Okay, so I was one of the folks (culprits?) who suggested Lynda.com for
learning PHP before even checking to see if they offered any tutorials on
the subject. I have to say that I'm shocked that there are only 4 segments
offered totaling less than a half-hour of instruction?? Sorry for the
knee-jerk testimonial! I'm going to email them right away and request that
they up their library in web development subjects. I just assumed that they
would have this covered as well as they do the front-end subjects, but we
know what happens when you assume...

Cheers,
Art

On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 10:58 AM, Paul <[email protected]> wrote:

> For what it's worth, any no offense to anyone who posted about Lynda.com. I
> also think Lynda.com is awesome. I did a quick search on PHP and the results
> returned 4 courses. Two of which are all of 16-17 seconds in length. The
> other two are 10-11 minutes. I would not consider this *comprehensive*.
> Jonathan, for my opinion it really depends on two important variables.
>
> a) How best to *you* absorb training information. Are you the type of
> person that can pick up a book on the subject and consume the details? Do
> you need one-to-one instructor driven instructions?
>  b) In what environment are you specifically interested in? Meaning for
> PHP you can get training for example in Dreamweaver. Or you can get training
> on using TextMate and learn to do all the things DW does for you.
>
> Maybe look into the Austin Community College. They used to offer a
> Webmaster cert program which was part of the Adult Education. Lindsey Allen
> (also on this list) might be so kind to offer some opinion on ACC.  They
> offer both online self-paced sessions as well as in-classroom instructor
> lead courses.
>
> P-
>
>
> On May 14, 2009, at 10:26 AM, Art Thompson wrote:
>
> I suggest Lynda.com as well. For years I didn't take them seriously
> because, after all, how could a video tutorial take the place of an O'Reilly
> book or a physical class on a subject. But, I've found that their
> one-on-one, tutorial-based learning is superb for technical subjects such as
> PHP or ActionScript and I feel that they are unmatched with regards to the
> time and effort put in to learning and what I actually walk away with. Plus,
> you can't really beat the price. Also, I keep strange hours and who's going
> to teach me one-on-one Advanced ActionScript at 2 in the morning?
>
> Art
>
> On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 8:38 AM, Rob <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Take a look at geekaustin.org ... they offer free mysql classes from
>> time to time
>>
>> On May 13, 9:15 pm, Jonathan Horak <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Hello y'all,
>> >
>> > Anyone have recommendations for cost-effective PHP/MySQL training in
>> > central Austin? I was recently laid off, so I'm looking to expand my
>> > skillset -- advanced front-end developer here with beginner level PHP
>> > experience -- while the job search continues.
>> >
>> > << Jonathan
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>
> >
>

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