Great point Matt, pretty much what we all did back in the days when books were pretty scarce, and a very good idea in case you find something that wasn't covered in someone's book.
We've come a long way since the days when people used to seek us out at trade shows and almost angrily ask "Why doesn't LPI have courseware?" Now the only problem is figuring out what set of guides, books, practice, man pages and greps for things /usr/share/doc/packages you use to prepare. Ross On Mon, Jul 14, 2008 at 2:20 PM, G. Matthew Rice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Evan Blomquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > If anyone has a better suggestion for LPIC-1 preparation, I'd love to > hear > > about it. > > Hey, guys. > > Timing is also a factor for these exams. If you are planning to study for > a > while and take the exams after Dec 1st, there's new objectives. > > > Regardless of that point, though, I always recommend that people print out > a > copy of the LPI objectives and use it as a checklist. It's fairly concise > but can help you quickly identify areas that you may not be prepared for. > > I don't mean this as a replacement for the books, online research, training > etc. but more as a 'final check' that you, at least, looked at the various > objectives and topics. > > Regards, > -- > g. matthew rice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> starnix care, toronto, ontario, ca > phone: 647.722.5301 x242 gpg id: EF9AAD20 > http://www.starnix.com professional linux services & products > _______________________________________________ > lpi-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-discuss >
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