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Hey, welcome, everyone.

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At the beginning of every section, I'll have a video similar to this one where I talk about what actually

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matters in the section.

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So I try to keep them brief.

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I just want to highlight of all the topics we cover, you know, what really is worth your time and

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stress to try and get right versus what could you circle back to later?

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So I'll use this Trello board.

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I've made for all the topics in this course, and I'll go through the main topics in this section,

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which is just an introduction to get nothing very well, nothing technical really at all.

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We're just going to cover some important conceptual topics.

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So all these topics are labeled as green, meaning that they're pretty easy to pick up.

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Some of the other topics later on are a bit more challenging.

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But we're going to talk about what is Gitte.

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I would say that is probably critical, understanding the difference between getting GitHub critical,

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understanding the history of get not critical to using and working with gett.

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There's a video about who uses get different use cases.

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It's not just engineers these days, government scientists, writers.

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So I'll say important on the verge with nice to have.

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I wouldn't really spend a lot of time on it.

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What does it do for us?

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That is also going to be critical.

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We need to understand the purpose of Gates before we actually learn the commands.

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So that's pretty much it for this section.

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And what matters, the main takeaways focus on what is gets what is compared to GitHub and what exactly

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does it do for us.

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OK, let's go.
