Copyright and License
Except stated otherwise, the content of LinuxBasics.org is copyrighted by the authors and licensed under the GNU General Public License. We also would appreciate that contributions to this site are made available under these terms. (See below on details).
The GPL is usually applied to software and not documentation, but this use is also possible. The “Source Code” in this particular case is the text in the markup-language we have used to put it on the site, which is “DokuWiki-Markup”, plain text or HTML.
The full Text of the GPL can be found at gnu.org and here on this site at GPL.
There is also a GPL-FAQ and inofficial translations available at http://gnu.org.
How will your contribution be licensed?
First and foremost: However you wish it to be.
However, to ensure that the wiki stays operable, all wikis on this site are considered one ‘work’ under the GPL. That means that if you contribute anything to the wiki, you need to do so under the GPL, since you are modifying that work.
If you wish to add something and use some other kind of license (even having no license is a license :), then you need to do so in your personal webspace and link to it. If you do not have webspace on your own, contact us so we can provide you with a page (or namespace) which is only editable by you. Be sure to mention the license-terms in your page.
Copyright (c) by the authors.
Prior to editing, authors agreed to license their contributions by the terms of the GPL.
See our licensing page for details.
Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Welcome to LinuxBasics.org - The online community that helps people to get Linux installed and running.
During this tour, we will guide you through our website, which has many facets which wait to be explored
The biggest project we are running is our Linux course, based on the LBook.
The book is stored in wiki-format, which enables us to update and correct it as we go.
Discussion for the course is on our Forum
Our mailing-list is for any Linux-related question.
The questions and answers from the list are stored in the list's archives in order to help others with the same problems.
Every weekend, we meet to chat in IRC. These meetings are NOT mandatory, but are a nice chance to get to know each other better.
IRC is also a great tool to solve many problems, since it is very quick and easy to ask for more details if you need them.
The tutorials are one of the oldest sections on the LBo-website.
Here you find explanations on how to do specific tasks in Linux. Many of the tutorials were created after a certain problem
has been discussed (and usually solved :) on the mailing-list.
The tutorials are categorized in
In the links section, you find outbound links to other valuable resources.
One of our later additions to the site. We maintain a mirror of the Linux Documentation Project. This is our contribution to the "home of the HOWTOs"
Another later addition is the LBlog which focuses on how to do stuff on the Linux Desktop. It begins with the basics on installing Ubuntu.
Using the integrated site-search, you can search the tutorials, the LBook and all other wiki-pages
Simply type the search term into the box in the upper-right corner of our webpages
As a community, we depend on your feedback and collaboration. So, if you have something to share with others, please contact us. If you have a suggestion for a topic you would like to see covered here, please add it on the Wishlist.
There are many ways to contribute: You can answer questions on the mailing-list, you can write a complete tutorial or just a step-by-step documentation on how you completed a specific task using linux. Ask questions if the information on this site is not clear, tell us if we got something wrong, spell-check our writings, whatever.
We are looking forward to meeting you at LinuxBasics.org
Anita, Jisao, Sam and Stefan