In Need Of Redhat video Tutorials.
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Did you CRC/MD5 check the ISO? You have a bad ISO most likely.
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@JaredBusch said:
Did you CRC/MD5 check the ISO? You have a bad ISO most likely.
Jared I think you may be right. I just d/l another DVD ISO and I got as far as inputting the password. Now it's showing that it's installing the packages. I didn't do any CRC/MD5 check. I spent all that time last night for nothing. Something simple. SON OF A MONKEY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you so much Jared. I feel much better now. Maybe I should go get some sleep now. lol!
Stand by for the final conclusion.
Spoke too soon! It got all the way to completion then this popped up:
Just another soggy wet dream!!!!
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@JaredBusch said:
Did you CRC/MD5 check the ISO? You have a bad ISO most likely.
Hey Jared! After reading your post about the check, I dug deeper into Centos site and came across a post that stated that it's better to pull from torrents as oppose from the site. With that said, I did. I noticed that it came with MD5 check. I give it a shot and here are the results:
Thank you so much for shining a lite on the matter from that perspective. I was up all night. Now I Officially feel better. Now it's time to learn. I have to make up for lost time. Thank you all for being there for me. It feels really good to have a great team of men and women like you all.
Well....until the next question.Oh wait! I wanted to ask....jk! lol!
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What is your first CentOS project?
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Glad you got this working, sorry i was not available to reply to your chat.
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@StrongBad said:
What is your first CentOS project?
I was wondering the same thing. One of the best ways to learn CentOS (or any Linux distro) is to set yourself some goals to go about it. May I suggest setting up your own wordpress server. This gets some of the basics out of the way for things like editing config files and installing packages.
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@JaredBusch said:
Glad you got this working, sorry i was not available to reply to your chat.
That's cool Jared. I just took what you posted earlier and Wax On and Wax Off. Whaala! I'm good now. lol!
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@coliver said:
@StrongBad said:
What is your first CentOS project?
I was wondering the same thing. One of the best ways to learn CentOS (or any Linux distro) is to set yourself some goals to go about it. May I suggest setting up your own wordpress server. This gets some of the basics out of the way for things like editing config files and installing packages.
I may pick your brains on that coliver at some point. Thank you for the suggestion.
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Some great project ideas on Linux include:
- Jump Server
- Web Server (WordPress or otherwise)
- Storage Server (NFS for UNIX machines, SMB via Samba for Windows)
- Media Server (share out those home movies and music)
- PBX (like FreePBX or Elastix) to use as your home phone system
- Logging Server (ELK or similar, a bit more advanced)
- Stand alone database server (used by other projects, most likely)
- Wiki for home documentation (likely sharing the web server box)
- Directory server (instead of AD to manage your desktops)
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Pluralsight:
($50 monthly subscription - can turn off at any time - unlimited training for that month.)
http://www.pluralsight.com/search/?searchTerm=LinuxLinux Foundation:
(Online Classrooms)
http://training.linuxfoundation.org/linux-coursesLearnable:
Not sure how good this one is. I was going to check out some of their topics.
https://learnable.com/courses/a-beginner-s-guide-to-production-linux-49#overview -
@scottalanmiller said:
Some great project ideas on Linux include:
- Jump Server
- Web Server (WordPress or otherwise)
- Storage Server (NFS for UNIX machines, SMB via Samba for Windows)
- Media Server (share out those home movies and music)
- PBX (like FreePBX or Elastix) to use as your home phone system
- Logging Server (ELK or similar, a bit more advanced)
- Stand alone database server (used by other projects, most likely)
- Wiki for home documentation (likely sharing the web server box)
- Directory server (instead of AD to manage your desktops
Thank you so much Scott for all of those suggestions. I will put forth an effort to do them all. Talking about stepping outside of your comfort zone. lol!
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@bsouder said:
Pluralsight:
($50 monthly subscription - can turn off at any time - unlimited training for that month.)
http://www.pluralsight.com/search/?searchTerm=LinuxLinux Foundation:
(Online Classrooms)
http://training.linuxfoundation.org/linux-coursesLearnable:
Not sure how good this one is. I was going to check out some of their topics.
https://learnable.com/courses/a-beginner-s-guide-to-production-linux-49#overviewbsouder thank you for providing links on the educational part. I really need all I can get. I really do appreciate that!