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| New to Linux? Migrating from Windows or OSX? Read this... Firstly, please don't misinterpret this post as spam. I assure you that I am a "real human being", and this I have nothing to sell here. I've been using Linux for a short time only - I was "bumped" in to the Linux arena through a promotion at work which required me to service Fedora based servers in 50+ locations. I've always been a Windows/OSX person myself, but I quickly found Linux to be an amazingly capable OS. I've been having a world of fun working with it, and I've finally found a way to share my experiences with others - via podcast. My podcast is called "Linux Learning Curve", and its intent is to take listeners along with me as I learn the finer points of how to install, configure and use the Linux platform in a huge variety of different ways, from home PCs to corporate servers. The cast is targeted to both complete novices as well as migrating power users from other platforms. I've had the podcast screened and approved by the people at iTunes, so it's available in the podcast section of the iTunes store. It's completely free to subscribe. To find it, all you need to do is use the search feature of the iTunes store, and type in "Linux Learning Curve". If anybody does decide to give the podcast a go, I'd be really grateful for any feedback on the cast or its content - it will all go to making sure that I'm continually upgrading the products content and presentation, not to mention my own knowledge. Also, if anyone has ideas as to subject matter or how a cast can be improved upon, or even if anyone knows some of the common faults and shortfalls of podcasting, feel free to leave our pearls of wisdom on this very Group. Thanks, and "Viva la Tux"! |
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| On Sat, 28 Jul 2007, in the Usenet newsgroup alt.os.linux.gentoo, in article <1185596103.357107.14860@e9g2000prf.googlegroups.c om>, wiredkiwi wrote: >New to Linux? Migrating from Windows or OSX? 1855 Netiquette Guidelines. S. Hambridge. October 1995. (Format: TXT=46185 bytes) (Also FYI0028) (Status: INFORMATIONAL) That RFC (which you can find using the same search engine you are posting from) recommends reading a news group for a month before posting to it. Given the capability of that search engine and the fact that it's archiving this (and the other groups you multi-posted to), it would take only a few minutes to discover that your post is way off target. >Firstly, please don't misinterpret this post as spam. Why not? It may not be banging on the Breidbart Index, but it is "Excessive Multi-Posting" (EMP) which has the same meaning as the term "spam" usually carries, but it is more accurate and self-explanatory. EMP means, essentially, "too many separate copies of a substantively identical article." "Substantively identical" means that the material in each article is sufficiently similar to construe the same message. And if you're wondering where that comes from, perhaps you should read the article "FAQ: Current Usenet spam thresholds and guidelines" which is posted every Sunday to the Usenet newsgroups news.admin.net-abuse.bulletins, news.admin.net-abuse.usenet, news.admin.net-abuse.sightings, news.admin.net-abuse.misc, and news.answers. >I've been using Linux for a short time only - I was "bumped" in to the >Linux arena through a promotion at work which required me to service >Fedora based servers in 50+ locations. I've always been a Windows/OSX >person myself, but I quickly found Linux to be an amazingly capable >OS. And I suppose that means you also posted articles to Fedora newsgroups. You may want to notice that Gentoo and SuSE are not Fedora. Why did you post to such a lively group as "alt.uu.comp.os.linux.questions"? Did you even bother to notice what the character of that group is? Or is it just another newsgroups with the word 'linux' in the name? By the way why are you posting from google instead of using the news server your ISP provides? Old guy |
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