Good Reference Books
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Thread: Good Reference Books

  1. #1
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    Post Good Reference Books

    Hi,

    I was just wondering if anybody has found any particular books they find themselves refering to regularly for help with technical work.

    I am also looking for a good guide to Linux. All the books I find are either thin, this is how to install linux books, or massive thick tomes on recompiling the kernal.

    I would love a middle of the range book, explaning some of the standard things ppl use linux for, like, how to setup SAMBA, sendmail, a web server, and perhaps setup a internet proxy server.

    Any thoughts?

  2. #2
    Registered User Stanley_Kubrick's Avatar
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    For hardware i use this big-a$$ tome called the complete guide to upgrading and repairing PCs (mark minasi)from SYBEX. Good info but becomes dated rather quickly. This is the book i studied for the h/w part of the A+ exam.

  3. #3
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    "The Complete guide to Maintaing and Repairing PC's"

    O'Rielly books (anything is good - particularly their Linux stuff)

    "Linux Complete" by Sybex
    MS Windows NT Resource Kit
    TechRef
    PC Dictionary (for some of those DA#$ acronyms.)
    Novell's complete Guide to NetWare 4.11 (and 5)
    Windows 2000 Administrators Pocket Guide

  4. #4
    Registered User Fubarian's Avatar
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    [quote]Originally posted by cyberhh:
    <strong>
    Windows 2000 Administrators Pocket Guide</strong><hr></blockquote>

    love that lil book

    MS seem to put out some pretty good reference books

  5. #5
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    Mike Meyers' A+

    This is hands down the best text.

  6. #6
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    I like the O'Reilly "animal" books, and have a whole collection of their * In A Nutshell books. Saved my arse more than once.

    I can't recommend the TechRef and/or Pocket PCRef highly enough. I wore out my Pocket PCRef when I was working at CR, and literally consulted it at least twice a day. I always carried it around in my back pocket. The TechRef came in real handy when I was working a desk job at Sensormatic. (They are almost the same, except the TechRef is larger, has larger print and has a few extras like printer control codes and company addresses, while the Pocket PCRef is much more portable.)

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    Question


  8. #8
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    Thanks guys...

  9. #9
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    Also,

    About the best thing I ever did was get an old dayplanner - tear out the guts and create a ton of templates with frequently used information in it. As I found a trick, looked something up for the second or third time, determined some network information, whatever it is I wrote it in my "Little Black Book" and THAT has become the BEST reference material I have ever used.

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