Wow, been using Linux for 20+ years (programmer so kinda casual, not a sysadmin) and I had never heard of the `apropos` command. You really do learn something every day.
Came here to write the same thing. I also didn't know that you could use ctrl-l to clear the console. Here's me writing 'clear' all the time like a sucker.
the only reason I'm following these tutorials is because I decided to mess around and get Linux Ubuntu running on a Nintendo Switch. I'm having a blast working all this stuff out. Thank you so much for this series, definitely will be up to date with future episodes.
I've been using linux for 4 years and I never knew about apropos. This is going to save me SO MUCH time not having to google stuff when I forget what command I am supposed to use. THANK YOU!!!!!
Someone once told me that if you really know a subject you have to be able to explain it to a 5 year old kid, and man you are the perfect example. I can’t stop watching your videos, you really add value here. I just wanna say THANKS!!
You're not a five year old. The problem with that popular quote is that our knowledge and concepts build on each other. That's also what makes them so powerful. They're not isolated facts. They are abstractions build on abstractions. It's impossible to explain something complex to a five year old, because all of the required background knowledge takes so much time to acquire that in the end, it's no longer a five year old, but a twenty year old. In a way our education system IS explaining sth complex to five year olds - over the span of decades.
I keep burning out listening to boring videos but Chuck is making it interesting, good personality... I watched way longer than I ever watched before... Make more please!
I had a cybersecurity unit at uni and I had no idea what I was doing because they hardly explained anything. I passed that unit but I'm just learning what the heck I did back then. Thank you for such great videos.
I don't think I have ever seen a more exciting person than Chuck teaching Linux. I tried few times to learn Linux and quickly gave up because it was so boring leaning all those commands. Chuck passion is contagious
Hey chuck , Make a video on how you started your journey in I T how you got interest in it ? Then your lifestyle, job etc. Meanwhile make a Q&A video. Plss 😋
I have tried to learn Linux, I forget how many times, but many times. By me just following your energetic videos and trying out what you say I have learnt more in like 10 videos across the board than I have learnt in 25 years of trying to learn on my own. You have inspired me to do the HTB courses at my age, cough cough approaching 60. Thanks man your videos will inspire many folk to take Linux for a spin. Much appreciation from NZ
I will take you further back to when a Terminal was a key board and a printer with a side of card reader. Yep long time ago in a land far away (Japan in the late 70s USMC) that was our terminal for our Unix based system that filled an entier container box, well actully two of them because the second was where the 4 keypunch operators punched the cards. I didn't see a modern day VT100 ever but using old Tandy computers with emulators programmed in, in college we connected to the school Unix system to write code, compile it, test it, and run it. Then I got smart because for a grand I could build my own 8086 DOS based desktop computer, connect it to a phone line, and dial up any of the 36 numbers and work all night because the lab shut down at midnight. Ahhhh the good old days when networking was still one to one.
I just want to say and let you know, you've re-ignited my inner nerd and started learning Linux. Thank you for your videos and your energy. PS. some of the questions on HTB section "User management" where quite hard, since they didn't explain them. So you had to explore the system and google some stuff yourself.
You literally answered a question that I was thinking about when you mentioned apropos. I like your style of teaching, I'm 7 months into using Linux and I'm always looking to improve my knowledge. Your channel does it for me. Thanks for the great content!
I checked your merchant store and was so surprised you don't have anything that says "What the junk?" Haha 😅 Would be so funny to see something with that
Finally a trainer who makes it fun and playful to learn, that's important to stay motivated on the long run. And not taking ourself seriously is also something enjoyable: relax we will get there attitude. Very enjoyable course so far. Thanks and congratulations
Dude. The way you teach is awesome. I'm watching this as a refresher. And I have to say, I like how you start from the essentials and work your way up. You'd be a great instructor for IT. Thanks for all you do!
Thank you for this course Chuck! I knew most of what has been covered to this point, but the way you lay the information out is fun and engaging, and I know the further I go, the more I'm going to learn! Never stop learning! Thanks!
PRO TIP: In the workspace, the first thing you see in the prompt (which will usually say "eu-academy-1" is actually the vpn you're connected to. You can't change this in the first page, but on page 6 (the first page that teaches you to ssh) you can change your vpn server to whatever is closest.
