I took two of Jason's classes on Udemy. Both great classes, I highly recommend his Bash scripting class. Its great for intro to programming. And it is really cool to write interesting scripts that do some really interesting stuff. A good language to learn first before continuing on to something else like python.
I tried to find them on Udemy but not sure where the links are :( I'm really interested in taking his Bash scripting course. Any link provided would be highly appreciated!
On Udemy.com Bash Scripting and Shell Programming (Linux Command Line) - Jason Cannon www.udemy.com/bash-scripting/ Occasionally Udemy classes go on sale for $10 - $12.
Thank you, this was just what I needed. I’m not a novice, but I needed something that would cover the smaller topics in a large topic like linux sys admin. I’m very capable of finding granular information, but you can’t look for information if you don’t know the topics.
When you started talking about your music career, and how you ended up here, I felt touched. I'm on that same road. I don't really like studying what the university wants to teach me (too much garbage content I don't wanna know, or I find it not useful). I'm self taught with music as well... It's nice to find people who had done the same. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
I came the same way. Music + dead end job (Dropped out of uni) Desktop support 2 years Redhat Administrator (well, entire server/network admin) - been in it for 3 weeks.
Gavin: I have been debating going back to uni (I couldn't stand school) just for the career boost, but have that "drop out" status hanging over my head. I really want to break into the sys admin world - or even Linux desktop support. I'm so tired of Windows support. What did you do to become a RH admin? Certs + networking?
same here.. dead end with the music, alot money invested into gear and shity job.. now im working as linux&hw support, i'm working 12h. shifts for 12 days at month for great money and my dreams come true.
At 14:54 the range of a Class A is given as 1.x.x.x - 127.x.x.x. I think the 127.0.0.0-127.255.255.255 is a reserved range and is excluded from Class A grouping.
You're a 1. Amazing teacher first and foremost. 2. An amazing sales person which is probably gonna go overlooked. 3. Pro at Linux. Much love thank you for the awesome content brotha.
Brilliant class , Basically I am Windows Administrator and want to shift to Linux as part of my work , This class really helped to Understand the Linux base -Booting,Filesystem,Disk manaement,usermanagement,Network,Firewall etc. thanks for the class
Didn't even catch your name until I read some of the comments here. I've watched a few videos and I'm always impressed how succinct and clear they are. I only today realized oh wait, I you're the guy that wrote those books I bought. My father's a retired telecommunications engineer that just decided he wants to get into programming proper, just for fun. I bought him a copy of your Python book since I think it's the best intro to programming in any language out there. I always recommend it. Hope that goes toward your missing musician income. Thanks for the videos too.
I was doing corporate level I.T before getting into a car accident. I started right off as desktop support at H.P, and moved my way up to supporting anything with a cord. Literally supporting every pc, server, and head over Kaseya!! I have idle time recovering and have had anxiety being what I call "out of the loops" well I decided to learn Linux, threw a disto into a VM and headed to the web to learn! Thanks for the videos
I really love the beginning where you explain how you got here. I'm currently a technical/intel recruiter and have been for 11 years. I'm really tired of it, and a couple weeks ago I found a Linux Admin with 7 years of experience. He doesn't have a degree, just self taught Linux and some certifications. We offered him 115k, found out he's making 170k with 7 years of experience and a high level clearance. Unbelievable. About 14 years ago I went to a small tech school and learned Network Administration as well as some Linux Administration. Being the irresponsible 19 years old I was, I didn't do anything with it. For the last few months I've been thinking about what I can do to get out of recruiting. I knew I have a knack for IT, but I didn't want to go get a bachelors degree and spend all that money. After researching, and then coming across this Linux Admin, I realized it's what I want to do, and this video really verifies that I can do it too. Thank you so much for this. I absolutely cannot wait to start a career in Linux Administration and one day pay it forward as well.
,.As a former professional musician and a long time IT professional I can tell you there are a lot of musicians in IT. I think the common denominator is "logic".
@@XwolfBane18oh wow I forgot I left this comment. I ended up getting my Linux+ and then taught myself how to code. I made the career switch to software engineer about five years ago and I love it.
@@rreay724 that’s amazing man I am looking for a similar thing I have been a IT support technician for 3 years but I want to improve and challenge myself. Do you have any LinkedIn or discord I would love to connect and get some advice from you if possible.
You're asking yourself what is the difference between poweroff and shutdown? halt terminates all processes and shuts down the cpu. poweroff is exactly like halt, but it also turns off the unit itself (lights and everything on a PC). It sends an ACPI command to the board, then to the PSU, to cut the power. shutdown is like poweroff, but it also runs the shutdown scripts. I always use shutdown -r now to reboot, and shutdown -h now to turn it completely off for the night.
