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Boring - is it with jumping clowns, a ticklish monster and periodic prize draws?
If a similar question arises, I recommend starting with the basics. And not necessarily on INTUIT. Look for command line basics, scripting, package installation, network setup, disk management, iptables setup.
Then ask yourself the question - "Why the hell do I even want to study this?" And try to find a better answer than "become the smartest and coolest sysadmin in the world!" Set a specific task for yourself, formulate it very clearly and it will immediately become clear to you where to move on. And maybe score on Linux. Windows administrators, believe me, also live very well.
As for the video lectures. I'm not sure about INTUIT, but YouTube is full of similar material.
PS Decide on the Linux distribution that you want to study, because at the initial stage of study there is a huge difference between them and it is not erased immediately. Of the popular ones, I recommend studying Debian, Fedora, CentOS, Ubuntu. Basically, you can learn Debian and Fedora, since CentOS is basically Fedora and Ubuntu is Debian.
You can search on different MOOCs:
https://www.udemy.com/topic/linux-video-tutorials/
https://class.coursera.org/startup-001/lecture
https://www.edx.org/course /introduction-linux-linu...
Again, it's worth deciding on the level: as a rule, entry-level courses are almost identical to each other, most of them. But what is more serious, is already less common, and costs more ...
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