Love your content man and having a lot of fun learning this stuff, have u ever thought to make a top 10 books that you strongly recommend of ethical hacking?🙏
I studied for the Comptia Linux+ for Months. I took the exam and passed first try. The apropos command was never mentioned in any training or book that I went through. It's not on the cert objectives either. So I learned a cool new command that is super useful for beginners and experienced users. Moral of the story: Just because you are certified and have experience in something, there is ALWAYS something to learn when you revisit the basics.
I just want to let you know your awesome man. I've watched a lot of your video's before i barely knew what Ethical Hacking was and now after watching some of your videos i think its AWESOME and im only 14 years old but when im older i think im probably gonna go into IT cause this stuff is awesome. I already have Kali Linux Installed on my laptop and usually i just play around with some commands and stuff but i really want to learn more about this kinda stuff and one day be a Pro at Ethical Hacking :)
@Sharma Vivek too bad I shut down my facebook , or I'd link a picture of me drinking out of my 2L coffee mug and or the day it broke. I think I'm the reason why comberland farms gas stations in NY started to limit the size of the cup you can bring for the $0.99 refill.
Thank you so much, LOVE from Chile!. I have seen a lot of content on RUclips related with "hacking" and you make so good material i think you are one of the best, very funny, and very easy to understand, you have great personality and i love it the way you teach this things.
@Roy C shut up scammer. If you were a true hacker, this is not how you would be getting them shillings. You're as good as the call centre scams, but even more stupider.
When you said "did you get all that?" I did. I actually input every command as you said them to run it. I like the speed in which you explain things. I realize that this is "deep in the feed" so I am not sure about commenting protocol. I do intend to watch basically every video on your channel and I have been telling my wife to also watch your videos before she is allowed on the network I am building. With your help. Thank you for all of the information. I fully intend to support you more when I am able. Your coffee sounds amazing.
Love the way that the command that tells you what the command is that you can't remember is the hardest command to remember. (one bottle of red later I have no idea if this even makes sense, sorry).
Go checkout his Virtual box and Kali Linux setup tutorials. Using kali with virtual box takes away the lag. But you can still follow along. Thats what I'm doing
I ain't gone lie by the time I get to watching @NetworkChuck and learning it's no longer coffee time so every time he takes a sip of coffee I sip my lemonade and vodka. Thanks Chuck I'll remember you when I make it big brother..
Yup I used real 2:45 terminals like VT100/102 + VT220 for programming on DEC machines. and paper/dot matrix DecWriter terminal on PDP11/70 in school before that... when PgUp scrolling back meant standing up, reaching behind TTY and grabbing green-bar paper to see what printed five minutes ago. Having used unix & old terminals gives insight into how shell scripting & terminal environment developed over the years.
Me working in Linux: I don't how to solve this issue. Let me look up a tutorial. Tutorial: Just click here and here, then you're all set. Me: Clicks there and receive a bunch of errors.
Thank you NetworkChuck. I have a lab at home in which i experiment with before i deploy stuff at work. Just barely skated by on some of the stuff with knowing virtually nothing about Linux. The other day i decided that was going to change. i have installed Proxmox and a vm of Linux not knowing you would help get us going in HTB Academy. So following your videos and using it I have learned more then about Linux then i ever knew. i plan on using it more and helping the small company i work for expand and be more secure. Again, thank you.
I can't find Episode 1 but you seem like a god-send bro I can't wait to follow along I've been hoping to come across someone who is cool, down to earth and walks you through, in a friendly, chill way, learning Linux. I have tried so many distros SO MANY freakin' times man, I'm stoked to finally learn, like ACTUALLY learn the how-to's and basics of Linux after all these years! Thanks for these vid's, you sir are awesome!
coffee, CoFfEe, COFFEE!!! I'm on my 4th (Lavazza). I'm studying for my Linux+, testing on May 24th. I used two different types of study courses and neither of them said anything about "apropos", thank you!!!
