I've been using your videos for the past six months and I have legit learned SO MUCH. I had vague ideas about a lot of this stuff beforehand but every single one of your videos has helped me actually learn this stuff instead of just, i don't know, following a text tutorial and not really retain anything. I really feel like I owe you something at this point so when I get some cash next month I am going to join the channel or buy some merch. Anyway, my current home lab for Linux "work" is spread across four pcs (two desktop and two laptop), a Debian WSL install on my main win10 machine, and a VM install on another win10 machine. Your videos have helped me manage all this quite well. THANK YOU for your work and these videos are making a HUGE difference out here in the wild. Bless you, Jay.
Thanks, sir. Your videos have been very informative. From bash scripting, Linux crash course, etc. Instead of searching RUclips on how to do this, that. With all this very basic knowledge, I am able to think and navigate my way. With just a few days of watching some of your series. Thanks once again. Looking forward to great more content.
to the point. Well maintained voice and pace to present the content. Your videos are the example of what knowledge sharing should look like. Thank you Sir
Very helpful, especially the "allowgroups for ssh users" tidbit. Never would have crossed my mind. This just convinced me to buy your ubuntu server book. God bless you.
after reading your ubuntu 3rd edition i thought i would watch this video aswell. both explain it perfectly - keep up the good work and thanks for all your content.
Good info, but how are the groups managed? For example the current situation that brought me here is I can't remote desktop into my raspberry pi unless I remove the user from the "video" and the "render" groups. I am trying to figure out why and where those groups permissions are defined? If I could look under the hood and see what those two groups are actually doing then maybe I could just fix the permissions instead of having to remove the users from those groups.
Thank you for these fantastic and wonderful videos, but please, how does someone follow your videos or playlist? It seems like all your videos are just everywhere. I am learning Linux for the first time, but it is hard to follow your videos step by step. Any assistance will be greatly appreciated. From beginner to power user, please tell me or give links to follow. Please, anyone, feel free to point in a direction. Thank you all in advance
Can you make a deep dive tutorial (series?) for switching Desktop Environments and Display Managers? I've seen people switch gdm3 to lightdm in Pop!_OS and using lightdm-webkit2-greeter with Aether theme and so on, but when I try to do it following those videos, my Pop!_OS crashes (lightdm wont start, had to use timeshift from command line to revert back to earlier situation).
Good. I have a question though. In File Permissions we have user:group:others. Can you make the correspondance between these file permissions and primary vs secondary groups. For example primary group, is it really the group part in a file permission. If so, what about secondary groups are they others? Or do both primary and secondary groups belong to group part in file permissions?
I've been using your videos for the past six months and I have legit learned SO MUCH. I had vague ideas about a lot of this stuff beforehand but every single one of your videos has helped me actually learn this stuff instead of just, i don't know, following a text tutorial and not really retain anything. I really feel like I owe you something at this point so when I get some cash next month I am going to join the channel or buy some merch. Anyway, my current home lab for Linux "work" is spread across four pcs (two desktop and two laptop), a Debian WSL install on my main win10 machine, and a VM install on another win10 machine. Your videos have helped me manage all this quite well. THANK YOU for your work and these videos are making a HUGE difference out here in the wild. Bless you, Jay.
Thanks, sir.
Your videos have been very informative. From bash scripting, Linux crash course, etc. Instead of searching RUclips on how to do this, that. With all this very basic knowledge, I am able to think and navigate my way. With just a few days of watching some of your series.
Thanks once again. Looking forward to great more content.
to the point. Well maintained voice and pace to present the content. Your videos are the example of what knowledge sharing should look like. Thank you Sir
I really appreciate that!
Man, thanks a lot. I'm a beginner in this world. Your videos are incredible, good and concise info.
Your channel has been an absolute Godsend. Thank you 🙏
Love the ssh_users example. This is practical for sure.
Very helpful, especially the "allowgroups for ssh users" tidbit. Never would have crossed my mind. This just convinced me to buy your ubuntu server book. God bless you.
Thanks! I'm not IT but I enjoy your vids very much!
after reading your ubuntu 3rd edition i thought i would watch this video aswell. both explain it perfectly - keep up the good work and thanks for all your content.
Thanks Jay for this video!
Best tutorials on the web!
Nice! Love the user names. I do think you need to add Skully (
User danascully was added to sshd_config at 20:21
@@thekaleb Wow I missed that! Damn... Thanks! :-)
LLAP
I watched many of these videos and took notes of them, I never knew there were articles with commands somewhere 0__0
Great video as always
Love all your videos sir. Always clear and understandable. Thank you.
Thanks Jay, is this group will have permission?
very helpful content.thanks a lot
Good info, but how are the groups managed? For example the current situation that brought me here is I can't remote desktop into my raspberry pi unless I remove the user from the "video" and the "render" groups. I am trying to figure out why and where those groups permissions are defined? If I could look under the hood and see what those two groups are actually doing then maybe I could just fix the permissions instead of having to remove the users from those groups.
In 4K. Nice
Thank you for these fantastic and wonderful videos, but please, how does someone follow your videos or playlist? It seems like all your videos are just everywhere. I am learning Linux for the first time, but it is hard to follow your videos step by step. Any assistance will be greatly appreciated. From beginner to power user, please tell me or give links to follow. Please, anyone, feel free to point in a direction. Thank you all in advance
I've usually just gone into /etc/groups and modifies th line to add or remove users.
Thanks for the video it was good review for me and I learned new command which is gpasswd
thanks Jay ,,, really your vids is very helpful 😀👍🙂🤍🤍🤍
Another nice video 👌
thank you.
Thank you so much for this amazing FOSS content!
great job as always.
Can you make a deep dive tutorial (series?) for switching Desktop Environments and Display Managers?
I've seen people switch gdm3 to lightdm in Pop!_OS and using lightdm-webkit2-greeter with Aether theme and so on,
but when I try to do it following those videos, my Pop!_OS crashes (lightdm wont start, had to use timeshift from command line to revert back to earlier situation).
I'm not sure yet if I can fit that in, but that's certainly a good idea and would make for a fun video. I'll see what I can do. :)
Thanks!
Thanks Jay.
👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you Jay!
I am terrible at remembering command options, so I have always edited the passwd and group files manually.
Can you share me the complete playlist to learn Linux terminal
Thanks very much....
thanks for the video, you are amazing
can i edit users by editing gropus file?
thank you :) nice video
but if you have a folder that you want several groups to have access to
Perhaps for more users OpenLDAP or KeyCloak would be better?
How do I add jellyfin to access my video files
Great Video Thank You :-)
Very good content thanks for your time to explain it
thanks man for the content. it is very helpful
In University for Network Admin. Your videos should be part of the curriculum.
1:56
Good. I have a question though. In File Permissions we have user:group:others. Can you make the correspondance between these file permissions and primary vs secondary groups. For example primary group, is it really the group part in a file permission. If so, what about secondary groups are they others? Or do both primary and secondary groups belong to group part in file permissions?
thank you.