The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to benny1967 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-12-16
, 23:09
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Austin, Texas
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#2
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The Following 10 Users Say Thank You to fphillips For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-12-16
, 23:58
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Posts: 114 |
Thanked: 45 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Turin, Italy
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#3
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For those looking for a tutorial that is already written:
http://blogs.gnome.org/tthurman/2009...rial-contents/
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2009-12-17
, 06:37
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Posts: 434 |
Thanked: 325 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#4
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2009-12-17
, 06:45
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Posts: 156 |
Thanked: 28 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Los Angeles, CA
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#5
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2009-12-17
, 06:49
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 220 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Surrey, UK
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#6
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I wish somebody would establish an online school, courses,... for writing apps for Maemo. Easy to follow. Target audience: People with very little coding skills, people who tried to learn how to code from a book, but can't learn that way. People who decades ago wrote apps in ancient languages and now find it difficult to find their way between C, Python, Gstreamer and DBUS.
The target audience would not include people who don't know what a variable or a comment is.
How would it work?
What would it take? Somebody to set up a blog (technically), projetcs to use as examles,... easy. The tough thing is: Do we have people in the community who can teach? This would be really difficult. We don't need good coders, we need people who can read code, create a concept from it (what can I use this code for? What does it teach?), break it down in lessons... and then write about it in a way people can follow.
And we need somebody who loves to do just that, because once you started, you better not stop at lesson 7 of 9 and leave your readers without a way to handle error conditions.
Let me know what you think... You may reply to this post even if you don't feel like becoming a teacher.