Where are the simplest easiest to understand instructive materials for neophytes moving to GNU/Linux ?...
Instructive info with the easiest of learning curves. Where are the simplest easiest to understand instructive materials for neophytes moving to GNU/Linux. Especially weblinks cautious about the use of jargon or explain carefully any jargon used ! For example avoiding the jargon term distros, jargon not used by consumers generally. Meaningful advocating. Advocating is a lot easier and meaningful if it includes how do I setup GNU/Linux now?...
Don -- No doubt you have heard the saying "give a man a fish and he eats for a day, but teach a man to fish and he eats for a lifetime" (or its corollary, "give a man a fish and he eats for a day, but teach a man to fish and you'll never see him again."). While I don't have specific tutorial sites to offer -- this is where Google is your friend -- your e-mail touches on an issue that is not addressed enough in Free/Open Source Software circles, in my opinion, and where the folks organizing SFD could help. Let's not fall into the trap that users who come to GNU/Linux and FOSS are complete idiots who need to be spoonfed everything they need to know ("Step one: Turn on your computer by locating the power button and pressing it."). After all, they're smart enough to realize that they have alternatives to Windows (and MacOS), which is why they want to try GNU/Linux and *BSD, and as such their curiosity will lead them to read the tutorials that are out there. The jargon/lingo/language will be picked up in the process. While I don't have specific sites to refer to -- again, this is where Google is your friend -- I recall when I started out in Linux/FOSS four years ago that there were many tutorials -- some more difficult than others -- but the learning curve for someone with at least average intelligence (and I count myself in this category) was not steep at all, and grasping the terminology was not a hurdle. In my own experience, if one tutorial was incomprehensible (due to the level or poor writing or lack of organization), I found another that I could understand. Do some tutorials out there need to be simplified and/or better organized? Absolutely. Are the better written ones out there? Yep. What I guess would be a good start would be to get the links to the better written ones together in one place where people can get to them -- a wiki page hosted by the SFD site perhaps? It might make for a good project for the SFD folks to take on, if they're up to it, and while I can't spearhead it, I'd help work on it. Larry Cafiero On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 8:38 AM, don warner saklad <don.saklad@gmail.com>wrote:
Instructive info with the easiest of learning curves. Where are the simplest easiest to understand instructive materials for neophytes moving to GNU/Linux. Especially weblinks cautious about the use of jargon or explain carefully any jargon used ! For example avoiding the jargon term distros, jargon not used by consumers generally.
Meaningful advocating. Advocating is a lot easier and meaningful if it includes how do I setup GNU/Linux now?...
_______________________________________________ SFD-discuss mailing list SFD-discuss@sf-day.org http://mail.sf-day.org/lists/listinfo/sfd-discuss
Let's not fall into the trap that users who come to GNU/Linux and FOSS are complete idiots who need to be spoonfed everything they need to know ("Step one: Turn on your computer by locating the power button and pressing it."). After all, they're smart enough to realize that they have alternatives to Windows (and MacOS), which is why they want to try GNU/Linux and *BSD, and as such their curiosity will lead them to read the tutorials that are out there. The jargon/lingo/language will be picked up in the process.
We need to start teaching Linux at the ground floor; right now all the classes in "digital literacy" are sponsored by proprietary software vendors and teach only proprietary software. THIS is where we need to be getting a foothold, because in my experience people who have no previous learning on computers at all will find a Linux desktop much easier to learn than a Windows desktop. A good friend of mine has just this week registered http://digilit.org.nz/and we're planning to explore "what digital literacy means" through a series of programs on community radio, and for my part teaching complete beginners everything from the basic skills to Office applications, photo editing and beyond, using a Free OS and Free applications. This should be an interesting project.
A good friend of mine has just this week registered http://digilit.org.nz/ and we're planning to explore "what digital literacy means" through a series of programs on community radio, and for my part teaching complete beginners everything from the basic skills to Office applications, photo editing and beyond, using a Free OS and Free applications.
This should be an interesting project.
Sounds like a brilliant project! Keep us posted? Tell us how to stay tuned as it progresses.
On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 10:38 AM, don warner saklad <don.saklad@gmail.com>wrote:
Instructive info with the easiest of learning curves. Where are the simplest easiest to understand instructive materials for neophytes moving to GNU/Linux. Especially weblinks cautious about the use of jargon or explain carefully any jargon used ! For example avoiding the jargon term distros, jargon not used by consumers generally.
Meaningful advocating. Advocating is a lot easier and meaningful if it includes how do I setup GNU/Linux now?...
Check the series of Linux Reality: http://www.linuxreality.com The show is long over, but the series is very structured and still current.
_______________________________________________ SFD-discuss mailing list SFD-discuss@sf-day.org http://mail.sf-day.org/lists/listinfo/sfd-discuss
-- *Alexandro Colorado* *OpenOffice.org* Español http://es.openoffice.org
participants (5)
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Alexandro Colorado
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Bruce Kingsbury
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don warner saklad
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kattekrab@gmail.com
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Larry Cafiero