Linux is almost like DOS; exactly where I STARTED from 30+ years ago. I had FORGOTTEN that I already know how to navigate the Raspberry Pi. I keep letting potential employers undermine my confidence in myself. I was using DOS while these people were literally in DIAPERS! Thank you for this video. I feel my CONFIDENCE coming back!
Just wanted to drop you a very big thank you Mr. Mcwhorter. I have been following your videos for two years. I am going back to school to change my major from from psychology to Electrical engineering. your videos we're immensely helpful in teaching me Arduino and Raspberry pi. I have made a dog who wags his tail for my before/after school children at the program I work at as well. It involved a ultrasonic sensor and servo which was taught in your videos. Thank you for your fun and straightforward teaching approach!
This an awesome lesson, 3 years later. Feels like the teacher has a lot of experience explaining things, and can break things down in the simplest of terms. It's so easy for this type of stuff to go over my head and yet this lesson is sticking.
you are the best, i learned arduino uno from you and i worked on many projects, and i got a lot from it. Now a raspi tutorial, that's what I just wanted, and I was searching for it on the whole internet but no one could satisfy like you did. THank you sir for existing
This is not too basic, this is exactly what I (and I would assume others) need. Learn the basics before diving into the hard stuff. Another great video!
Wow! This is the best video on RUclips! You have made learning for me fun and exciting! I hope to see more videos on the Raspberry Pi from you in the future. I have just started your series. Thank you for your time and efforts!
Love you teaching method. Interesting, I knew some DOS and Basic Programming back in the 80s. I see some similarities. You sparked the fire back on. Thank you
I really appreciate your method of teaching! You show us how to do it, then go over it to reinforce it! Especially good when it is after work and the brain is a bit tired. Keep up the good work!
Amazing video, I am in the process of watching and working through your whole series with my raspberry pi and a cup of coffee : ) keep up the great work sir!!
Very good classes, I´m from Brasil and i´m learning how to program python on the RPI3 , so I can do a nice, and not expansive equipment, in my intership, thank you verry much for teaching me! Your classes are just great!!
Hi Paul! Little help here... Would you recommend using this software called "geany" for the pi? Just wanted an unbiased and trustworthy answer before I get going 😊
AWESOME MAN THATS AMAZINg. Uh, I got a problem I have a raspberry pi 3 model b, and got a raspbian installed SD card it works fine but programs like Scratch are not opening any suggestion?
I have a question, is it possible with Raspberry pi to look, add and copy in folder on the network? I mean the sharing files from a NAS or a Windows computer?
Yet the thing that really bugs me is the sync problem with voice audio. Really bugs me on these old videos. I was just doing a screen capture and there was a latency problem
Good morning, mr. McW. I have a question maybe I do some wrong, no login asked but I cann't get to the options menu, RASPIAN is installed but in GUI the options to #3 enable boot to...and after #1 console text required a login, don' t exit on my Raspian, the custumization of Linux is vanish? what is wrong? or maybe I do all again, of Ignore the GUI and all the time use the command line, only the backup and is all done. I'm going to shutdown the Raspberry, and tomorrow try it again, thanks for the lessons. gil
That's probably a function of the PI thinking you have a British keyboard, when you actually have a US one (or vice versa). The British keyboard layout is different than US. The quick correction is to try typing a " to get an @. To correct this on your Pi: (Long explanation, but the following is easier than it looks. If you are not already familiar with using "nano" to edit files on the Pi, you might first want to watch video 4 to learn about how to use it. ) Log on to your Pi and type: sudo raspi-config in the screen that comes up, choose "Localisation Options", then choose "Change Locale". Scroll down through the list until you get to a choice that says "en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8" (if you are using a US keyboard) you want to flag this to make sure it gets installed. The space bar toggles the flag on and off (an asterisk means "on"). When that is set, hit tab to drop down to the options at the bottom of the screen. Use the left and right arrow keys to select OK (or hit Tab until OK is selected, if you don't have arrow keys on your keyboard) and press enter. You should see a screen asking you to select the "Default Locale for the system environment". Choose the one that says "en_US.UTF-8" (up/down arrow keys to select. Tab to get to OK and hit Enter. You may see a message that says "generating locales", then it should take you back to the main raspi-config screen. Choose "Finish" to apply the changes and get out of raspi-config. One last thing to check. Type the following: sudo nano /etc/default/keyboard In the file that comes up, look for the line that says: XKBLAYOUT="gb" and change the "gb" to "us", then save and exit. I can't remember if you have to reboot your Pi for the changes to take effect or not, but that should fix your keyboard issues.
Trying to connect a Raspberrypi 3 to a Pixhawk flight controller ! Any suggestions ? mavproxy.py --master=/dev/? --baudrate 57600 --aircraft MyCopter ... For some reason I can't get the connection ? everything is wired according to ardupilot ...
Like watching paint dry. 27 minutes to describe 5 minutes worth of content. Probably didn't help that I knew 99% of the content. Would be worth while mentioning to the newbies that PWD stands for Present Working Directory, so they can relate the PWD to something. Also in 27 minutes you could have perhaps covered off how to move to a directory that needed elevated permissions (the reason for me watching the whole video).
It was common back when Linux first started gaining popularity. It wasn't an established English word. 'Lee-nooks' was another variation. The short I like 'win' became the standard use a several years later.
Linux is almost like DOS; exactly where I STARTED from 30+ years ago. I had FORGOTTEN that I already know how to navigate the Raspberry Pi. I keep letting potential employers undermine my confidence in myself. I was using DOS while these people were literally in DIAPERS! Thank you for this video. I feel my CONFIDENCE coming back!
Just wanted to drop you a very big thank you Mr. Mcwhorter. I have been following your videos for two years. I am going back to school to change my major from from psychology to Electrical engineering. your videos we're immensely helpful in teaching me Arduino and Raspberry pi. I have made a dog who wags his tail for my before/after school children at the program I work at as well. It involved a ultrasonic sensor and servo which was taught in your videos. Thank you for your fun and straightforward teaching approach!
That sounds great. Let us know how it goes.
This an awesome lesson, 3 years later. Feels like the teacher has a lot of experience explaining things, and can break things down in the simplest of terms. It's so easy for this type of stuff to go over my head and yet this lesson is sticking.
you are the best, i learned arduino uno from you and i worked on many projects, and i got a lot from it. Now a raspi tutorial, that's what I just wanted, and I was searching for it on the whole internet but no one could satisfy like you did. THank you sir for existing
Thanks for the kind words!
This is not too basic, this is exactly what I (and I would assume others) need.
Learn the basics before diving into the hard stuff. Another great video!
Wow! This is the best video on RUclips! You have made learning for me fun and exciting!
I hope to see more videos on the Raspberry Pi from you in the future. I have just started your series. Thank you for your time and efforts!
Thank you Mr. McWorther, I learnt so much, can't wait to learn more raspberry pi.
perfect lessons ,clear english, clear expression, thanks a lot sir
I just found your channel. I'm learning tons from you sir. thank you for all the time you've put into these lessons.
Love you teaching method. Interesting, I knew some DOS and Basic Programming back in the 80s. I see some similarities. You sparked the fire back on. Thank you
I really appreciate your method of teaching! You show us how to do it, then go over it to reinforce it! Especially good when it is after work and the brain is a bit tired. Keep up the good work!
Incredibly awesome job, all those tutorials are helping me so much with my Tesis to be an Telecomunications Engineer.
you are SUCH a great teacher thank you so much :) I am so excited to do all of these tutorials
Amazing video, I am in the process of watching and working through your whole series with my raspberry pi and a cup of coffee : ) keep up the great work sir!!
Amazing work sir! First time with linux
Thank you for the great explanation of the folder structure! One needs to know the basics to build upon. Great Job!
Dear Sir, Quality of Your lessons is excellent
Thank you! Your method of teaching is very helpful for me as a beginner!
These are great first principle lessons and build layer on layer.
You are still number one!
Impressed by this informative and easy to learn lesson!
It takes a great deal of dedication to produce such a fine tutorial. We are very grateful. Thank you.
Wow! Really good linux llessons. Thanks for the hard work making these videos. Really appreciate! Manny from Puerto Rico
Your videos are extremely helpful! I've been looking for videos exactly like this. Thank you!
Thank you sooooo much! Nobody explain this and I had no idea how to navigate!
Excellent instructional tutorials Paul. Much appreciated.
Very good classes, I´m from Brasil and i´m learning how to program python on the RPI3 , so I can do a nice, and not expansive equipment, in my intership, thank you verry much for teaching me! Your classes are just great!!
Insanely good tutorials!
I have watched some lessons from you and the are great. Thanks men! I am going to watch all of them. :)
Fantastic lesson....I teach and you are a great instructor...Cheers Jeff
best tutorial ive found so far thank you
This is what I needed! Great tutorial!
Glad it was helpful!
very useful tutorial
Agreed...insanely good, well explained tutorials! 👍
Thanks . Very clear and easy to understand.
Bedankt
Thanks!
Im hooked into your videos! Great job..!
You're amazing! Thank you very much!
Omri Vidal Thanks for the kind words.
sir,i really love the way you teach
you are sooooo good teaching this, thanks!
Hi Paul! Little help here... Would you recommend using this software called "geany" for the pi? Just wanted an unbiased and trustworthy answer before I get going 😊
You are awesome with your teaching
Thanks for your lessons, Nice to follow ir. 👍😁
Thanks for the video. Very helpful to go to basics!
That was really good... keep going with this tutorials!
Just loving this Series by the way i m not doing on Raspberry pie board rather in vmware pie os is free!!
Thanks man! I appreciate your detailed explanation
You are really good . great tutorial
pi has arrived today so I can now start
how do you get color codes filetypes? what terminal program are you using?
Really helpful for me!! thanks so much
Great tutorial. Thank you!
Excellent tutorial Sir, Thank you very much :)
There is another way to navigate to home is just using ~. For example:
ls ~
will navigate to home directory.
Great Work Man
Thanks for the visit
you are AWESOME, thanks for videos
AWESOME MAN THATS AMAZINg.