Jason, excellent tutorial! Very well written, spoken, it is easy to follow and the material is good for an overview. I'd love to see more on two topics: security practices ( dos and don'ts) and networking ( how it works all together: nameservers, DNS, DNS zones). Great stuff!
Yeah, Jason, you are insanely awesome. thank you... its down to me now, but your Udemy courses and website have started me down a path that I really really really want to head down
You have filled a void in my life. Thanks to your wonderful presentation I now have a better understanding of what I’m doing. I threw myself into the water in order to learn how to swim, now instead of splashing around and going under I now know that I’m naturally buoyant. Thank you.
Hi, Linux Training Academy if you don't mind, can you do a tutorial to configure redsocks to forward all internet traffic through an SSH tunnel ? So that we wouldn't have to configure a socks proxy in chrome / firefox to browse via that ssh tunnel.
I took two of Jason's classes on Udemy. Both great classes, I highly recommend his Bash scripting class. Its great for intro to programming. And it is really cool to write interesting scripts that do some really interesting stuff. A good language to learn first before continuing on to something else like python.
Kevin Kerchove
Agree with you friend but most of the time it's over our economic capacity
I tried to find them on Udemy but not sure where the links are :( I'm really interested in taking his Bash scripting course. Any link provided would be highly appreciated!
On Udemy.com
Bash Scripting and Shell Programming (Linux Command Line) - Jason Cannon
www.udemy.com/bash-scripting/
Occasionally Udemy classes go on sale for $10 - $12.
I second this request.
I've been a musician and a teacher for a lot of time. I can tell you're a great teacher and I deeply thank you for this.
Still useful 9 years later, I've got half of your crash course on a flash card system and will come back to it for 3 days or more! :)
Thank you, this was just what I needed. I’m not a novice, but I needed something that would cover the smaller topics in a large topic like linux sys admin. I’m very capable of finding granular information, but you can’t look for information if you don’t know the topics.
I'm glad this video helped!
When you started talking about your music career, and how you ended up here, I felt touched. I'm on that same road. I don't really like studying what the university wants to teach me (too much garbage content I don't wanna know, or I find it not useful). I'm self taught with music as well...
It's nice to find people who had done the same.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
Hi5 and cheers
I came the same way.
Music + dead end job (Dropped out of uni)
Desktop support 2 years
Redhat Administrator (well, entire server/network admin) - been in it for 3 weeks.
Gavin: I have been debating going back to uni (I couldn't stand school) just for the career boost, but have that "drop out" status hanging over my head. I really want to break into the sys admin world - or even Linux desktop support. I'm so tired of Windows support. What did you do to become a RH admin? Certs + networking?
same here.. dead end with the music, alot money invested into gear and shity job.. now im working as linux&hw support, i'm working 12h. shifts for 12 days at month for great money and my dreams come true.
@@gavinpeters9531 Still in the redhat admin position ?
At 14:54 the range of a Class A is given as 1.x.x.x - 127.x.x.x. I think the 127.0.0.0-127.255.255.255 is a reserved range and is excluded from Class A grouping.
It's a loopback range - For testing purposes! you're right!
You're a
1. Amazing teacher first and foremost.
2. An amazing sales person which is probably gonna go overlooked.
3. Pro at Linux.
Much love thank you for the awesome content brotha.
Thanks for the kind words! I love sharing my passion for Linux!
This is one of the best linux sys admin videos I've seen so far.
Brilliant class , Basically I am Windows Administrator and want to shift to Linux as part of my work , This class really helped to Understand the Linux base -Booting,Filesystem,Disk manaement,usermanagement,Network,Firewall etc. thanks for the class
Didn't even catch your name until I read some of the comments here. I've watched a few videos and I'm always impressed how succinct and clear they are. I only today realized oh wait, I you're the guy that wrote those books I bought.
My father's a retired telecommunications engineer that just decided he wants to get into programming proper, just for fun. I bought him a copy of your Python book since I think it's the best intro to programming in any language out there. I always recommend it. Hope that goes toward your missing musician income. Thanks for the videos too.
I was doing corporate level I.T before getting into a car accident. I started right off as desktop support at H.P, and moved my way up to supporting anything with a cord. Literally supporting every pc, server, and head over Kaseya!! I have idle time recovering and have had anxiety being what I call "out of the loops" well I decided to learn Linux, threw a disto into a VM and headed to the web to learn! Thanks for the videos
Kenneth Nicklowicz リロ注ぐ?されます
How you're doing now?