Start hacking with this free Linux Lab: ntck.co/htbacad (HTB Academy) 💯💯Think you're smart?? Take the quiz: bit.ly/ep3quiz (FREE) Watch the entire series: bit.ly/linuxforhackers *Sponsored by HTB Academy --------------------------------------------------- Sign up for the Hacker Academy: ntck.co/htbacad Hack some stuff (HTB): ntck.co/htb Linux for Hackers (and everyone) EP3. HELP!!!! Sometimes (or all the time) in Linux, we need a little help with our commands in the CLI. In this video, I'll walk you through an essential way to get help in the Linux terminal while also learning a thing or two about the terminal itself. Also....NEW COMMANDS!!! *Disclaimer: The Linux foundations course from HTB Academy is a Tier 0 course, allowing me to show the course content in this video series. SUPPORT NETWORKCHUCK --------------------------------------------------- ➡️Become a RUclips Member: bit.ly/join_networkchuck ☕☕ COFFEE and MERCH: NetworkChuck.coffee Check out my new channel, bit.ly/nc_clips 🆘🆘NEED HELP?? Join the Discord Server: discord.gg/networkchuck STUDY WITH ME on Twitch: bit.ly/nc_twitch READY TO LEARN?? --------------------------------------------------- -Learn Python: bit.ly/3rzZjzz -Get your CCNA: bit.ly/nc-ccna FOLLOW ME EVERYWHERE --------------------------------------------------- Instagram: instagram.com/networkchuck/ Twitter: twitter.com/networkchuck Facebook: facebook.com/NetworkChuck/ Join the Discord server: bit.ly/nc-discord 0:00 ⏩ Intro 1:26 ⏩ FREE Linux LAB 2:17 ⏩ Getting to know the Linux Terminal 4:01 ⏩ NEW COMMAND: PS 7:13 ⏩ !!!! NEW COMMANDSSSS !!!! 8:19 ⏩ HELP!! (how to get help) MAN and -h 9:57 ⏩ NEW COMMAND: apropos 10:56 ⏩ your homework 11:29 ⏩ QUIZ!!!
I usually don't comment on videos but this is the most helpful Linux video I've ever seen. I knew about the manual but I have never heard of apropos and that's life changing. I love playing with Linux virtual machines and this makes me so excited to get even deeper into the shell.
some of the commands covered here id - tells you all about you. uname - (with switch will give you info on machine) ifconfig - network info ip - more network info netstat - network info ss - session stuff ps - process info who - who else logged onto system env - enviroment info lsusb - any USB plugged in lsof - list open files man - search index of related OS terms, commands and uses. apropos - approximate command search
Thank you for the amazing video I am in employee training my job is to build computer I must say you help me to not get confuse I know linux but when it gets for coding is tricky
I've been working with Linux full time since 2009. Apropos, grep, and man are really all you need to be able to get out of a bind. Protip? Hit shift + k on a command in vim to be shown the man page. Once you learn splits in vim, you can use the file explorer and shell as a supervillian lvl IDE.
I'm not aiming to be an hacker or to get into IT (yet, who knows I might end going down that route), I'm just an average person and I've just started learning the very basics of general use Linux for fun, but thank you this was still super helpful! I feel like that apropos command is the best tool for learning ☺️ Also just found your channel and love it, love how passionate you are and how all of your videos are for absolute beginners
You know im watching ur 2nd limux 4 hackers rn. Idk if you know but at 909, you are emphasizing. But the way you approached all of sbin, is almost like predicitve programing. Which is crazy. Your personality, allows those who are receptive to you, to learn. We will always remember what matters. Sounds pretty cool to me. Just wanted to leave some un-bais perspectives.
Many times I tried to learn Linux but I give up right away, because I didn’t know what I am doing, I searched a lot of videos to find out more about Linux but didn’t help me to learn. Finally I came across with this guy “NetworkChuck” the Viking of computer networking. If your seeing this comment mr Chuck I thank you for making Linux fun and really easy for me to learn. Salute for your enthusiasm. 😎 🇦🇫lots of love from Afghanistan🇦🇫
Not directly related, but timeshift is a huge help for the ones starting on Linux (pre-installed on Mint and Ubuntu). Its a time-machine that backups all your system regularly and in a smart way (by default excluding your home folder and hidden config folders within). So whenever you feel you messed up something you shouldn't, or trying to make something to work to the point of exhaustion and didn't have the dilligency to backtrace, just timeshift the whole thing, and in five-ish minutes you're good to go again.
@@shafialanower3820 yes, a free application that comes bundled with some distros (ubuntu doesn't come preinstalled with it). It was created by one person and has lacking documentation, but it is pretty reliable.
You can help yourself with commands by making aliases for them you can also tie echo response so it displays command you run. example : alias Documents='cd /home/user/Documents && echo " You used this command : cd /home/user/Documents"' it will execute command and display what command you used. You would be surprised what linux can do and this video shows clearly you know way more than me so idea for alias is for those who find difficult to remember some commands.
I'm enjoying this series. He's fun to listen to and here and there I learn a tidbit I missed in my Linux learning. But imagining my mother or even most of my friends trying to learn all this terminal stuff is amusing. Not because they couldn't, but because they don't want to. They just want to get to RUclips or play their games or pay their bills.
I am actually using Linux on a virtual machine and not on hackthebox but still, it's crazy how easy you made it to look. This is the first time I'm ever using Linux and it is so interesting. Thank you very much man! Huge respect from Israel.
Yooo…I was bouncing around the terminal like crazy after this video. I didn’t really do anything but I went and looked in every crack and crevice there was. It was awesome. Hit that like button 11x’s top notch video for sure.
chuck you forgot this part, before the apropos cmd can be useful you first need to run this cmd "sudo mandb" then apropos cmd becomes useful. perhaps maybe cause I run Linux on a live environment, not on hackbox. Actually, when I first ran the apropos cmd it always returned nothing appropriate
Wow, been using Linux for 20+ years (programmer so kinda casual, not a sysadmin) and I had never heard of the `apropos` command. You really do learn something every day.
Came here to write the same thing. I also didn't know that you could use ctrl-l to clear the console. Here's me writing 'clear' all the time like a sucker.
same here. using Linux flavors since 12+ years.. apropos !
apropos it's magical ✨
This command impressed me too.
@@alexfoxleigh9443 that was me in the beginning in like 3 months of knowing Linux I found cntrl l I was like reallyyyyyyyyyyyy
the only reason I'm following these tutorials is because I decided to mess around and get Linux Ubuntu running on a Nintendo Switch. I'm having a blast working all this stuff out. Thank you so much for this series, definitely will be up to date with future episodes.
I've been using linux for 4 years and I never knew about apropos. This is going to save me SO MUCH time not having to google stuff when I forget what command I am supposed to use. THANK YOU!!!!!
Someone once told me that if you really know a subject you have to be able to explain it to a 5 year old kid, and man you are the perfect example. I can’t stop watching your videos, you really add value here. I just wanna say THANKS!!
You're not a five year old.
The problem with that popular quote is that our knowledge and concepts build on each other. That's also what makes them so powerful. They're not isolated facts. They are abstractions build on abstractions.
It's impossible to explain something complex to a five year old, because all of the required background knowledge takes so much time to acquire that in the end, it's no longer a five year old, but a twenty year old.
In a way our education system IS explaining sth complex to five year olds - over the span of decades.
Half the time he's teaching half the time he's sipping coffee. Love it.
Both of my favorite things to do
@@NetworkChuck wow
the best way to teach
thats the best part
You got that out of order... coffee always comes first.
I keep burning out listening to boring videos but Chuck is making it interesting, good personality... I watched way longer than I ever watched before... Make more please!
I had a cybersecurity unit at uni and I had no idea what I was doing because they hardly explained anything. I passed that unit but I'm just learning what the heck I did back then. Thank you for such great videos.
I don't think I have ever seen a more exciting person than Chuck teaching Linux. I tried few times to learn Linux and quickly gave up because it was so boring leaning all those commands. Chuck passion is contagious
Hey chuck ,
Make a video on how you started your journey in I T how you got interest in it ? Then your lifestyle, job etc. Meanwhile make a Q&A video. Plss 😋
What's cool about Chuck is he's a family man love a American family man hacker. Only need 2000 more Chucks all over the world. Lol.😎😏
@Benjamin what the help are u talking about 🤪
I have tried to learn Linux, I forget how many times, but many times. By me just following your energetic videos and trying out what you say I have learnt more in like 10 videos across the board than I have learnt in 25 years of trying to learn on my own. You have inspired me to do the HTB courses at my age, cough cough approaching 60. Thanks man your videos will inspire many folk to take Linux for a spin. Much appreciation from NZ
This series is basically a gold mine for the ones who started getting into Linux and want to learn more.
