David G. Miller wrote: > John R Pierce <pierce@...> writes: >> On 2/12/2013 4:51 PM, Bassem Sossan wrote: >> > I'm beginner with Linux... >> > I have found a good resource, it's a book called "Beginning Red Hat >> > Linux 9"... the centos's version that I've installed "centos 6"... >> > Is this book may be compatible with Centos 6 ? >> >> not really. >> >> Red Hat Linux is ancient. > <SNIP> > I started with Red Hat Linux 5 in 1998. Mind your manners when calling > RHL 9 ancient or I'll come over and hit you with my walker. That's "tease me about my age, and I'll beat you with my cane". <g> And RH9 was fine - that's what I ran on my firewall/router box for *years*, with few updates. > > Advice to OP: Don't spend much money on treeware books about Linux in > general or CentOS in particular. The technology moves fast enough that > the book will be obsolete in six months to a year. Yup, it's a problem. However, most stuff really doesn't change, if you're looking at administering it, or working on it (except for N33t k3wl GUIs....). > I work best with real books because I can easily dog-ear, underline, > highlight, mark, etc. so I understand liking a real book. Book molester! > > If you really want to have a real book, take the time to visit a local > book store that has a decent selection of technical books and page > through some of the books there to see which author's style fits you. > If you can afford it, spend the money and support your local book store. <snip> And, of course, almost anything published by O'Reilly is going to be somewhere between good and really good: well-written, knowledgeable, and reliable. mark "not getting a kickback from them, really!" _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos