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8 Reviews
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The first Linux+ book to receive five stars from me,
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
I reviewed the first edition of this book and found a few shortcomings, all of which have been fixed in this edition. The prior edition did not cover some hardware items that I saw on the exam; this edition includes it. The prior edition had installation screen shots from the Mandrake distribution, but Redhat is a far more common distribution in the business environment. This edition uses screenshots from RedHat Fedora. The index in the prior edition was not as thorough as I would have liked. This edition includes the items I looked for but was unable to find in the prior one. Even with the shortcomings in the prior version it was still the best certification study guide that I had reviewed. This edition is an improvement on the best study guide available, making it the new champ. One of the things I like best about Sybex certification books is that they are one of the few publishers who provide both the information needed to pass the exam and the information needed to actually work in the real world. All the most common networking and administrative tasks, troubleshooting, adding packages, adding hardware, and installation are covered in detail including installation methods and problems, security, file services, and troubleshooting. The author does an excellent job of walking the reader through all the various processes step by step and explaining each item in detail. Each chapter ends with a chapter summary, a section on exam essentials that summarizes exam critical items, a summary of commands covered in the chapter, a key terms list, and review questions and answers. The book even includes a CD with a test engine, two exam preparation exams, and flashcards. I've taught Linux at the college level both for certification and for practical application purposes and this is the best book available for the new or only minimally experienced Linux user who is planning to take the certification exam. The "Linux+ Study Guide, Second Edition" is the best exam preparation study guide I have seen on the market to date and a highly recommended read for anyone seeking certification.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not linux-compatible,
By "corona688" (SK, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
There's something ironic about a linux book that's not compatible with linux. When you want to learn windows, you use windows; when you want to learn linux, apparently, you also use windows, because they never thought that anyone would use anything else.It says on the back of the book, "Test your knowledge with advanced testing software that runs on Linux and Windows." In theory it can run under linux, in practice it does not. They didn't test it. Unlike windows, files under linux are case-sensitive, and the html files on the CD are expecting all the wrong names. They aren't even consistent in what case they expect the files on the CD to be, sometimes uppercase, sometimes mixed case, while nearly everything on the cd is pure lowercase. To put it clearly, it's dead-link city. The only way use the testing software(in the form of Shockwave files) under linux is to copy the CD to your hard drive and fix all the HTML capitalization mistakes. The ebook contained on the CD is also not usable under linux, but this is not the fault of anyone at Sybex. Adobe is presumably working on it. The content of the book itself is otherwise quite useful, albeit somewhat redhat-centric.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Too verbose for a study guide.,
By sporkdude "sporkdude" (San Jose, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
This book says it's a study guide for the Linux+ certification. Well, yes and no. It does explain the concepts of Linux, it does give a brief description of the test and has a CD that contains two sample tests. However, that's where the study guide ends. It's really a beginner's guide to Linux as opposed to a study guide.This book is very verbose in that it uses a lots of paragraphs as opposed to tables, lists, and definition. It's a good thorough read, but a terrible, terrible reference book. Designed for the absolute beginner, it's not for people who played with Linux and are trying to get certified. The first half of the book is extremely basic where it takes about 10 minutes of reading for anything particular concept to become apparent. The latter half is more advanced and informative, but without simple tables and references, much of the information is lost in the needless rambling. The worst parts are the review sections. The summaries at the end of the chapter are really lacking. So while concepts are explained well, the details (e.g. where are the system logs, how to alter the init level scripts) are hidden within chapters. The practice tests are good, but the difficulty between the end of chapter tests and the practice tests are huge. A study guide needs to be full of facts, easily searchable, concise, and contain a lot of information. This book only fulfills the latter requirement.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Get "Running Linux" or "Linux+ In Depth",
By
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
When I thumbed thru it at the store, I thought it was great, but as I read thru it I was left wanting. I don't feel confident about taking the linux+ test yet. Having taken two other CompTIA test I have a feel for the level of detail needed to pass - this book doesn't have it.
