Linux admins,

I’ve been around Linux long enough to stop expecting much from intro books. Most of them walk through commands — maybe a few flags — and never explain why those commands behave the way they do. You end up memorizing steps instead of understanding the system underneath.

When I received a review copy of William Shotts’ The Linux Command Line (3rd Edition), I was pleasantly surprised. Read on to learn more about the new way this book has found to teach both newbies and Linux gurus on the best way to learn Linux.

Yours in Open Source, 

Dv Signature Newsletter 2024 Esm W150

Dave Wreski

LinuxSecurity Founder

The Linux Command Line: Bridging Security Awareness for Sysadmins

8.Locks HexConnections CodeGlobe Esm W400

I’ve been around Linux long enough to stop expecting much from intro books. Most of them walk through commands — maybe a few flags — and never explain why those commands behave the way they do. You end up memorizing steps instead of understanding the system underneath.

 When I picked up William Shotts’ The Linux Command Line (3rd Edition) again, I expected more of the same. A quick brush-up, maybe a reminder of a few forgotten shortcuts. Nothing major.

Learn About The Linux Command Line (3rd Edition)>>

Enhancing Linux Security with Threat Intelligence Platforms

20.Lock AbstractDigital Circular Esm W400

Cyber threats move faster than teams can track them. Exploits surface, get patched, and come back wearing new code. Staying secure now means reading the landscape before it shifts. Every day, thousands of new indicators roll in — from open-source feeds, sensors, honeypots, and shared research. Nobody can keep up manually.

That’s why most mature shops rely on a threat intelligence platform. It pulls data from everywhere, cleans it, correlates it, and gives it shape. Instead of triaging blind alerts, teams start to see what matters. They move from guessing to knowing.

 

Learn About Threat Intelligence Platforms>>