Hi. I understand you opinion Greg. There are lots of documentation about Linux Kernel. For example, I have been studying "Linux Kernel Development 3rd Edition". But if you want a job as Linux Kernel developer, is this type of training important? If you have experience it is "easy" to get the job. But you have to start from somewhere (even if you have the knowledge and skills). thanks On Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 2:15 AM, Greg KH <greg@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 05:08:08PM -0700, Adarsh Joshi wrote: >> Hi everyone, >> >> The documentation is great but I think Andre means that the courses give >> more confidence. > > Why? > >> I am a kernel newbie as well and as all beginners are suggested, I have >> subscribed to kernel.org mailing lists. I do understand some of the mails >> but not most of them. It just gets a bit overwhelming most of the times >> which is not very helpful. > > Then don't subscribe to the lists, but start with the documentation that > we have. It's a lot. Then ask specific questions on the kernelnewbies > mailing list if you have them, or on the subsystem mailing lists. > >> It would be great if there is there any documentation on how to interpret >> these emails and start working on them. > > Ask questions about them, we don't know what you are having problems > with unless you say. > > thanks, > > greg k-h > -- André Nogueira http://sites.google.com/site/andrenogueirasite/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kernel-janitors" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html