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Hello, I am currantley new to backtrack or any other linux os system for that matter. Basically I have been following tutorials from the web/ you-tube. I know I don't like being a leacher trust me lol. So any opinions on where to start with using linux cmds thanks alot.
-spybrat
Congratulations you are the 1 millionth person to ask this question! Further more you win the "I have no search 'fu" award which is a very distinguished honor. Please wear your badge with pride.
Slackware was my school
www dot slackware dot com
you can try it too
www dot gentoo dot org
Find for handbook
http:// www. linux .ie/ newusers / beginners-linux-guide /
http:// en.wikibooks.org / wiki /Linux_Guide
Maybe start by reading the sticky thread titled: http://forums.remote-exploit.org/new...ad-thread.html
It would seem to be appropriate since you are a Linux noob. In addition, the "sticky" nature of the thread would suggest that it is something a new member of the site should pay attention to. This is why this particular thread has been made so easy to find. Open the Newbie area of the forum, and you will see it right there in front of you - like right there! Fourth from the top. Its actually pretty hard to miss it - maybe this will even qualify you for another award?
Capitalisation is important. It's the difference between "Helping your brother Jack off a horse" and "Helping your brother jack off a horse".
The Forum Rules, Forum FAQ and the BackTrack Wiki... learn them, love them, live them.
Insted of reading that whole thread,from starting.read this
http://forums.remote-exploit.org/new...html#post32879
as that thread created basically for slackware newbies which is not needed now as the whole distro now based on debian ubuntu.
Still not underestimating the power...
There is no such thing as bad information - There is truth in the data, so you sift it all, even the crap stuff.
Capitalisation is important. It's the difference between "Helping your brother Jack off a horse" and "Helping your brother jack off a horse".
The Forum Rules, Forum FAQ and the BackTrack Wiki... learn them, love them, live them.
Slackware is my school too to Linux.
But what I don't understand is that sometimes I read Backtrack is based on Slack wich is based on Slackware.
Once I read Backtrack come from ubuntu![]()
Backtrack was based on Slackware until BT3.
BackTrack Information Security Distribution » BackTrack 4 Pre Final