There is nothing on the courseware that can't be found in text books available all over the world. So it isn't all that great a news. Also, most univ. profs put up notes and presentations online.
People in India too telecommute as traffic problem has become a significant one, not to mention the rising fuel prices and increasing distance from home to workplace.
I'm a CS graduate from the University in Karnataka State. We don't study C# or VB.NET as part of our curriculum. Infact, CS isn't about language at all. We study core subjects like Data Structures, Design and Analysis of Algorithms, Computer Organizations, compiler design, Object Oriented Analysis and Design, Software Engineering, Databases, Distributed Computing, Network and Systems programming and many more. In the process, we learn C, C++, Cobol and all our labs are on Linux. We have mini projects and full term projects for which we can use any appropriate technology/language.
But, yes, neither I or nobody I know of knows Objective C. It's not all that popular here. People learn C# and.NET outside the university on their own, or they are introduced to it when they do internship at companies who use such technologies.
and the likes of Nike and Reebok and all the great American multinationals
There is nothing on the courseware that can't be found in text books available all over the world. So it isn't all that great a news. Also, most univ. profs put up notes and presentations online.
People in India too telecommute as traffic problem has become a significant one, not to mention the rising fuel prices and increasing distance from home to workplace.
What nonsense.
.NET outside the university on their own, or they are introduced to it when they do internship at companies who use such technologies.
I'm a CS graduate from the University in Karnataka State. We don't study C# or VB.NET as part of our curriculum. Infact, CS isn't about language at all. We study core subjects like Data Structures, Design and Analysis of Algorithms, Computer Organizations, compiler design, Object Oriented Analysis and Design, Software Engineering, Databases, Distributed Computing, Network and Systems programming and many more. In the process, we learn C, C++, Cobol and all our labs are on Linux. We have mini projects and full term projects for which we can use any appropriate technology/language.
But, yes, neither I or nobody I know of knows Objective C. It's not all that popular here. People learn C# and