Edx Free Linux Training
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Did anyone else take advantage of the free Linux course offered by EdX a couple of months ago? I have been working through it slowly as I can, but I am struggling to get the time to do it. How far did you get?
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chapter 6. My 70-410 study took priority though.
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@coliver said:
@NetworkNerd said:
EdX
No, is it still being offered?
I do not believe so - http://community.spiceworks.com/topic/549894-free-linux-course. I do have a coupon for $100 off the re-run of that course if you want it.
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I took some free linux training from HP once upon a time. Not sure if they still do it, though.
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Did not get a chance to try it, how is it?
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How are you liking the training? Are you finding it valuable? What distros of Linux do they focus on?
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@Dominica said:
I took some free linux training from HP once upon a time. Not sure if they still do it, though.
Oh wow I totally forgot about those. That was a long time ago!
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@StrongBad Every time I see your name I start singing "C'mon evveybody it's Labo Day!" That is all.
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It talks about SUSE, Debian, and Fedora families. The first few modules were general overview of how the Linux kernel and boot loader work, and they break out the steps in examples (at least those I have done up through chapter 4) for a distro in each family with screenshots. It's really helped me just doing what I have done thus far.
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@NetworkNerd said:
It talks about SUSE, Debian, and Fedora families. The first few modules were general overview of how the Linux kernel and boot loader work, and they break out the steps in examples (at least those I have done up through chapter 4) for a distro in each family with screenshots. It's really helped me just doing what I have done thus far.
That is an unexpected lineup. One enterprise distro (Suse) which is primarily popular in Europe (and with me) and two hobby distros. That's weird.
I would expect Red Hat, Suse and Ubuntu if there were three.
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@Dominica said:
@StrongBad Every time I see your name I start singing "C'mon evveybody it's Labo Day!" That is all.
That wasn't me. That was Homestarrunner.
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@StrongBad said:
That wasn't me. That was Homestarrunner.
Ummm, duh. But you remind me of Homestarrunner. It's all about word association, man.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@NetworkNerd said:
It talks about SUSE, Debian, and Fedora families. The first few modules were general overview of how the Linux kernel and boot loader work, and they break out the steps in examples (at least those I have done up through chapter 4) for a distro in each family with screenshots. It's really helped me just doing what I have done thus far.
That is an unexpected lineup. One enterprise distro (Suse) which is primarily popular in Europe (and with me) and two hobby distros. That's weird.
I would expect Red Hat, Suse and Ubuntu if there were three.
The specific distros they show are CentOS, Ubuntu, and OpenSUSE. Notice I said families above.
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@NetworkNerd said:
The specific distros they show are CentOS, Ubuntu, and OpenSUSE. Notice I said families above.
Fedora is considered part of the RPM family Although CentOS is a downstream of it.
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Oh i forgot about it.. but i am struggling to study when I'm home.
I think i am still in 2nd Chapter.. -
They are offering a re-run of this course with updated content in January. If you did not sign up, I highly recommend it.
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Thanks
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@NetworkNerd said:
They are offering a re-run of this course with updated content in January. If you did not sign up, I highly recommend it.
Thanks just signed up.
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Thanks - I'm already taking three other classes over winter, we'll see if I actually have time to audit this one as well.