
An introduction to working in Unix. The tutorial covers GUIs vs. command line interfaces, absolute vs. relative paths, how to start Terminal, the parts of a Unix command prompt, and six Unix commands: pwd, ls, ls -l, cd, mkdir, mv, cp, and rm. Written and Produced by Christina Bergey.

Bizzare Unix clips from popular movies and tv. This is a small taste of my upcoming long form video mixtape, "Uploading Virus". If you know of any other clips of unix-like OSs mentioned or featured in TV or Movies, let me know! Oh, and all you idiots who don't think "Unix" exists anymore, see this family tree: www.computerworld.com
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Watch new AT&T Archive films every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at techchannel.att.com In the late 1960s, Bell Laboratories computer scientists Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson started work on a project that was inspired by an operating system called Multics, a joint project of MIT, GE, and Bell Labs. The host and narrator of this film, Victor Vyssotsky, also had worked on the Multics project. Ritchie and Thompson, recognizing some of the problems with the Multics OS, set out to create a more useful, flexible, and portable system for programmers to work with. What's fascinating about the growth of UNIX is the long amount of time that it was given to develop, almost organically, and based on the needs of the users and programmers. The first installation of the program was done as late as 1972 (on a NY Telephone branch computer). It was in conjunction with the refinement of the C programming language, principally designed by Dennis Ritchie. Because the Bell System had limitations placed by the government that prevented them from selling software, UNIX was made available under license to universities and the government. This helped further its development, as well as making it a more "open" system. This film "The UNIX System: Making Computers More Productive", is one of two that Bell Labs made in 1982 about UNIX's significance, impact and usability. Even 10 years after its first installation, it's still an introduction to the system. The other film, "The UNIX System: Making <b>...</b>
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*UPDATE* I have not booted this system since creating this video in 2009. If anyone here can offer a method to safely dump the drive, I would greatly appreciate it. Some have already posted methods but I want all the tips I can get before I accidentally wipe out irreplaceable data. Send me an email: tswoskowiak:AT:gmail.com. I Also have all of the original manuals, disks and the box it came in! But thanks to my cat, the box is torn to shreds. I don't throw anything out. I would also like to dump the disks if they can still be read. If I can get everything, I will put it into a tar ball and upload it somewhere. This is my AT&T Unix PC booting up. This was given to me by a family friend who bought it new around 1984/1985. It sat unused since 1991 and booted when it was first given to me in 1999 (along with a 3b1). I played around with it for a few weeks until I shelved it. While cleaning out the basement I decided to try and boot the old beast and wouldn't you know after 10 years the dam thing still boots! (No, I didn't throw it out) I cant believe that after sitting for nearly 20 years it still works. I use Linux and wow using a 25+ year old shell does take some getting used to. Amazing how little the Unix file system hierarchy has changed, we still use /bin /etc /dev /lib /mnt and /tmp. For any of you who grew up on PC computers in the 80's you will all remember the very loud and distinct MFM hard disk sound as the stepper motor moved the heads around the platters. System <b>...</b>

The 'ls' binary on the original release of Unix (version 6) was 4920 bytes long. Thirty six years later, 'ls' on Ubuntu is 105776 bytes. Is this the laziness of modern coders? Increasing features? Does 'cat' really now do 313 times more stuff, or is there something else going on? Grab your sandals and/or fake beards as our two brave coders tear apart a handful of common UNIX utilties which they grew up alongside, with adult supervision from a genuine greybeard.

UNIX tutorial, through step-by-step, full screen video lessons written by recognized experts in their fields, can help you master the techniques you need to quickly become productive with the UNIX program. red hat linux Telangana
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Robert Hood - Unix Label: M-Plant Catalog#: M•P315 Format: 2 x Vinyl, 12" Country: US Released: 1999 Genre: Electronic Style: Techno, Minimal Real Name: Robert Hood Profile: Robert Hood makes minimal Detroit techno with an emphasis on soul and experimentation over flash and popularity. Having recorded for Metroplex, as well as the Austrian Cheap label and Jeff Mills' Axis label, Hood also owns and operates the M-Plant imprint (including the two sublabels Drama and Duet) through which he has released the bulk of his solo material. Hood was a founding member, along with Jeff Mills and Mike Banks, of the Underground Resistance label, whose influential releases throughout the early and mid '90s helped change the face of modern Detroit techno and sparked a creative renaissance. Infusing elements of acid and industrial into a potent blend of Chicago house and Detroit techno, UR's aesthetic project and militant business philosophy were (and remain) singular commitments in underground techno. Hood left Detroit (and UR) with Jeff Mills in 1992, setting up shop in New York and recording a series of 12" EPs. Through the mid '90s, Hood has focused on his solo work, setting up M-Plant in 1994 and releasing singles such as "Internal Empire", "Music Data" and "Moveable Parts". Although his desire to remain underground has been replaced by an urge to reach a wider audience, Hood remains fiercely critical of artistic and economic movements destructive to inner-city communities and has <b>...</b>

