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Linux Basics Tutorial Guide for Beginners - About Debian Linux Guides
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"8db
1000
Linus Torvalds
Created the Linux kernel while
at Helsinki University (Finland)
Released September 16, 1991
Linux Basics
Ian Murdock
Created Debian while at
Purdue University (Indiana)
Released August 16, 1993
While many may shy away from Linux because of its complexity, it is this very complexity that makes it so interesting and beneficial. And as with anything complex, when taken as a series of small, simpler pieces (as we do on our guide pages) it becomes easy. With all of its pieces, Linux is like a bottomless toy chest that will provide you with many years of learning. "Never stop learning" as they say. Your brain needs exercise just as much as your body. Keep it in shape or you run the risk of becoming a mental turnip by the time you're 70. Linux is a great brain exerciser.
Back before Microsoft developed Windows, Macintosh computers were more popular. It was easier for new computer users to use a mouse to point to cute little pictures than to have to learn a bunch of DOS commands. However, you couldn't write batch files on Macs, couldn't redirect text or file contents to ports, pipe input to commands, take actions based on return codes, etc., etc. While the Mac GUI made it easier to use a computer, it insulated you from the hardware and OS kernel limiting your ability to execute commands and automate tasks. And isn't automation, i.e. having the computer do the work for you, what computers were supposed to be all about? The Mac GUI did quite the opposite. It required user input to accomplish anything. A similar comparison can now be made between Windows and Linux/UNIX servers and the same equations hold true:
Simplicity = Limitations
Complexity = Capabilities
This is the case with just about anything. An audio system with a single "tone" control is easy to use but it doesn't give "
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