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Date:      Sun, 28 May 2000 19:03:56 -0400
From:      "leegold" <goldtech@worldpost.com>
To:        "Doug Young" <dougy@gargoyle.apana.org.au>
Cc:        <freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: any good books?
Message-ID:  <000a01bfc8f9$013844e0$cedda4d8@leegold1>
References:  <000501bfc8f2$e3ea30c0$cedda4d8@leegold1> <003f01bfc8f4$f5a59c30$847e03cb@ROADRUNNER>

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> Whilst I agree with you in principle, as do many people new to both unix &
> FreeBSD,> there have been countless similar comments over the years and
nothing much> has changed.> Well thats not strictly correct ... there have
been a few attempts at> creating intelligible docs,> but unfortunately there
doesn't seem to be any attempt at recording where> they all are.
> However the ONLY way I can see any improvement is to stop complaining & do
something

yeah, you're right.

one thing, that caught me off guard was the lack of support for the newer
video cards. i got a shiny new card - highly rated - that's not x86
supported. typical newbie blunder. got me peaved.

i've taken a mess of programming, computer- college level courses, nothing
i've seen is as tuff a nut to crack as unix sysadmin. And that's what's
happening - FreeBSD and maybe to a lesser extent Linux, requires the USER to
become their own sysadmins. and that ain't easy my friend. think about it.

> positive about improving things ...... its obvious that the experts don't
> perceive the need for step_by_step docs, but the compliments I've received
from my attempts to> produce something> a bit more newbie-friendly clearly
demonstrate the need for similar stuff.> My main problem is lack of time
..... if any other newbies feel inclined to assist I would appreciate their
comments.





>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "leegold" <goldtech@worldpost.com>
> To: <freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG>
> Sent: Monday, May 29, 2000 8:20 AM
> Subject: Re: any good books?
>
>
> > imo, i have not seen any what i would call good documentation for fbsd
> (and
> > linux) for the neophyte. of course it could be that i am stupid and do
not
> > have the mental capacity to understand the documentation  (of course it
> > would help if walnut creek had not sent me ver 4.0 w/the complete bsd
> book -
> > since their are signbificant changes in the install from 3.x.x ), but
all
> > documentation i see assumes sysadmin level knowledge. plus most levels
of
> > conversation also assumes pro level knowledge.
> >
> > plus, most doucumentation and support i hsve seen so far in the open/fee
> > software realm is either incomplete ( sometimes only a cheesy/lazily
> written
> > readme.txt), or assumes some mystic divination on the part of the user
> >  again  maybe i'm just stupid), or prof/ sysadmin knowledge.
> >
> > So in a nutshell, i think there there are NO good intro books on any
> flavor
> > of x86 unix.. they all suck - i can't fathom any of the hundred or so
i've
> > seen on linux or freebsd.
> >
> > when documenting try a tree stucture, then any of the deviations of the
> path
> > will take care of themselves - naw -that would make to much sense.
> >
> > guess i must be a stupid mofo.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> > with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message
> >
>



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