The Bash, Shell, Terminal and Terminal Emulator was new to me. Thanks so much.
chuck you always amaze me man😴 i dont think i saw someone so good at explaining stuff❤️❤️❤️love from India ❤️🇮🇳
❤️🇮🇳
@@joy_6.9 How did you type that 'IN'?
im so damn happy to have found this channel... love from india ('◡')
@@beamer5404 It’s when you’re on laptop you see “in” but it’s because he put an Indian flag on his phone. So on iPad or phone you see the flag
@@beamer5404 🇮🇳
You're such a positive bloke Chuck. Thanks for doing what you're doing, it has really inspired me to work hard at learning IT for a new career.
You make this even more fun. I love the energy and excitement, it gets me just as excited about learning Linux. Keep it up!
If you're color blind you should know that your work environment has a great lights and colors! Good job Chuck!
I will take you further back to when a Terminal was a key board and a printer with a side of card reader. Yep long time ago in a land far away (Japan in the late 70s USMC) that was our terminal for our Unix based system that filled an entier container box, well actully two of them because the second was where the 4 keypunch operators punched the cards. I didn't see a modern day VT100 ever but using old Tandy computers with emulators programmed in, in college we connected to the school Unix system to write code, compile it, test it, and run it. Then I got smart because for a grand I could build my own 8086 DOS based desktop computer, connect it to a phone line, and dial up any of the 36 numbers and work all night because the lab shut down at midnight. Ahhhh the good old days when networking was still one to one.
Nice! Me? Early 70s IBM 360 and 370 mainframes.. banking..
Omg finally someone who I can understand and who has helped me only 3 videos in thank you
I just want to say and let you know, you've re-ignited my inner nerd and started learning Linux.
Thank you for your videos and your energy.
PS. some of the questions on HTB section "User management" where quite hard, since they didn't explain them. So you had to explore the system and google some stuff yourself.
I feel like everytime I watch your videos i´m in a class with the best teacher ever, my focus increases in a way I can´t even explain.
I've been using Linux for about 3 years and there are some of these commands I've never heard of
You literally answered a question that I was thinking about when you mentioned apropos. I like your style of teaching, I'm 7 months into using Linux and I'm always looking to improve my knowledge. Your channel does it for me. Thanks for the great content!
NetworkChuck + David Bombal = My education
#me2
I have been addicted to you for the past few months. I can't stop watching your videos. God bless you.
I checked your merchant store and was so surprised you don't have anything that says "What the junk?" Haha 😅 Would be so funny to see something with that
Finally a trainer who makes it fun and playful to learn, that's important to stay motivated on the long run. And not taking ourself seriously is also something enjoyable: relax we will get there attitude.
Very enjoyable course so far. Thanks and congratulations
This is the first video I am watching of you. And damn this excitement and motivation is insane. Looking forward to seeing more of you.
Dude. The way you teach is awesome. I'm watching this as a refresher. And I have to say, I like how you start from the essentials and work your way up. You'd be a great instructor for IT. Thanks for all you do!
Chuck, you're an amazing human being man. Thank you for all your amazing content!
Love from Kerala India... Nice and lovely class... Easy understandable for all..even to non English speakers... ❤️❤️❤️❤️
പൊളിച്ചു മച്ചാ....
Thank you for this course Chuck! I knew most of what has been covered to this point, but the way you lay the information out is fun and engaging, and I know the further I go, the more I'm going to learn! Never stop learning! Thanks!
PRO TIP: In the workspace, the first thing you see in the prompt (which will usually say "eu-academy-1" is actually the vpn you're connected to. You can't change this in the first page, but on page 6 (the first page that teaches you to ssh) you can change your vpn server to whatever is closest.
I appreciate this Chuck! You're not only giving us fish, you're also teaching us HOW to fish
@@abdulelahfallatah Lmao. I see what you did there
Always felt relieved after knowing the basics that I use blindly. Hats off to Chuck
Love your content man and having a lot of fun learning this stuff, have u ever thought to make a top 10 books that you strongly recommend of ethical hacking?🙏
Brushing up on my Linux skills and figured I'd go further before running into something new to me. but in episode 3 apropos was it. Thanks!
Chuck, you've got a fan in me. Keep it up!
Besides the topic of networking, in general, you are one of the best instructors out there.
Chuck's been making more...existential dread jokes? And they are being appreciated very much.
