The greatest feature of the internet is it international content. When i want some local news/videos/music, there it is. If I want to find some international stuff, see, whats up in other countries, I find it also there. So should we divide to different places? Do you like checking 20 different sites for 20 different countries? I don't and i like to see movies on youtube, that are international. Related stuff from other countries. Contents from other countries can be interesting too.
I also always believed, that having different distributions is a real advantage for GNU/Linux. But as you can see in many forums, there are many flamewars about the "best" distribution.
I think, technically it is really a strengh, but many people just don't get the point, and weaken the whole GNU/Linux Community against Microsoft. Why should they fight GNU/Linux, when they do it by themselves?
Because sometimes I like it to read about something ordered and structured. And maybe there are things in this book, that you don't google that fast or maybe you find a tool, that you wouldn't have found with google - or maybe just not that fast.
- often with more insightful examples, tutorials, etc - I you need more insightful examples, you can still google for it, but for a first impression this should be enough.
The greatest feature of the internet is it international content. When i want some local news/videos/music, there it is. If I want to find some international stuff, see, whats up in other countries, I find it also there. So should we divide to different places? Do you like checking 20 different sites for 20 different countries? I don't and i like to see movies on youtube, that are international. Related stuff from other countries. Contents from other countries can be interesting too.
I also always believed, that having different distributions is a real advantage for GNU/Linux. But as you can see in many forums, there are many flamewars about the "best" distribution. I think, technically it is really a strengh, but many people just don't get the point, and weaken the whole GNU/Linux Community against Microsoft. Why should they fight GNU/Linux, when they do it by themselves?
Because sometimes I like it to read about something ordered and structured. And maybe there are things in this book, that you don't google that fast or maybe you find a tool, that you wouldn't have found with google - or maybe just not that fast.
- often with more insightful examples, tutorials, etc -
I you need more insightful examples, you can still google for it, but for a first impression this should be enough.