Uh, I got a problem I have a raspberry pi 3 model b, and got a raspbian installed SD card it works fine but programs like Scratch are not opening any suggestion?
Great tutorial. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us for free ;) Subbed.
I have a question, is it possible with Raspberry pi to look, add and copy in folder on the network? I mean the sharing files from a NAS or a Windows computer?
Can you make a series on “raspbian” operating system
I kinda miss the older production, because the style was unique and nice.
Yet the thing that really bugs me is the sync problem with voice audio. Really bugs me on these old videos. I was just doing a screen capture and there was a latency problem
I agree. Great tutorial!
/home/pi/python_games/horngirl.png ... I had to do a double take on that filename.
Good morning, mr. McW. I have a question maybe I do some wrong, no login asked but I cann't get to the options menu, RASPIAN is installed but in GUI the options to #3 enable boot to...and after #1 console text required a login, don' t exit on my Raspian, the custumization of Linux is vanish? what is wrong? or maybe I do all again, of Ignore the GUI and all the time use the command line, only the backup and is all done. I'm going to shutdown the Raspberry, and tomorrow try it again, thanks for the lessons. gil
Excellent! Thankyou :)
You're awsome sir.. Thank you so much
Great tutorial !!!
Very helpful, thank you.
Woah man he has got some teaching skills
Thank you so much old man :) i would like you to be my grandfather :D
+Daniel Raducu Hey, I am not THAT old . . . but thank you for the kind thoughts anyway.
Followed your instruction. Thanks! Now when I'm trying to send an email or sign into a browser(Chromium) when I type a @ I get a " instead. Any help?
That's probably a function of the PI thinking you have a British keyboard, when you actually have a US one (or vice versa). The British keyboard layout is different than US. The quick correction is to try typing a " to get an @.
To correct this on your Pi:
(Long explanation, but the following is easier than it looks. If you are not already familiar with using "nano" to edit files on the Pi, you might first want to watch video 4 to learn about how to use it. )
Log on to your Pi and type: sudo raspi-config
in the screen that comes up, choose "Localisation Options", then choose "Change Locale". Scroll down through the list until you get to a choice that says "en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8" (if you are using a US keyboard) you want to flag this to make sure it gets installed. The space bar toggles the flag on and off (an asterisk means "on"). When that is set, hit tab to drop down to the options at the bottom of the screen. Use the left and right arrow keys to select OK (or hit Tab until OK is selected, if you don't have arrow keys on your keyboard) and press enter.
You should see a screen asking you to select the "Default Locale for the system environment". Choose the one that says "en_US.UTF-8" (up/down arrow keys to select. Tab to get to OK and hit Enter. You may see a message that says "generating locales", then it should take you back to the main raspi-config screen. Choose "Finish" to apply the changes and get out of raspi-config.
One last thing to check. Type the following:
sudo nano /etc/default/keyboard
In the file that comes up, look for the line that says: XKBLAYOUT="gb"
and change the "gb" to "us", then save and exit. I can't remember if you have to reboot your Pi for the changes to take effect or not, but that should fix your keyboard issues.
Thanks a lot that's really helpful
Thanks you are so helpful
pwd = print work directory
23:42 - Or _cd ~_ or even just _cd_
Thank you so much for this.
Trying to connect a Raspberrypi 3 to a Pixhawk flight controller ! Any suggestions ? mavproxy.py --master=/dev/? --baudrate 57600 --aircraft MyCopter ... For some reason I can't get the connection ? everything is wired according to ardupilot ...
Thank you very much !!
Someone please help me to get the exact same colour scheme. Mine is just black and white
Thank you so much.
¡¡¡¡Muchísimas gracias!!!!
Why does the screen capture program not show up?
thank u sir..
So, the word "Linux" does have two correct pronunciations? "Lion-nahks" and "Leen-neeks"?
I don't think the command line is going to help me that much if i'm programming a GUI application on the RPI.
I know you have a reason for this even though it seems like I time traveled back to dos.
Can we use windows on pi
Why would you want to ruin a perfectly good pi with windows?
awesome vid! ^__^
thanks a lot :)
Like watching paint dry. 27 minutes to describe 5 minutes worth of content. Probably didn't help that I knew 99% of the content. Would be worth while mentioning to the newbies that PWD stands for Present Working Directory, so they can relate the PWD to something. Also in 27 minutes you could have perhaps covered off how to move to a directory that needed elevated permissions (the reason for me watching the whole video).
It is LINUX not LINE-US :P :D
So why do you pronounce Linux like that? I think you're the only person I've heard say it that way.
its really frustrating
@@karimkohel3240 So is bad syntax...
It was common back when Linux first started gaining popularity. It wasn't an established English word. 'Lee-nooks' was another variation. The short I like 'win' became the standard use a several years later.
if you are new to this, please don't pick up how he pronounces linux as it is pronounced correctly as linex
the coughing and sonar sound makes me uncomfortable
3-
Linux is not pronounced "LineX" it is pronounced LEE Nooks. We are in Lesson 3! Just sayin'.
you were right now i hate windows
Who cares how he is pronouncing Linux. It could be a geographic thing.
ZZzzzZZZZZzz.....omg he is so boooooooooooooringgggggggggggg....