I studied for the Comptia Linux+ for Months. I took the exam and passed first try. The apropos command was never mentioned in any training or book that I went through. It's not on the cert objectives either. So I learned a cool new command that is super useful for beginners and experienced users.
Moral of the story: Just because you are certified and have experience in something, there is ALWAYS something to learn when you revisit the basics.
Wow how have I never heard of apropos. That's gonna be one of my new favorites lol
Chuck, I love how you make everything very easy to understand stand if you're 12-70
I just want to let you know your awesome man. I've watched a lot of your video's before i barely knew what Ethical Hacking was and now after watching some of your videos i think its AWESOME and im only 14 years old but when im older i think im probably gonna go into IT cause this stuff is awesome. I already have Kali Linux Installed on my laptop and usually i just play around with some commands and stuff but i really want to learn more about this kinda stuff and one day be a Pro at Ethical Hacking :)
The first RUclips channel in my life where I have not yet double tapped the screen to fast forward absolutely amazing content
à propos (the linux command apropos) is a French word meaning 'by the way' or 'about' more or less... And I'm Flemish 😁
Great vids mate, In last two days i have learnt more about Linux then i did from using Windows for 4 years
How can you sleep while you’re drinking 15 cup’s of coffe a day
I bet he switches to using Linux with UI. Lack of challenge bores him to sleep momentarily.
@@xDxVxDxfan UI is a challenge is you only ever used shells lol
I'm sure if he didn't intend to sleep he would have a standing desk, at least that's how I use to manage.
He shall never sleep, cuz sleep is for the week.
@Sharma Vivek too bad I shut down my facebook , or I'd link a picture of me drinking out of my 2L coffee mug and or the day it broke. I think I'm the reason why comberland farms gas stations in NY started to limit the size of the cup you can bring for the $0.99 refill.
Thank you so much, LOVE from Chile!.
I have seen a lot of content on RUclips related with "hacking" and you make so good material i think you are one of the best, very funny, and very easy to understand, you have great personality and i love it the way you teach this things.
Love the content but you forgot to mention that Linux is free, regardless if they get it from your sponsor.
it's a just handy vm apparently
This _apropos_ command is probably the most useful thing I learnt from a Linux tutorial vid.
@Roy C shut up scammer. If you were a true hacker, this is not how you would be getting them shillings. You're as good as the call centre scams, but even more stupider.
Here I am to support this awesome guy. Regards from Romania.
When you said "did you get all that?" I did. I actually input every command as you said them to run it. I like the speed in which you explain things.
I realize that this is "deep in the feed" so I am not sure about commenting protocol.
I do intend to watch basically every video on your channel and I have been telling my wife to also watch your videos before she is allowed on the network I am building. With your help.
Thank you for all of the information. I fully intend to support you more when I am able. Your coffee sounds amazing.
Hi! Love you from Albania🇦🇱
Shqipeee
Where the fuck is Albania
shqiptare gjithandej 😂
Love the way that the command that tells you what the command is that you can't remember is the hardest command to remember. (one bottle of red later I have no idea if this even makes sense, sorry).
Thank you so much, LOVE from MOROCCO !
I see you bro im from casablanca :D
@@samk41156 where you saw me XD
peace from errachidia
Powershell and managing Windows services, access controls, etc is WAY harder than learning Linux via the CLI (Command Line). Gets easy fast.
im struggling to actually use hackthebox cause idk if its just me but the vm/"box" is so laggy
Go checkout his Virtual box and Kali Linux setup tutorials. Using kali with virtual box takes away the lag. But you can still follow along. Thats what I'm doing
I ain't gone lie by the time I get to watching @NetworkChuck and learning it's no longer coffee time so every time he takes a sip of coffee I sip my lemonade and vodka. Thanks Chuck I'll remember you when I make it big brother..
This video by @NetworkChuck is the literal definition of man-SPLAINING. 🤪😂
Yup I used real 2:45 terminals like VT100/102 + VT220 for programming on DEC machines. and paper/dot matrix DecWriter terminal on PDP11/70 in school before that... when PgUp scrolling back meant standing up, reaching behind TTY and grabbing green-bar paper to see what printed five minutes ago. Having used unix & old terminals gives insight into how shell scripting & terminal environment developed over the years.
