out just fine.
>
>> Full disclosure applies, I wrote it and still get frequent emails as
>> to it's effectiveness from readers.
>
> I still use it often when explaining something to a newish person. I do
> prefer Ross's book (hello Ross! <wave> ) but that's because of his
> writing style, not so much the actual content.
>
> Sergio, you might want to buy both books.
>
>
> --
> Alan McKinnon
> alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
>
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