Yeah, I agree. I have taken all of the classes excpt for hte Unix admin 2. I needed to hold off
on that so I could get in a little more C programming and JAVA. Wayne Pollock REALLY knows his
stuff. I think he said that he worked for or helped develop Red Hat. If you are going to take
class on UNIX or Linux then you need to take it with Wayne Pollock.
William
--- Norbert Cartagena <gnorb@tampabay.rr.com> wrote:
> If some of you are between jobs or are looking to expand your knowledge,
> then HCC is the place to go. Not bad, IMHO. These look like good courses
> for anyone interested in making a carreer out of knowing Linux, and the
> teacher's not a bad guy - certainly knows his stuff (reads like a fiend!).
>
> Gnorb
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: HCC Linux/Unix courses
> Date: Fri, 02 Aug 2002 10:15:50 -0400
> From: Wayne Pollock <pollock@acm.org>
> Organization: Hillsborough Community College
> To: gnorb@tampabay.rr.com
>
> Norb,
>
> Please pass the word about my HCC courses on the
> Dale Mabry campus that start August 22:
>
> CGS 1760 Introduction to Unix
> CGS 2763 Unix Administration I
> CGS 2764 Unix Administration II
>
> These courses teach Linux Administration. They are 3 credit
> courses that meet once a week (twice a week for CGS 2763)
> Until December. The fee is about $53 per credit, plus a
> one time HCC application fee of around $20, plus a textbook.
> There may also be a lab fee of around $40 per course. (Note
> other schools charge considerable more than HCC!)
>
> Not interested in a degree? Lack time to go to every class?
> You can reserve a seat by signing up for Audit.
>
> The detailed class syllabus for each class is available on-line
> at:
> http://www.hccfl.edu/pollock/
>
> Registration has already started, and you can register by phone.
> Enrollment is limited to around 20 students per class. Check
> the main HCC web page for details.
>
> In the administration classes, students are given blank
> removable) hard disks. They will learn to install, configure,
> manage, and maintain the server. (Solaris is also discussed,
> but is not hands-on.)
>
> Although there are many books you can learn from on your own,
> There are many benefits to our classes: root access to a machine
> you can trash and not worry about it, explanination of concepts
> and not just some "how-to" collection, access to a knowledgeable
> instructor and fellow setudents.
>
> Thanks!
>
> -Wayne Pollock, pollock@acm.org
>
>
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