The Lynda.com course durations are listed in hours, so the first two PHP
offerings cover about 21 hours combined, and the last two about half an
hour.

Sandy



On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 2:07 PM, Art Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:

> 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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