 Hello, everyone. My name is John Hammond and I would like to showcase some code content and material that I'd created two years ago actually back in 2016. Well, I was still a student in college. So at the time I was actually lucky enough to be able to teach a class, just a small elective like a one credit course that would meet once a week for maybe an hour and a half. And it was on the introduction to Linux. So Linux a computer operating system on the command line, just kind of the interesting facets and tidbit of it and just in general Linux. So the students were my classmates, most of them a little over a dozen and a couple stragglers of just other individuals in a year behind us. But honestly, it was really awesome and I wanted to showcase some of the material to you, whether or not you are a teacher, maybe wanting to see how you can approach teaching Linux or maybe some of the stuff maybe of interest to you. If you're a student or just someone who is a hobbyist really wants to get into Linux, maybe some of the materials here may help you. And like to showcase how I think teaching can be done for this computer science cybersecurity it stuff, or if you're a developer and you just want to see code, what I built how it's put together. I won't write any code in the series, but I will be reviewing code so it'll certainly be on the screen. I'll be discussing it and you can see some of the stuff that I had done. Good things or bad things. Also, this is on the tails of my school had recently just announced that they'll be opening up a new academic major a new field of study in cybersecurity cyber systems computer science stuff. And it had came to me that okay some of this material some of my content may be in use in the curriculum so I developed all this with the intent for it to be very Linux like in that it is open source. It's free, transparent allow anyone to use it. And obviously with the appropriate credits for its original creator. So I wanted to showcase it to you. It originally lived on GitHub, and it is still up their presence. I had moved it now to get lab. So I actually have it in the personal like directory of my own portfolio. And we'll be able to download and play with it and I'll show you just like that. Right now, let's do it. So it's on get lab get lab.com john Hammond, and the repository is intro to Linux. I'll hop over to my command line, and we can get clone that URL. So the repository has a couple different folders if we actually move in here. Some of them are showcasing either specific lessons or modules or things that I taught specifically for a day or a week or some period of time in class. Some things are relative to the repository itself or it's look pretty like the pictures. There is some kind of the back end setup how things are built and how I put things together. Really the final guide is my parting gift and my kind of Bible that I put together for anyone that will inherit a lot of this material later. So in the final guide, that is the directory that has some latex files and images that put together again. I like to use latex. So this got the open source representation of everything that I'd written. And I put a lot of work into this and I like to think it's some of some good things, some good stuff that I put together. So the course of materials for the introduction to Linux class back in 2016 written by me, the table of contents. I want to use this. Honestly, I want to use this text document. I want to use this article here as my skeleton or like really the tangent of where I'll dive into other different things that I have created and written and I'll be able to showcase in this series. So hopefully some of them will be of interest to you. A little bit of scripting, a little bit of MySQL, a little bit of SSH, installing software, maybe actual like web attacks, et cetera, et cetera. So interesting, interesting things. I wanted to use this as the jumping off point for all the concepts and the content that I will explain to you in the later videos. So again, I'm going to get into this in the next video, but I did want to introduce it to you showcase it to you and get that get clone. So if you'd like some of this content, you are certainly able to download it and use it explore that is the whole point. I will try and showcase what is in the repository and what is accessible in that giant final guide PDF file because that's where a lot of the goods are. Really, I wrote my formal report into what I built, how I created it all, et cetera. So we'll move into that in the next video. So thank you guys for watching. I do want to give a quick shout out to my supporters, people that are helping me out on Patreon. Thank you so much. I can't say it enough. That's why I do this at the end of every video. Just to give you another reminder, I cannot thank you enough like literally. So this list is getting longer and I am so, so grateful. Thank you for being willing to go on this adventure and this journey with me. $1 a month on Patreon gives you the shout out at the end of every video. Thank you to all of you guys. Spencer Clark, Alhara Woods, Timothy County, Jacob H, et cetera, et cetera. Thank you. $5 a month gets you early access to some of the content I'll release on YouTube. If I upload it, it may be scheduled for a later release to be to be released and to go live at a later date as to when I normally record in bulk or I record in mass a lot of videos at the same time. And if you don't want to wait, you want the content right when it's ready. That's what the early access is for. If you do want to support me, maybe please like the video. Let me leave me a comment what you'd like to see, what you think of this, what we can do better, I don't know. If you're willing to subscribe and if you do really, really want to support, check me out on Patreon. Thanks so much, guys.