I really love the beginning where you explain how you got here. I'm currently a technical/intel recruiter and have been for 11 years. I'm really tired of it, and a couple weeks ago I found a Linux Admin with 7 years of experience. He doesn't have a degree, just self taught Linux and some certifications. We offered him 115k, found out he's making 170k with 7 years of experience and a high level clearance. Unbelievable. About 14 years ago I went to a small tech school and learned Network Administration as well as some Linux Administration. Being the irresponsible 19 years old I was, I didn't do anything with it. For the last few months I've been thinking about what I can do to get out of recruiting. I knew I have a knack for IT, but I didn't want to go get a bachelors degree and spend all that money. After researching, and then coming across this Linux Admin, I realized it's what I want to do, and this video really verifies that I can do it too. Thank you so much for this. I absolutely cannot wait to start a career in Linux Administration and one day pay it forward as well.
,.As a former professional musician and a long time IT professional I can tell you there are a lot of musicians in IT. I think the common denominator is "logic".
Can I ask how things are going in your progression of becoming a Linux administrator
@@XwolfBane18oh wow I forgot I left this comment. I ended up getting my Linux+ and then taught myself how to code. I made the career switch to software engineer about five years ago and I love it.
@@rreay724 that’s amazing man I am looking for a similar thing I have been a IT support technician for 3 years but I want to improve and challenge myself. Do you have any LinkedIn or discord I would love to connect and get some advice from you if possible.
perfect for beginners & intermediates. Pretty much covers everything.
You're asking yourself what is the difference between poweroff and shutdown?
halt terminates all processes and shuts down the cpu.
poweroff is exactly like halt, but it also turns off the unit itself (lights and everything on a PC). It sends an ACPI command to the board, then to the PSU, to cut the power.
shutdown is like poweroff, but it also runs the shutdown scripts.
I always use shutdown -r now to reboot, and shutdown -h now to turn it completely off for the night.
Jason, excellent tutorial! Very well written, spoken, it is easy to follow and the material is good for an overview. I'd love to see more on two topics: security practices ( dos and don'ts) and networking ( how it works all together: nameservers, DNS, DNS zones). Great stuff!
One of the best and most user friendly crash course.
To employer... "I studied under the great, Jason Canon... on TH-cam."
Self motivated and using tech to further your IT education in resourceful ways. Sounds like a good thing to me.
Say no more fam. Hired!
...Fcking... Hired!
Yeah, Jason, you are insanely awesome. thank you... its down to me now, but your Udemy courses and website have started me down a path that I really really really want to head down
Thank you very much. Having a job interview tomorrow and I probably start working in a datacentre. So a quick refresher was nice and helpful!
"My name is Jason Canon." Right out of the gate, I know that I'm in for something special. Reminds me of my old teacher, Erik Artillery Bombardment.
bwahaha! amazing. real
Awesomely laid out video! Made the subject so much easier!
I learned a lot of good things here and was reminded of a lot of things I had forgotten. Thanks!
You have filled a void in my life. Thanks to your wonderful presentation I now have a better understanding of what I’m doing. I threw myself into the water in order to learn how to swim, now instead of splashing around and going under I now know that I’m naturally buoyant. Thank you.
Excellent overview! Clear and easy to follow along.
Thanks for your work and the book !!!
You're welcome!
Superb your teaching skill's are awesome. Keep going really appreciated.
Wish I could have same voice as yours.
In reality or eventually there is no such thing as safe and secure job.. Nice vid! you are a good teacher!
Can you list the most commonly use commands in systems administration
on Windows Server: shutdown /r
Wow. I almost had a Master's in Computer Science and you would be the best professor. My stupid professor was a loser.
Do you recommend any cert?
Why linux ram auto management wrost than windows?😭
Thankyou Linux Training Academy
I work in CloudOps IT and did not know that `ifconfig` is deprecated...good stuff, thanks! #TIL
sir in Linux which flavor are you teaching the course???
Hi, Linux Training Academy if you don't mind, can you do a tutorial to configure redsocks to forward all internet traffic through an SSH tunnel ? So that we wouldn't have to configure a socks proxy in chrome / firefox to browse via that ssh tunnel.
Excellent video!
really good course ! thank you for sharing
Awesome video. A lot of important topics discussed.
Jason Canon?
you're great sir...
Very helpful thanks
Thank you for your helpful lecture!
Well, I'm a wedding videographer and here I am!
Super voice
Suddenly "Idriss" became another student :D
Just kidding, great content!
Thank you!
It would be grateful if you add subtitles with it as sometimes it is quite difficult for a non native English speaker to understand your language
Awesome thanks
Good video.
Thank you !!!
Thanks!
I work in IT and it’s still not paying the bills
Time for job change and a raise? www.linuxtrainingacademy.com/career-advice/
this is so good asmr video
good lecture.
Thx
nice video
good
One thing you don't cover is how windows file extension names relate to LINUX.
Good
systemd is killing linux.....