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Linux Books

Of course the Internet along with the help of Google is a great source of information. You can answer almost any question you have about Linux and find many tutorials, guides and help. However many people prefer reading this information on a printed book accesssible even when they are not online or don't have a computer in front of them. I've received many e-mails asking me to propose them a few good books regarding Linux commands, administration and for specific distributions such as Ubuntu, Fedora etc. So, I've search for a few good books. Here they are. Happy reading!

Linux Books

Ubuntu guides

Ubuntu is a free Operating System based on Debian GNU/Linux. It has been rated as the most popular Linux distribution amongst Linux users according to Distrowatch. As it happens every six months a new version of Ubuntu has been released. Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx is here! Below you can find some helpful tutorials for old and new users!

Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx Post Installation Guide
Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala Post Installation Guide
Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope Post Installation Guide
How to install Ubuntu Linux on Windows using VirtualBox

Fedora 12 Installation Guide

Fedora 12, codenamed Constantine, is released! Just for the info, Fedora is an RPM based Linux Distribution, an Operating system in other words, developed by the community supported Fedora Project and sponsored by Red Hat. Fedora contains only free and Open Source software. Some of Fedora's 12 new features are Gnome 2.28, KDE 4.3, better web cam support!, and many others.

Fedora 12 Installation and Post-Installation Guide
Fedora 11 Installation and Post-Installation Guide
Fedora 11 Installation and Post-Installation Guide in Chinese

chrome-logo.jpgI believe most of you have heard of Chrome before. Chrome is Google's promising browser, based on Chromium project, which is considered to be really fast. Until recently Chrome was available only for Windows and Mac users. But now Google has released a version of Chrome for developers in order to test it. Of course I was curious to see it running natively on Linux (without using wine or crossover office) and therefore I installed it on Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope. According to the developers site:

Chrome requires Intel Pentium 4 / Athlon 64 or later CPU, and 32 or 64 bit Ubuntu 8.04 or later, or 32 bit Debian 5. Support for other Linux distributions is planned; unpacking the .deb files by hand may work.

Installing Google Chrome will add the Google repository
so your system will automatically keep Chrome up to date. (If you don't want Google's repository, do "sudo touch /etc/defaults/google-chrome" before installing the package.)

Note: The Linux build still lacks certain privacy features, and is not appropriate for general consumer use.
To test it on your own download and install the appropriate package depending on your computer's Linux installation. Clicking on it should do the job


**Note: you can do this also manually by downloading the appropriate package, open a terminal, cd to where you keep it and type:

sudo dpkg -i google-chrome-unstable*

You can find it under Applications > Internet -> Chromium Web Browser .
And here is the whole procedure in screenshots.











Now you can enjoy Google Crhome browser in Linux!

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Comments (4)

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We need RPM not everybody use Ubuntu, lots and lots of people uses fedora or Centos
Please help develop rpm for CentOS somehow !!! smilies/kiss.gif
Mustapha Kamal , July 10, 2009
...
If I knew how I would. smilies/sad.gif I guess we'll have to wait till the developers decide to provide Chromium for other Linux distributions as well.
axel , July 13, 2009
Packages for Fedora (and with some work, for Red Hat Enterprise Linux or CentOS)
http://spot.fedorapeople.org/chromium/

... packages for Fedora (and with some work, for Red Hat Enterprise Linux or CentOS)

This may be of some help to you.

Cheers. smilies/smiley.gif
David S , November 09, 2009
...
Thanks David! I've alredy added this repository in my Fedora 11 Installation and Post Installation Guide. smilies/smiley.gif
axel , November 16, 2009

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