stommel.tamu.edu — All free, of course. Includes the typical roundup of Linux/Unix languages, also includes things like cron, openGL, networking, GTK, Gimp, iptables, regex, Grub/LILO, booting between multiple kernels and a plethora of others.
Dec 10, 2006 View in Crawl 4
kokorhekkusDec 10, 2006
Admirable idea. But this seems to be an old list since I didn't find anything that was added later than 2003. And that means you risk (unless you count on the writers of the pages) to land on some out-of-date tutorial for an older version which will just turn some people off linux or just make them pissed off at digg. So: good idea but shouldn't have been frontpage material without a substantial warning if at all.
rippofunkDec 10, 2006
Very old info, the newest stuff is 3yrs old, its like having text and tutorials on win98. And a couple of links I clicked on were dead, which makes sense since some links date back to `96.Buried.
Closed AccountDec 10, 2006
Don't click on the main link for RSYNC, because it points to www.rsync.org which just has links on it for xanax and other spam related links....
geonineDec 10, 2006
Hella dead links, 4 out the 6 python links are dead or rerouted. There has to be some good stuff in there though.
comendolixoDec 11, 2006
nice 403
mbieszDec 11, 2006
Heh, the ancient Google logo makes a nice touch. It does give the right idea, though: what's the point of these gigantic lists if you can Google "perl tutorial" or "python reference"?
aragon127Dec 11, 2006
Is there an Ubuntu version
amikael9999Dec 11, 2006
Well, not a bad one, but where is the search?Google tells you which one is the best:<a class="user" href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=computer+books&btnG=Search">http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=computer+books&btnG=Search</a>And Yahoo tells you too:<a class="user" href="http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=computer+books&prssweb=Search&ei=UTF-8&fr=sfp&fl=0&x=wrt">http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=computer+books&prssweb=Search&ei=UTF-8&fr=sfp&fl=0&x=wrt</a>
monsterbDec 17, 2006
A little dated, but very useful. I digg it!