Basically true. I learned enough in three days last year to write the
demo version of my Mahjongg game, which was downloaded about a hundred
thousand times. The hitch is Java, not Android.

On Nov 18, 11:25 am, Andrei <[email protected]> wrote:
> 3 to 6 days is enough, if you know Java, to start writing real apps,
> the rest you learn writing apps while producing something useful
>
> On Nov 18, 10:33 am, Mark Murphy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Andreiwrote:
> > > 3-6 days should be more than enough to learn all Android
>
> > That's unrealistic. I have been developing in, teaching, and writing
> > about Android for nearly two years, and *I* don't know "all Android".
> > Heck, I am going to be spending a chunk of time the rest of this week
> > just to wrap my head around the new contacts stuff.
>
> > 3-6 days can give you a solid foundation for application development,
> > though.
>
> > Going back to the OP:
>
> > >> I am attempting to reach out to Android Developers who might be able
> > >> to answer a fundamental question... what is the best way to identify
> > >> Android developers in the US?
>
> > How do you define "identify"?
>
> > >> My company is thinking of training developers who have experience in
> > >> Java or Linux onsite at our facility in Dallas, TX for 3-6months in
> > >> Android development. We have clients in the telecom industry who are
> > >> in desperate need of individuals with expertise in Android development
> > >> but we haven't had much luck finding developers in the US.
>
> > There is a crying need for a go-to site for Android jobs.
>
> > Lacking that, I would advertise on 
> > Craiglist,http://jobs.joelonsoftware.com/(orthe StackOverflow jobs area, not
> > sure if these are the same thing), anddev.org's jobs board, LinkedIn's
> > Android Developer group, etc.
>
> > That being said, many firms are growing their own Android development
> > teams through training.
>
> > >> Do you think training is a viable option? If no, then how to identify
> > >> individuals with existing skills?
>
> > I recommend students have experience with basic Java application
> > development (though not necessarily JavaME or Swing/SWT), plus
> > experience in some widget-based GUI development (which is most common
> > stuff outside of most Web app frameworks).
>
> > Note that all of this assumes you are looking for Android application
> > developers. Firmware developers are a whole 'nuther kettle of fish.
>
> > --
> > Mark Murphy (a Commons 
> > Guy)http://commonsware.com|http://twitter.com/commonsguy
>
> > Android App Developer Books:http://commonsware.com/books

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