On Monday 10 February 2003 10:03 am, Rechenberg, Andrew wrote: > I would have to agree with Robert here. The best way to study for the > RHCE is just work with Red Hat Linux everyday and think of things to > break and then fix them. > > I've been using Red Hat since 1998 and took my RHCE in late 2001 on > RH7.2 and I found that my everyday use of Linux helped more than any > written material that I looked through before the exam. If you have > been working with Red Hat and/or Linux for a while, the RH300 Rapid > Track course is excellent and is good exam preparation if you or your > employer can afford it (no I don't work for Red Hat ... yet ;) ).
Thanks Andy for offering your thoughts on getting ready for the RHCE. And if particular mentioning the RH300 Rapid Trace course. I think that most of us here on the RH list work daily with our systems but don't try and break and solve things. That is a good point, and something I am going to try and do more. Mind you, I normally break a lot of things without meaning to break them, and than I sit in grief for about a week trying to fix it. But, your point is well taken. If you can fix it, than I bet that RHCE exam will seem a bit easier.. > > Practice, Practice, Practice. > > That's my advice :) > > Regards, > Andy. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Robert P. J. Day [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 6:08 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: RHCE > > On 10 Feb 2003, carsten wrote: > > Hi everybody: > > > > I am considering to get certified. Could somebody tell me the basic > > steps or give me some recomendation where to start? > > (man, this really should be in an FAQ somewhere.) > > don't just read. do. *work* with the system. invent projects > for yourself, then carry them out. as in, "today, i am going to > create an additional filesystem and format it so i can store > my MP3 files on it." > > or "today, i'm going to pretend i forgot the root password, > and i will do what it takes to recover from that." > > or "today, i will deliberately trash my MBR with the 'dd' command, > then restore it to recover my system." > > and so on. > > rday -- T.L.Gervais Coldbrook, NS Canada. -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list