IEEE course on USB programming on Linux

Robert P. J. Day rpjday-L09J2beyid0N/H6P543EQg at public.gmane.org
Thu Mar 6 20:44:52 UTC 2008


On Thu, 6 Mar 2008, Christopher Browne wrote:

> Saw this; it's pretty pricey, and certainly of specialized purpose, so
> I doubt it's for everyone...
> http://toronto.ieee.ca/education/usb0408/
>
> But if you're keen on learning about programming for USB devices, and
> paying for training does not daunt, then it's worth looking at...

  normally, i wouldn't consider this kind of self-promotion but, since
the topic is technical training, i can't resist the urge.

  if people are interested in basic to moderately technical linux
training (including the basics of linux development and an
introduction to kernel configuration and kernel programming, module
management, etc, that sort of thing), by all means, drop me a note
off-line.

  linux-related instruction is what i've done for the last 15 years,
including starting out as an authorized SCO instructor, but please
don't hold that against me, i was young and foolish.  mostly foolish.
:-)

  currently, i'm doing business here in K-W, but hey, toronto is just
down the road.  and i come with my own classroom full of 64-bit AMD
CPU laptops, so there's none of this "bring your own laptop" stuff --
everybody gets the same system so there are no surprises.

  anyway, i'm sure i've already violated about 17 rules of engagement
for this mailing list and i apologize profusely for that but, when the
subject is the availability and cost of technical training, it's hard
to sit quietly on my hands.

  if you want to chat more, i'm not hard to find.  ciao.

rday
--


========================================================================
Robert P. J. Day
Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry:
    Have classroom, will lecture.

http://crashcourse.ca                          Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA
========================================================================
--
The Toronto Linux Users Group.      Meetings: http://gtalug.org/
TLUG requests: Linux topics, No HTML, wrap text below 80 columns
How to UNSUBSCRIBE: http://gtalug.org/wiki/Mailing_lists





More information about the Legacy mailing list