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I have recently considered going on a training course for WPF so I did a quick search and at the top of the list was this training course from Learning Tree.

It seemed like possibly what I wanted however when I looked at the price I nearly choked. £1700 for a 4 day course. As if that wasn't enough I was greeted with this tempting photo of "Participants programming with XAML"

So for £1700 I can share a 15" monitor with another "participant".

Basically what I want to know is, are there any courses out there for geeks by geeks? I would much rather pay some independent guy (or gal) £1700 for a day of their time than pay this generic glossy company. Is there perhaps a service for matching people up for this kind of learning?

I'm in London by the way.

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For geeks? As opposed to C#/WPF training courses for, what, farmers? – Matt Hamilton Jul 1 at 8:48
Have you seen tractors these days? Those things are more advanced than any PC! Perhaps courses that "appeal" to geeks would be a better way of expressing what I mean. – MrEdmundo Jul 1 at 8:50
I can't joke - I work in an IT dept on a farm. Not kidding. – Matt Hamilton Jul 1 at 8:58
Wow, farms have advanced some way since the days of me getting peed on by lambs at my uncles farm. – MrEdmundo Jul 1 at 8:59

2 Answers

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A while ago I came across the website of an outfit called Iterative Training, who worked with IDesign.net to provide advanced training courses in WCF WPF and the like. The former don't seem to be around any more (hence no link), but the latter are and seem to still be doing those training courses - multi-day affairs in continental European capitals.

The reason this is relevant is because IDesign are made up of people such as Juval Lowy and Brian Noyes, who from their writings seem very much the kind of people who would provide actually advanced training courses.

I have no affiliation with them other than thinking their offerings sound good.

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What you've got to ask yourself is "What can these people teach me that I can't learn by myself?"

Like most devs I've met, I'm self taught. I either learnt on-the-job or at home, just 'messing around'.

The self discovery of new concepts always seems to be more effective than being taught.

With the vast resources of the web at your fingertips I don't think paying to learn common, well documented practices like WPF is justified (unless you've got loads of spare cash, in which case why bother?).

The only time I'd consider going on one of these types of courses is if a) the skill was too specialised and obscure that the resources weren't available on the web, or b) someone else was paying.

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I disagree. Whilst I understand that self tuition is possible, sometimes I just want to bounce ideas or understanding off somebody who has more knowledge than me. Given the vast amount of information (not all of it good) it is sometimes good to get talking to an expert and ask "where should I start". – MrEdmundo Jul 1 at 10:27

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