First iPhone Development Course in the Middle East Sold Out Dubai - UAE: 8 November, 2009 - Signalling the region's massive interest in high-tech education, the SAE Institute today announced its ...
Fans of Apple gadgets have been happily blogging about a listing in Stanford University’s course catalog for the fall that includes what might be the first college course on programming for the iPhone ...
Jim Dalrymple has followed Apple and the Mac industry for the last 15 years, first as part of MacCentral and then in various positions at Macworld. Jim also writes about the professional audio market, ...
Dubai-UAE: 31 January, 2010 - The SAE Institute Dubai, the foremost creative media educator in the world, today announced the launch of a comprehensive iPhone programming course, featuring an ...
Learning Tree International has announced the introduction of a new course entitled “iPhone® and iPad Programming: A Comprehensive Introduction.” In this four-day course, instructors will teach ...
If you have a hankering to join the ranks of the 50,000+ strong group of iPhone developers but you lack the motivation to learn the ins and outs yourself, Stanford University may have just the thing ...
Last year, Stanford ran a course on iPhone Application Development with a twist. The class lectures were made available on iTunes as free downloads and the course materials could be acquired from ...
Welcome to day 2 of a 5-day course on iPhone programming presented by Joe Conway from Big Nerd Ranch. During the course I'll be blogging about the differences between Android and iPhone development.
This is the 3rd in a series of 5 posts about an iPhone programming course I'm taking this week. The course is presented by Joe Conway from Big Nerd Ranch. To make things more interesting I'm writing ...
Alabama entrepreneur Michael Jones has released the Unbeatable Apps e-book and course to describe how to create iPhone apps and Droid apps with no programming required. The Unbeatable Apps course is ...
So we ended last episode with programming at the hardware level with things like plugboards and huge panels of switches, but what was really needed was a more versatile way to program computers - ...