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Professor Creates His Own Cisco Manual

yootje writes "ZDnet is running a story about a professor who made his own Cisco networking textbook, with 800 pages: "Computing instructor Matt Basham's suggestions for improving Cisco Systems' official training manuals fell on deaf ears for years. But he appears to have the networking giant's attention now." The professor made his book available for free on his website."

6 of 318 comments (clear)

  1. as html by dncsky1530 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's quite strange that it is not a PDF file.
    but is anyone wants the 5 meg html version it here

  2. Re:Still Wondering by rpbailey1642 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You're exactly right about getting kick-backs, as well as the fact that they collect royalties for every book they put out. My Biology teacher is friends with the author of my Biology book (this is the reason that we use it, actually) and he has stated that to stay current with the class, you need the new book. Unless, you're really cheap, in which case, you'll need to know that Chapter Five is now Chapter Seven, and other trifle changes like that. At $100 a pop, these guys are milking college students (and their delicious scholarships) for as much as they can.

  3. Re:Eeeeek... by komejo · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you register at Lulu, the free download is a PDF.

  4. Re:This should happen more often by farzadb82 · · Score: 5, Informative
    "Java and .Net are ECMA standards"

    I don't know where you got your info from but Java is NOT ECMA standardized and as for .net, only the CLR and C# langauge are ECMA standardized.

  5. Re:This should happen more often by BigBir3d · · Score: 5, Informative

    RTFA:

    <quote>Before publishing the book on his own, Basham said he had contacted Cisco Press about publishing it, but it wasn't interested. After his free book appeared online last week, however, the company contacted him via e-mail requesting a meeting to discuss the program at St. Petersburg College.

    Company spokeswoman Goodwin said that Cisco is always looking for ways to improve the program.

    She said that although instructors are required to teach the Cisco Academy curriculum, they are welcome to supplement it as necessary. She also emphasized that none of the Cisco Academy students are required to buy any of the textbooks from Cisco.

    "Cisco has a long-standing relationship with St. Petersburg College," she said. "And we have a process-oriented quality assurance program with the (Cisco) Academy where we work collaboratively with institutions to solicit feedback. We are continually making improvements based on customer needs."</quote>

    Cisco obviously thinks this is as cool as most of us think it is.

  6. PDF File by sagenumen · · Score: 5, Informative

    I converted the MS Word to a PDF and it is available on my school's server. They are going to hate me:

    http://www.lehigh.edu/~mlt3/textbook.pdf