Thanks to its status as operating system of choice for countless Internet servers, UNIX has grown far beyond the esoteric realm of high-powered academic and business computing. Now, no serious Webmaster can afford not to be able to use UNIX. UNIX For Dummies , 3rd Edition, is the practical, easy-to-understand guide for anyone who wants quick explanations of all essential UNIX functions. Bestselling authors John R. Levine and Margaret Levine Young also bring you the latest information on Linux, the highly popular noncommercial version of UNIX, as well as on major commercial implementations such as Berkeley UNIX, System V, System V Release 4, SunOS, and Solaris. In UNIX For Dummies , 3rd Edition, you find out to do things like Locate files Set and change read, write, and execute permissions Browse the Web, participate in Usenet newsgroups, exchange e-mail, and upload and download files Use text editors such as vi, ed, and emacs Install software Compress and decompress files Backup your work -- just in case…
Little value. I was frustrated when I would look up commands and it would say something like "this command is for advanced users. You should find someone smarter then you.".
I know those are not the exact words, but that's the gist of the book. If it's not an every-day-ordinary UNIX command, you should not be messing with it. I bought the book to learn about the commands I don't use every day.
A quite enjoyable read for people who meet UNIX systems for the first time. Probably not made to be read cover to cover, rather used as a quick reference if a situation demands.
The authors put a great effort into presenting the more complicated aspects in plain English and with humour. Sometimes a little too much humour if you ask me, even though I had more than one laughs out loud.
Personally I didn't find too much new information, but that just proves I wasn't the target audience. What might be problematic though is the inherent problem with IT-related literature: outdatedness. The 5th edition I read felt quite old in that aspect.
I had an employer who I was a store manager for who demanded I read this book so I would understand how his system worked. This was in 2001 and the 'system' he set up crashed because it was not programed for the Y2K! Good book that helped me with TY sales and LY sales and hourly sales once I figured out how to program it.. lol
an excellent and informative read, entertaining, not a reference book, but provides a lot of background on why UNIX and Linux is the way it is... How the mail tool called "biff" was named... Sys Admin favorite foods, and other essentials are covered.