This article presents all the reasons
companies should invest in training for their employees and how that
training should be designed. The usual classroom approach is described as
allowing students to be rapidly exposed to methods, tools and techniques
that they otherwise might not discover for months.
by Marty Ferguson
Ms. Richardson talks to Jim Higgins, the head of Caldera Training, and
discovers why Caldera decided to offer Linux training, how the classes are
designed (if they are distribution-specific), how many and what courses are
offered and much more.
by Marjorie Richardson
Future Technologies offers their training on the Web. The president
of the company describes his FTLinux Course for Linux. He tells us why he
felt presenting the course to students in HTML on the Web is a better
solution than traditional classroom methods. Also described are his
projects for LinuxUtilities and teaching students to build their own
distribution.
by Dr. Giovanni A. Orlando
This article takes a look at how training courses may be conducted in
the future and how they might improve the learning process. From simple
web-based courses to voice activation multimedia simulations, many choices
will be available. Mr. Holt also tells us the sorts of things to look for in
a good training course, such as top-level teachers and self-pacing.
by Brian Holt