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Linux crashcourse

Posted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 1:07 pm
by <<D.A.>>
http://tha-hell-hackers.kx.cz/forum/vie ... f=15&t=405

Hopefully, a good article for newbies in hacking, that are starting with Linux.

hello brothers hope you all are fine friendz can any one tel

Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 7:41 am
by nomanahmed
hello brothers hope you all are fine friendz can any one tell me how to unlimited downloading from rapidshre...waiting for yours possitive response thnxxx

Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 3:26 am
by pixelot
Wow. Very helpful stuff there. :shock:

Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 2:44 pm
by jack krauser
pixelot wrote:Wow. Very helpful stuff there. :shock:
yeah check out our site so you can read and the rest of the articles that DA and i wrote!!!!we will soon have more to publish about hacking,software,hardware,types of atttacks and how to's

Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 9:41 pm
by XZIBIT
can u stop spamming D.A

jackrauser

chanops.org
librairc.net
the-bot-house.com
phoenix-systems.net

----------------------
my shit list

nobody sh1t list

Posted: Fri May 16, 2008 4:31 pm
by dust
I saw linux course,
and I wonder, would Ubuntu 7.1 do the job for begginer,at least some time?








(sorry my english)

Posted: Fri May 16, 2008 6:24 pm
by jack krauser
dust wrote:I saw linux course,
and I wonder, would Ubuntu 7.1 do the job for begginer,at least some time?








(sorry my english)
well if you are beginner than yes.....start with ubuntu the first 2-3 months and than that you will know some things about how linux works than i suggest you to put slackware 12.1 for a desktop
but if you have a laptop than backtrack 3 ;)

Posted: Fri May 16, 2008 7:43 pm
by <<D.A.>>
jack krauser wrote:
dust wrote:I saw linux course,
and I wonder, would Ubuntu 7.1 do the job for begginer,at least some time?








(sorry my english)
well if you are beginner than yes.....start with ubuntu the first 2-3 months and than that you will know some things about how linux works than i suggest you to put slackware 12.1 for a desktop
but if you have a laptop than backtrack 3 ;)
backtrack for newbies is just a toy... you can't use tools without understanding what they do...
ubuntu is too easy and it's clicking distro... after all, not too bad... you may use it, but as soon as you'll know the basics, switch to something more advanced...

Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 3:11 pm
by jack krauser
<<D.A.>> wrote:
jack krauser wrote:
dust wrote:I saw linux course,
and I wonder, would Ubuntu 7.1 do the job for begginer,at least some time?








(sorry my english)
well if you are beginner than yes.....start with ubuntu the first 2-3 months and than that you will know some things about how linux works than i suggest you to put slackware 12.1 for a desktop
but if you have a laptop than backtrack 3 ;)
backtrack for newbies is just a toy... you can't use tools without understanding what they do...
ubuntu is too easy and it's clicking distro... after all, not too bad... you may use it, but as soon as you'll know the basics, switch to something more advanced...
yeah exactly ubuntu is for newbies in the world of linux,
and it will put him in the right direction....

Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 4:10 pm
by Allosentient
Could somebody explain the advantages of slackware linux (other than being "original")?

Posted: Wed May 21, 2008 2:23 pm
by pixelot
Is Arch Linux also good for those purposes? :roll:

Posted: Wed May 21, 2008 4:06 pm
by <<D.A.>>
Allosentient wrote:Could somebody explain the advantages of slackware linux (other than being "original")?
The most original distro is OpenSUSE... even Windows doesn't have so many bugs</irony>
1) Slackware is very stable
2) doesn't require powerful machine (on my old computer(P166, 64RAM, 2GBHDD, 2MBVRAM) it works perfectly... with all the necessary daemons activated on startup, it boots for about 1,5 minutes); configuration tools are made for text-mode, so you can even avoid installing X;
3) easy-to-use - if you know linux, you won't have any troubles installing it and running it
4) has a good set of SW (for example, in ubuntu, compiling C code is sometimes very painful, as it is missing a lot of libraries); has everything for work in text mode; however, X is not abandoned;