Me working in Linux: I don't how to solve this issue. Let me look up a tutorial.
Tutorial: Just click here and here, then you're all set.
Me: Clicks there and receive a bunch of errors.
Thank you NetworkChuck. I have a lab at home in which i experiment with before i deploy stuff at work. Just barely skated by on some of the stuff with knowing virtually nothing about Linux. The other day i decided that was going to change. i have installed Proxmox and a vm of Linux not knowing you would help get us going in HTB Academy. So following your videos and using it I have learned more then about Linux then i ever knew. i plan on using it more and helping the small company i work for expand and be more secure. Again, thank you.
After seeing your instagram post,
My mind say to me, Go Go Go Go Go !!!!!!!!!
excellent starting point to get into the terminal and come up with any doubt about a command - thanks a lot Chuck...
I love your shirt! So funny 😂
It took me until the last minute of the video to get the joke. I want to buy it now.
I can't find Episode 1 but you seem like a god-send bro I can't wait to follow along I've been hoping to come across someone who is cool, down to earth and walks you through, in a friendly, chill way, learning Linux. I have tried so many distros SO MANY freakin' times man, I'm stoked to finally learn, like ACTUALLY learn the how-to's and basics of Linux after all these years! Thanks for these vid's, you sir are awesome!
Muito bom seus vídeos 🇧🇷
Ele não entende portugues.
@@electricimpulsetoprogramming tô ligado só pra dizer que sou BR mesmo kkk
@@domingoscosta44 Isso não vai mudar nada na vida dele, caso for deixar um comentario deixe algo util...
im falling asleep not cuz the videos are bad but because its 7am and ive been rewatching your videos to get it concrete😵💫
“The Lord may not come when you call, but He is Always on Time.”
Thank you Chuck. That apropos is very handy. And yes, the man pages are very powerfull.
Sa shqipe i kem ktu🇦🇱🇽🇰
⬇️
Paska shqiptar ktu a
Wewe
@@rezznovv shqipe ke n fund t botes e le mo ktu n video 🇦🇱🇽🇰
Bravo cuna msoni se ju rritet kari kshu
sa te duash 😹
ma shum se mendon ti :)
coffee, CoFfEe, COFFEE!!! I'm on my 4th (Lavazza). I'm studying for my Linux+, testing on May 24th. I used two different types of study courses and neither of them said anything about "apropos", thank you!!!
Start hacking with this free Linux Lab: ntck.co/htbacad (HTB Academy)
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Linux for Hackers (and everyone) EP3. HELP!!!! Sometimes (or all the time) in Linux, we need a little help with our commands in the CLI. In this video, I'll walk you through an essential way to get help in the Linux terminal while also learning a thing or two about the terminal itself. Also....NEW COMMANDS!!!
*Disclaimer: The Linux foundations course from HTB Academy is a Tier 0 course, allowing me to show the course content in this video series.
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0:00 ⏩ Intro
1:26 ⏩ FREE Linux LAB
2:17 ⏩ Getting to know the Linux Terminal
4:01 ⏩ NEW COMMAND: PS
7:13 ⏩ !!!! NEW COMMANDSSSS !!!!
8:19 ⏩ HELP!! (how to get help) MAN and -h
9:57 ⏩ NEW COMMAND: apropos
10:56 ⏩ your homework
11:29 ⏩ QUIZ!!!
Thanks
Where are you from sir 👍
im drinking pepsi lol.
btw love your videos dude I appreciate all your effort. keep up the great work
sudo su hey I’m freaking root now. 😂
when i enter my email to sign up i just get a 443 page, can anyone help?
I've only started a few days ago and I'm happy! You aren't like those TTS videos that aren't fun and are so serious.
I usually don't comment on videos but this is the most helpful Linux video I've ever seen. I knew about the manual but I have never heard of apropos and that's life changing. I love playing with Linux virtual machines and this makes me so excited to get even deeper into the shell.
some of the commands covered here
id - tells you all about you.
uname - (with switch will give you info on machine)
ifconfig - network info
ip - more network info
netstat - network info
ss - session stuff
ps - process info
who - who else logged onto system
env - enviroment info
lsusb - any USB plugged in
lsof - list open files
man - search index of related OS terms, commands and uses.
apropos - approximate command search
The Way you are teaching Linux is just amazing, exciting. Keep it up.
