Just to clear up a little of the confusion, there is in fact an SMU branch in Houston. It is a really small branch that seems to only teach technology and engineering courses. I was there in person this week. I actually got information about the training course in question (my employer is sending me to this training, I would rather not use MS development tools for obvious reasons) and their current prerequisites are at least 6 months of prior programming experience as well as some level of networking experience.
Also, many universities around here offer MS training or similar courses.
That having been said, I tend to agree that lawsuits are not the way to solve this sort of thing. If you're paying the $6k or so for this kind of training, you should try to get your money's worth and make sure that you get what you paid for. Students are really customers buying a service. If the service is really that bad, complain on the spot, you'll have much better luck getting a refund.
What's the standard protocol for submitting bug reports around here?
I've noticed that when I first enter the page, there's about a 33% chance that I will get logged in as some random user. If I were a more malicious sort, I could have changed the preferences of these users as well...
Just to clear up a little of the confusion, there is in fact an SMU branch in Houston. It is a really small branch that seems to only teach technology and engineering courses. I was there in person this week. I actually got information about the training course in question (my employer is sending me to this training, I would rather not use MS development tools for obvious reasons) and their current prerequisites are at least 6 months of prior programming experience as well as some level of networking experience.
Also, many universities around here offer MS training or similar courses.
That having been said, I tend to agree that lawsuits are not the way to solve this sort of thing. If you're paying the $6k or so for this kind of training, you should try to get your money's worth and make sure that you get what you paid for. Students are really customers buying a service. If the service is really that bad, complain on the spot, you'll have much better luck getting a refund.
What's the standard protocol for submitting bug reports around here?
I've noticed that when I first enter the page, there's about a 33% chance that I will get logged in as some random user. If I were a more malicious sort, I could have changed the preferences of these users as well...
Other than that, Keep up the good work guys!