This is a practical course dedicated to real-world scenarios which will get you into Linux quickly, and not just fill your head with commands. Linux was not designed to be complicated or difficult or cryptic! If you know the context of why the commands are named the way they are, you will remember them easily! Do you ever wonder how people on television memorizing PI to 100 decimal places or the random order of an entire deck of playing cards? They use a technique which creates a narrative. Linux seems unfriendly and cryptic, but the system was never meant to be that way. In fact, the commands were supposed to be easy to remember but we have forgotten what the original clues were! I teach with this in mind and use memorization techniques based on narrative neural networks which are the strongest methods of memorization humans have. In this course for beginners who want to be users or administrators of Linux, I will show you how to do Linux basics which include basic navigation, diagnostics, and viewing the environment. For example, there is a command called NICE. Nice prioritizes processes or application on a computer to perform better or get preferential treatment. Most people use this command incorrectly. They tell the application to perform using NICE and it gets slower and more erratic. But they don't know the REASON. The reason is because nice was named after the saying "NICE GUYS FINISH LAST". When you nice a program, you are telling the program to be "nice" and let the other guys go ahead. In other words, nice +20 is "nicer", which means SLOWER. Now that you know the story, you will never forget the way to use the command nice!
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