Rob Hood / Jeff Mills Track: Unix AXIS RECORDS, 1994 mispress repress www.discogs.com

geeks.pirillo.com - http - Epoch time started January 1, 1970. According to the Epoch clock, we hit 1234567890 today! Now you will be able to say where you were when that time passed! I swear it, gumdrops were falling from the sky in Seattle, and yes - I really did chair dance! chris.pirillo.com
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Speaker: Isaac Levy (.ike) Abstract: FreeBSD Jails are a time-tested, secure UNIX virtual machine with endless uses. Early unix mainframe computing brought elegant process and resource sharing systems, which helped get more application use out of expensive hardware. These concerns have been largely been pushed aside in computing with the rise of desktop PCs, and large farms of ever-shrinking pizza boxes in the data center. Today, as more punch gets packed into 1u than ever, server resources can be further consolidated and abstracted to securely separate complex and sophisticated services in the same hardware server, by running secure virtual UNIX machines. Who wants jails? System Administrators who need to securely separate small yet important services. Software Developers who always need more dev machines to hack amok. Root-Kit Testing and Debugging. Educators who could use virtual machines to provide clean unix server systems for student use. Anyone who wants *secure* virtual machines. Why would you want jail(8)? The design of Jail(8) and jail(2) are small and secure, and because jails use native system utilities, they are simple for any unix hacker to work with- very shallow learning curve. They're great for userland-level hacking and development, honeypots, or highly available services for regularly attacked systems. What I'd like to talk about: How Jails Work, the technical nitty-gritty How to setup jails, the practical how-to, cooking show style... When NOT to use <b>...</b>

Cisco offers online Cisco Learning Labs, powered by IOS on Unix. Take a first hand view of what this technology has to offer.
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This lecture reviews basic Linux commands and the concept of the file system and command line interface. Some differences between Unix, Linux, and MS Windows are discussed. Basic unix commands are demo'ed on a mac book computer.

As UNIX was being born at Bell Labs, the VM operating system was being born at IBM. Though mainframe Linux is a comparatively recent phenomenon, VM and UNIX share common roots that are subtle but deep, with a rich heritage of open source code, community involvement, and developer passion. Scott Courtney and David Boyes explore the history of VM that led it to be such a fine platform for Linux, and how UNIX and UNIX tools evolved in the mainframe hardware environment in the decades before Linux. Talk by David Boyes and Scott Courtney of Sine Nomine Associates. The video starts about 10 minutes into the talk, when the history of Multics (ca. 1964) is being discussed. Ohio LinuxFest 2009 www.ohiolinux.org
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Windows Services for UNIX (SFU) or Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications (SUA) is a software package produced by Microsoft which provides a Unix subsystem and other parts of a full Unix environment on Windows NT and some of its immediate successor operating-systems. It was an extension and replacement of the minimal Microsoft POSIX subsystem from Windows NT As of 2011 SFU contains: Over 350 Unix utilities such as vi, ksh, csh, ls, cat, awk, grep, kill, etc. GCC 3.3 compiler, includes and libraries (through an MS libc) A cc-like wrapper for Microsoft Visual Studio command-line C/C++ compiler GDB debugger Perl NFS server and client A pcnfsd daemon X11 tools and libraries Tools for making NFS mount-points appear as Windows shares, and vice-versa (gateway services) An NIS server capability linked with Active Directory (AD) Some Windows/Unix authentication information-synchronization tools SFU does not contain the following (but binaries are available for separate installation): bash, OpenSSH, sudo, CVS, ClamAV, bzip2, gmake, curl, emacs, Apache, XView, Ruby, Tcl, Python Although SFU includes X Window System client libraries and applications, it does not contain a native X server. Administrators may configure any of the numerous third-party Windows X servers: fully featured free options include Cygwin/X, Xming, WeirdMind and WeirdX. Visit: www.suacommunity.com

This video provides an overview and history of the Unix OS. A brief comparison between Unix, MS DOS, Windows and other operating systems is provided. Basic Unix concepts are introduced and explained along with some simple Unix commands and features.

DENNIS RITCHIE: "THE SHOULDERS STEVE JOBS STOOD ON". "It's really hard to overstate how much of the modern information economy is built on the work Dennis did." Dennis M. Ritchie is a seminal figure of the information era, by creating software tools that power things as diverse as search engines like Google and smart phones, he stood astride the digital world like few others. "The tools that Dennis built — and their direct descendants — run pretty much everything today," said Brian Kernighan, a computer scientist at Princeton University who worked with Mr. Ritchie at Bell Labs. "When Steve Jobs died last week, there was a huge outcry, and that was very moving and justified. But Dennis had a bigger effect, and the public doesn't even know who he is," says Rob Pike. "There's that line from Newton about standing on the shoulders of giants," says Kernighan. "We're all standing on Dennis' shoulders." Dennis Ritchie Home page|: cm.bell-labs.com "THE DREAM TEAM": Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Brian Kernighan, Douglas McIlroy, and Joe Ossanna.
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Step by Step Oracle 11g Installation on Linux / Unix with ASM 11g with Screens. For Content and screens please visit www.dba-onweb.blogspot.com. More Videos and Notes. Don't forget to subscribe my Tube.

Elliot goes over how interprocess communication works in Unix, as well as some simple LISP Programming Fresno Open Source Users Group (FOSUG) Member: Elliot Johnson Cameraman: Steven Hollingsworth