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Forgive me as I am a "top" poster...<BR>
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Thought I would chime in as I've been off-list from ALE for a while...<BR>
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I have interest in completing Linux certs and have done some self-study (mainly toward RHCSA) but am open to another avenue.<BR>
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My background comes from graphics and programming design. I don't consider myself a programmer per-se; but do enjoy coding and have done a fair amount of HTML in my time. I do have great interest in learning C and started my tech career in Technical Writing and Illustration. From there I moved into working with Unix systems at Sequent Computing Systems (late 1980's) and then took a break for five years due to a move to NC. <BR>
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In 1995 I bought my first PC and re-learned everything I had forgotten on DOS/Windows systems. I did MCSE for NT4.0 and rather enjoyed that OS. In the late 1990's I started to dabble in Java and Linux and by 2000 I was taking classes at the Linux General Store (used to be near GA Tech). I had several failed attempts to migrate to *NIX (including Corel Linux and Solaris); but in the end gave SuSE 10.1 a try with more success. This was short lived and eventually I found my way into Ubuntu 8.04 and beyond. I was also big on PCLinux OS as it was good on a variety of h/w platforms. <BR>
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I became a daily driver in 2009 on 9.10 and eventually moved to Fedora 11. After that back to Ubuntu 11.04 and now daily driver of 12.04 and used to Unity (but also use Cairo a lot). Running Virtualbox to do some legacy Windows stuff and as a learning tool. Do a lot of Red Hat at work and have a new project that may require FreeBSD. <BR>
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I've been mostly GUI but enjoy CLI as a powerful tool. Don't own enough Windows platforms to bother with and the ones we have are special purpose machines with h/w that requires it. Otherwise we're all Ubuntu 12.04 LTS and happy as a clam. Just need to really dig in and learn CLI so that it is second nature. (Back to my roots in DOS and UNIX!)<BR>
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I am a Systems Engineer with a local computer manufacturer and work on a WIDE variety of systems; mostly industrial, medical and military systems on an International basis. My problems are usually very esoteric and specialized toward end-customer needs in confidential projects.<BR>
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Windows is of no interest to me anymore - only Linux and becoming more focused and capable in being the "go-to" Linux guy on campus. <BR>
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That's my sad little story and why I signed-up on the list - glad to see it has life!<BR>
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Cheers..........Rich in Lilburn<BR>
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On Mon, 2013-12-23 at 07:16 -0500, Leam Hall wrote:
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<PRE>
On 12/23/2013 06:19 AM, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> On 12/22/2013 08:59 PM, Leam Hall wrote:
>> Posted on GitHub so we don't have to search through e-mails.
>>
>> <A HREF="https://github.com/LeamHall/LinuxStudyGroup">https://github.com/LeamHall/LinuxStudyGroup</A>
>
> as a background, I have been doing command-line UNIX since 1985. I
> worked for AT&T installing AT&T UNIX computers, and AT&T PC6300 8086 DOS
> PC's ( before windows) . I learned ED before I learned VI.
> I learned to administer UNIX computers from the command line,there were
> no menus. Printers, users, files, uucp, DNS... maintenance ( fixing bad
> sectors, backups...). I know 5 or 6 VI commands really well:). I started
> running linux at home around 2003 with SuSe Version 9. I installed
> slackware at work, I think it was like version 2.14 or something, maybe
> around 2000, maybe 1999.
> All of my UNIX/Linux knowledge is seat-of-the-pants or AT&T courses, no
> certifications.. I do have an NT Administration certificate from about
> 1998 :) I don't have a real life need for linux certification, but I
> have installed it for people, and I certainly like to know MORE.
Paul,
You seem to be the perfect type to help new Linux Admins connect what is
with what was! While I like where Linux is now there's a part of me that
thinks SAs need more than just "click a few buttons and you have a cloud
server". I do want to push us into clouds, version control, and a few
other things, but a hands on experience with hardware is good.
Welcome aboard!
Leam
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