Showing posts with label loadays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loadays. Show all posts

2012-04-07

vi tutorial

Here is a link to the slides (or use this link if you have no access) of this LOAD vi tutorial. They are based on these linux-training.be html pages.

2012-04-04

about Loadays, a sore throat and a book

Yes, I was at Load (for the t-shirt) or at least my zombie-self was ;-)

Thanks to airco and teaching 8 or 8+4 hours a day for six days in a row I had lost my voice and sleep. Swallowing is painful with a sore throat, and for some reason the sorer the throat, the more one needs to swallow when trying to sleep :(

Anyway, the puppet tutorial at load was excellent! I tried following the Debian packaging talk from Wouter, but missed the start... and became way too exhausted.

In other news, Load saw the world premiere of a new book, more about this later, when I have a landing page set up for orders ;-)


2011-04-16

loadays talk

Some people convinced me to do a talk^Wtutorial tomorrow at loadays. It will be about bash!

Maybe I will use some slides from this downloadable pdf (50KB).

Content will come from the linux-training.be project (but that website stalled since February due to a redesign of our build-system). People that go to loadays can download the newest (1MB) pdf here.

LOAD, the Linux system administrator days

2010-04-11

loadays

This weekend saw the first edition of loadays, and it was good!

Puppet was nicely introduced by Dan Bode. CFEngine was not technical enough, which is imho preferred by the loadays crowd over marketing. The bacula talk was also a bit a mix of marketing and technical content, but ok.

Tom De Cooman did an excellent talk on monitoring tools, good speaker!

On Sunday we had to do without Pieter Colpaert's bash 4.0 introduction (thanks for putting the slides online!). Toshaan introduced us to SELinux with a clear presentation, maybe lacking some examples (since there was time left). Network RPM was interesting, but probably not for me. The last talk I followed was a good overview of the lsc-project by Jonathan Clarke.

Next loadays, if the organizers permit it, I'll do a bash tutorial.