Few or no tables. Sparse and ineffective examples. Too little detail. Terrible review questions at the end of the chapter. The ones on the CD aren't too much better. I'm very dissatisfied. I went back to the book store and tried some review questions from the Thompson book "Linux+ In Depth". I used their books for my A+ & Network+ certs and I was ready to take the test shortly after completing the books (though the McGraw Hill - Mike Myers - book on A+ I borrowed from a friend to gather a little more info before the test - it was even better than the Thompson one). I've started reading O'Reilly's "Running Linux" and I it also appears to be an excellent choice. If you have 3mos experience, buy a different book. If you're just starting out, and not looking for certification, this may be for you. Bottom line: It's a good book, don't get me wrong, but not one I'd recommend when you're about to spend $175 or so on an exam (particularly if you're paying for it yourself).
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Kudos to Roderick Smith!,
By
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
In my efforts to become a Linux expert, this is about my 12th book on the subject of Linux. My first Linux book was the first edition of this book, and I am getting reacquainted with Linux after a hiatus of about 2 years. (Incidentally, I am an expert on Windows NT/2000 system and network administration and, in addition to my extensive hands-on experience, have probably read at least 5 or 6 dozen books on computer hardware, software, operating systems, system and network administration, etc.)
I should note first that I read certification-oriented books primarily to gain knowledge of the subject matter, and not necessarily to pass the associated certification test. My experience is that if I acquire in-depth knowledge AND experience with the subject matter on which I will be tested, passing the exam proves not to be a problem. I have not taken the Linux+ exam, so this review is not about whether this book will help you pass the exam. However, given the apparent thoroughness with which the exam objectives are addressed in this book, I am confident that this book serves the purpose of helping people prepare for the exam. More importantly, however, this book provides the in-depth foundational knowledge necessary to acquiring expertise in Linux. This book may well also be the most technically accurate computer-related book I have ever read. Either the author or his editors (or both) have done an excellent job of ensuring technical accuracy. The book is extremely well-written and clear, considering the subject matter. It is packed with useable and relevant information, including references to additional information where appropriate. In summary, this book provides an excellent foundation for those who are new to Linux (or Unix) and are interested in actually using Linux and becoming knowledgeable about this important alternative to Windows. Thanks, Mr. Smith, for putting your time and effort into this book.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty good for a start, but not enough. I recommend using exam collection.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
I came across some study software a few years ago. I really like it and it helped me prepare much better for the Linux+ exam than did this book. The book is fine for getting the basics, but the test has specific commands that you must know. Those are not all in the book or in the practice questions. For me, the best way was to use prep software. I found that on Exam Collection dot com and you need the VCE Visaul Certification Exam software to download the practice tests. To me, the best part was that the software was only about $25 and all the practice exams were free. People just upload them to the site and there are some very good ones. Of course, since people just upload them to the site, you cannot 100% count on the answers, so you might have to look stuff up. Still, it is the best way I found to actually prepare for the Linux+ exam and many others for that matter. Best of luck no matter how you prepare. The exam is quite tough. There are just a bunch of random questions, some about hardware, some about specific command syntax, and some general questions. Some people say it is easy. Well, the construction of the exam is easy. Multple choice questions that are typically just a sentence or two. However, I think I had 80-100 questions and I think passing was 77 or 80%. Anyways, check the CompTIA web site for the latest details on the exam and best of luck to you!
3.0 out of 5 stars
Unfocused Study guide,
By TLAW_DBA "OCP Oracle 6i/9i/10g, SCSA Solaris ... (Montreal, QC Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
I read this book twice. Indeed it has some usefull information but it also deals with some info you don't really need as entry level Linux Admin. You can use it as second source for your studies. I give 3 stars.
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Does It Contain a CD, or Not??,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition (Paperback)
This isn't a review, just a question. I value inexpensive certification books for the exam simulation software, not the text (which is usually as mediocre as in most mass-market computer books). And I've been burned before by Amazon not making it clear (and giving you no one to ask) whether a CD or a cassette (in the case of language-study books) comes with a book.
So could somebody please tell me: does this editition come with a CD, or not? |
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Linux+ Study Guide (Exaam: XK0-001) 2nd Edition by Roderick W. Smith (Paperback - January 14, 2004)
Used & New from: $9.91
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