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Date:      Tue, 5 Jun 2001 10:16:27 -0600
From:      jeremy-novak <pr0cy0n@home.com>
To:        GoodleafJ@immunex.com
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: OT question -- Books on OS basics
Message-ID:  <20010605101627.A1072@c1456354-a.boise1.id.home.com>
In-Reply-To: <OF40B8F2EF.4E4A4B3E-ON88256A62.0054792A@immunex.com>; from GoodleafJ@immunex.com on Tue, Jun 05, 2001 at 08:27:53AM -0700
References:  <OF40B8F2EF.4E4A4B3E-ON88256A62.0054792A@immunex.com>

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On Tue, Jun 05, 2001 at 08:27:53AM -0700, GoodleafJ@immunex.com wrote:
> For personal reasons, I'm interested in learning about operating systems
> from a theoretical perspective. Here's the thing:
> 
>  - I don't have a background in computer science.
>  - I need something basic.
>  - Please recommend something if you know of a good book(s).
> 
> I'm prepared to accept the possibility that there is no basic book on
> operating systems accessible to a reasonably computer-saavy person with no
> CS background. In this case, can you suggest an intro to CS that might give
> me a background from which to proceed?
> 
> In short, I'd like to get up to speed, and I'm willing to do any amount of
> reading; I just want the shortest path first, so to speak.
> 
> Thanks for your time,
> John

  Hi John

 Unfortunately I really don't know what single book covers this topic. This very topic is a two years of coursework at my university. And honesstly I really 
 don't know a whole lot about Micro$oft, haven't played with it for a couple of  years. I can tell you that 'The Complete FreeBSD' by Greg Lehey and published
 by Walnut Creek CDROM Books http://www.cdrom.com/ is the best starter book
 for anything in the *nix category. It covers some history, comparitive
 differences between *nix and MS structure/commands, easy to understand 
 chapters on all key phases of running the OS. If you are just looking for
 a book that will not bruise the brain too much, yet be very educational
 and have the ability to intelligently compare the 'popular' OS's, this is 
 'the' book. 

 But be carefull john. I did some similar research in 96'-97', and I got 
 toatally hooked. Today I don't own one single piece of M$ software. 
 To quote 'a famous greek phillosopher' - "Once the mind is stretched by 
 new ideas, it can never re-take it's former shape". I 'was' a junior year
 finance major who willing and ready, threw it all away to become a C.S. major.
 
 Jeremy
 


          
  




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