dear all,

when are you planning to have this? i really would like to learn linux. our previous 
sysad suddenly left for germany and since i was the only one who seemed fairly 
interested, i was given the position. can we spread it over a few weekends, rather 
than during weekdays/nights? i don't know how complicated it is to learn all these, i 
know of only a few commands, and  it's been years since i used anything other than 
what some (most?) of you refer to as Windoze.

and what about fees?


thanks all, and i hope to learn a lot for you.

Cori Cruz


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Plant Biotechnology Laboratory
National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology
Albert Hall, Jacinto cor Lakandula Streets
University of the Philippines, Diliman. 1101






[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>It might be also helpful to hold a "boot camp" for those who are really
>new to Linux/UN*X.
>Here's an outline for a "boot camp" type of training:
>
>1.Basic hardware knowledge 
>                       1.Intel and Intel clone architectures 
>                       2.IRQs and IRQ settings for standard serial ports 
>                                3.Disk subsystems (IDE, EIDE, SCSI) 
>                                4.Disk partitioning 
>
>                           2.Basic UNIX/Linux knowledge 
>                                1.Basic text editor usage 
>                                     1.Opening, closing, writing, and
>abandoning files 
>                                     2.Basic text editing 
>
>                           3.UNIX Filesystem Hierarchy and Structure 
>                                1.UNIX/Linux filesystems 
>                                2.SCSI, floppy, CD-ROM, and IDE devices 
>                                3.Referencing /dev devices 
>                                4.ISA and PCI hardware issues 
>                                5.Filesystem formating and checking,
>fdisk, mkfs, fsck 
>                                6.Span multiple partitions with root
>filesystem 
>                                7.Mount misc partitions with mount 
>
>                           4.Basic file operations and manipulation 
>                                1.Basics: cp, mv, ls, more, less, cd, pwd,
>tar, find, etc. 
>                                2.Filters: cat, grep, egrep, wc, cat,
>tail, head, sort, etc. 
>                                3.File Name wildcards: *, ?, [ ], etc. 
>
>                           5.Printing 
>                                1.lpq, lprm, lpr 
>                                2.adding local and remote printers 
>
>                           6.UNIX/Linux Shell 
>                                1.Basic Shell Programming 
>                                2.Piping, I/O and error redirection 
>                                3.Script execution and permissions 
>                                4.Variables and parameters 
>                                5.The inherited environment 
>
>                           7.Basic security 
>                                1.Shadow passwords 
>                                2.File permissions 
>                                3.Understanding users, groups and umask 
>                                4.Suid 
>
>                           8.UNIX System Administration 
>                                1./etc/skel/... and home directories 
>                                2.Daemons 
>                                3.Cron 
>                                4.Superuser 
>                                5.Syslogd and logging 
>                                6.Backup and Restore Tasks 
>                                7.Control of Network Services and Daemons 
>                                8.System crontab 
>                                9.Using and managing the system log files 
>                               10.Basic system backup and restore
>operations 
>
>                           9.Basic TCP/IP Networking 
>                                1.IP numbers and classes 
>                                2.The network address, broadcast address
>and subnet mask 
>                                3.Tools and commands 
>                                     1.ping 
>                                     2.ifconfig 
>                                     3.netstat 
>                                4.Name resolution configuration 
>                                     1./etc/hosts 
>                                     2./etc/resolv.conf 
>                                     3./etc/host.conf 
>                                     4./etc/nsswitch.conf 
>
>                          10.Familiarity with Standard Networking Services 
>                                1.NFS and remote filesystems 
>                                2.Sendmail 
>                                3.POP, IMAP 
>                                4.FTP 
>                                5.DNS 
>                                6.DHCP 
>                                7.SMB 
>                                8.httpd 
>                                9.YP, Nis 
>                               10.Inetd 
>
>                          11.Basic Network Security 
>
>
>Cito Maramba, M.D.
>Asst. Professor 
>Medical Informatics Unit
>UP College of Medicine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>
>-
>Philippine Linux Users Group. Web site and archives at http://plug.linux.org.ph
>To leave: send "unsubscribe" in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>

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