Thank you for the amazing video I am in employee training my job is to build computer I must say you help me to not get confuse I know linux but when it gets for coding is tricky
I've been working with Linux full time since 2009. Apropos, grep, and man are really all you need to be able to get out of a bind. Protip? Hit shift + k on a command in vim to be shown the man page. Once you learn splits in vim, you can use the file explorer and shell as a supervillian lvl IDE.
I use TLDR for help on Linux commands and it's amazing . . .
I'm not aiming to be an hacker or to get into IT (yet, who knows I might end going down that route), I'm just an average person and I've just started learning the very basics of general use Linux for fun, but thank you this was still super helpful! I feel like that apropos command is the best tool for learning ☺️ Also just found your channel and love it, love how passionate you are and how all of your videos are for absolute beginners
You know im watching ur 2nd limux 4 hackers rn. Idk if you know but at 909, you are emphasizing. But the way you approached all of sbin, is almost like predicitve programing. Which is crazy. Your personality, allows those who are receptive to you, to learn. We will always remember what matters. Sounds pretty cool to me. Just wanted to leave some un-bais perspectives.
Many times I tried to learn Linux but I give up right away, because I didn’t know what I am doing, I searched a lot of videos to find out more about Linux but didn’t help me to learn. Finally I came across with this guy “NetworkChuck” the Viking of computer networking. If your seeing this comment mr Chuck I thank you for making Linux fun and really easy for me to learn. Salute for your enthusiasm. 😎 🇦🇫lots of love from Afghanistan🇦🇫
These tutorials are actually good, I am understanding with half a brain.
i figured it out. you are josh delacruz from blues clues but for adults and i couldnt appreciate it more. thanks ..
How could someone dislike a masterpiece ?
In addition to everything that's already been said regarding this series and your channel, I'd also like to give props for the John 3:3 shirt!
I am a just begainer and it was a great help. Thanks.
Not directly related, but timeshift is a huge help for the ones starting on Linux (pre-installed on Mint and Ubuntu). Its a time-machine that backups all your system regularly and in a smart way (by default excluding your home folder and hidden config folders within). So whenever you feel you messed up something you shouldn't, or trying to make something to work to the point of exhaustion and didn't have the dilligency to backtrace, just timeshift the whole thing, and in five-ish minutes you're good to go again.
What is timeshift? An application?
@@shafialanower3820 yes, a free application that comes bundled with some distros (ubuntu doesn't come preinstalled with it). It was created by one person and has lacking documentation, but it is pretty reliable.
You are my biggest inspiration. Only because of your Right Now motivation helps me a lot for doing work on time. Thank You.
ok
You can help yourself with commands by making aliases for them you can also tie echo response so it displays command you run. example : alias Documents='cd /home/user/Documents && echo " You used this command : cd /home/user/Documents"' it will execute command and display what command you used. You would be surprised what linux can do and this video shows clearly you know way more than me so idea for alias is for those who find difficult to remember some commands.
I'm enjoying this series. He's fun to listen to and here and there I learn a tidbit I missed in my Linux learning. But imagining my mother or even most of my friends trying to learn all this terminal stuff is amusing. Not because they couldn't, but because they don't want to. They just want to get to RUclips or play their games or pay their bills.
I mean i use WSL, did some stuff for a year, know stuff, but still great to watch this series to get to know everything u dont know
AWESOME intro!!! 😊
Thank you so much for the help getting to learn the bash shell!
I am actually using Linux on a virtual machine and not on hackthebox but still, it's crazy how easy you made it to look.
This is the first time I'm ever using Linux and it is so interesting. Thank you very much man!
Huge respect from Israel.
Yooo…I was bouncing around the terminal like crazy after this video. I didn’t really do anything but I went and looked in every crack and crevice there was. It was awesome. Hit that like button 11x’s top notch video for sure.
Linux can be absolutely infuriating at times. But it just makes the victory so much sweeter once you figure it out.
chuck you forgot this part, before the apropos cmd can be useful you first need to run this cmd "sudo mandb" then apropos cmd becomes useful. perhaps maybe cause I run Linux on a live environment, not on hackbox. Actually, when I first ran the apropos cmd it always returned nothing appropriate
the world of linux needs more enthusiastic people like you
I've been using Linux for ages, today I learnt about apropos!