Upcoming .NET Courses in 2008



I've had several people here in the Phoenix area and others I've met at ASP.NET Connections conferences ask when I'll be teaching specific .NET classes in 2008 and my standard reply has been "I'm not sure at this point".  We have things scheduled out past June now so here's the information for those who are interested.  Most of the classes listed are 5 days aside from the First Look at Visual Studio 2008 (1 day) and ASP.NET AJAX Programming (3 days).

The schedule is of course subject to change, but it's what I have at this point.  If you have any questions about any of the courses feel free to contact me through my blog.

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3 Comments

  • Hi Dan... I'm sorry to see that there isn't anything on the schedule for the new C# 3.0 changes (maybe a 1 day class), LINQ or Silverlight... A class on using the new MVC would also be nice.

    I don't know that you would teach these but there is nowhere I can find in the valley that teaches any of the dynamic scripting languages link PHP, Ruby/Ruby on Rails or Python... I've encountered a number of people interested in learning web development with these languages and hopefully someone at ITT will consider teaching them.

    -- Gregg --

  • Me again... A few other classes I think would be popular would be WPF, WCF and maybe WF. Classes that taught the best practices around using the different functionallities in Visual Studio Team System 2008 (e.g. Tester, Database and Architect) would also be a great help for those of us who own the software but don't know how to get the most value from it. The testing tools, especially the web interface test tool and the load testing tool are a complete mystery.

    Thanks again,

    -- Gregg --

  • Thanks for the feedback Gregg. I appreciate it. We're planning to run WPF, WCF and WF classes in the second half of 2008 and have some tentative dates planned. I'll definitely talk with the team about your other suggestions since I agree that a class on VSTS 2008 features would be quite useful. We haven't had a lot of demand for that particular technology at this point, but I suspect that may change since it's now in the second version of the product.

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