The Debian System book

meng meng-R6A+fiHC8nRWk0Htik3J/w at public.gmane.org
Sat Aug 8 03:29:22 UTC 2009


-----Original message-----
From: lsorense-1wCw9BSqJbv44Nm34jS7GywD8/FfD2ys at public.gmane.org (Lennart Sorensen)
Date: Fri, 07 Aug 2009 21:43:01 -0400
To: tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org
Subject: Re: [TLUG]: The Debian System book

> On Fri, Aug 07, 2009 at 06:25:02PM -0400, meng wrote:
> > 
> > -----Original message-----
> > From: lsorense-1wCw9BSqJbv44Nm34jS7GywD8/FfD2ys at public.gmane.org (Lennart Sorensen)
> > Date: Fri, 07 Aug 2009 12:09:18 -0400
> > To: tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org
> > Subject: Re: [TLUG]: The Debian System book
> > 
> > > On Tue, Aug 04, 2009 at 12:21:07PM -0400, meng wrote:
> > > > Has anyone read "The Debian System" by Martin F. Krafft, http://debiansystem.info/ ?
> > > > I'm wondering if it's worth getting, it's dated 2005 and covers "Sarge".
> > > > 
> > > > Or should I just stick with the Debian Reference manual, http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ ?
> > > > If it covers the same ground, I might as well refer to the online documentation.
> > > 
> > > I never buy computer books, because they are always obsolete by the time
> > > they are in print.  Online references are much easier to keep up to date.
> > > Certainly sarge is irrelevant now, given it has been replaced twice now
> > > (etch and lenny).  Major changes have happened.
> > 
> > Good points, you've convinced me :-)
> 
> I do make an exception for good programming language reference books
> for stable languages.  Those are nice to have.

lol, always exceptions :-)

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