New to Linux

Paul King pking123-rieW9WUcm8FFJ04o6PK0Fg at public.gmane.org
Mon Jan 2 15:19:39 UTC 2006


I would start with Fedora Core 4. It is pretty intuitive for a beginner.

Websites? You can google appropriate websites. In fact, Google even has its own 
separate search engine for Linux: http://www.google.com/linux

As for books, there is enough on-line/on-disk/web-based documentation that I 
would hold off on any book-buying decisions until you are sure you can't get the 
info you want. I find that the books I end up buying most of are language-based 
books, such as BASH or Perl. I have books on Linux, but because the on-line docs 
are more plentiful, cheaper, and more up-to-date, those books tend to gather 
dust.

Paul King

On 2 Jan 2006 at 9:09, Joseph (Joseph <tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org>) spaketh these wourdes:

> Hello everyone,
> First off I would like to wish everyone, all the best in 2006!
> I am new to Linux but I have been working with windows for about 10 years.
> I was wondering if I could get some pointers on the best place to start.
> There are some many versions of Linux, which one would you recommend?
> Also how about websites and books.
> You guys seem to know your stuff. Hopefully a beginner can ask these kind of
> questions here.
> Thanks in advance,
> Joseph
> 
> 
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