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Google Android Education Programming

Google Launches Android Programming Course For Absolute Beginners (zdnet.com) 98

If you're on the fence on whether or not should you spring for learning how to code, Google is willing to offer a helping hand. The company has partnered with Udacity to offer a "nanodegree" class designed for people with no programming experience at all. The program costs $199 per month. ZDNet reports:The course material, developed by Google, is hosted on learning platform Udacity and builds on earlier programs such as the Android Nanodegree for Beginners. The basics course takes around four weeks if the student commits six hours a week and upon completion they'll have created two basic apps built in Android Studio."Google, in partnership with Udacity, is making Android development accessible and understandable to everyone, so that regardless of your background, you can learn to build apps that improve the lives of people around you," Google announced on its developer blog.
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Google Launches Android Programming Course For Absolute Beginners

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  • The first thing you create is a "Hello World" app.
  • by OffTheLip ( 636691 ) on Thursday June 23, 2016 @01:31PM (#52375539)
    problems begging solutions are. When I was programming professionally I never thought being able to program was as important as having a problem to solve requiring a programming language. App development is the same, find a reason to program, solve the problem in your mind, apply a language and you are a programmer.
  • Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday June 23, 2016 @01:31PM (#52375541) Homepage Journal
    Well at least someone figured out how to make money with Android apps: Udacity.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      except the classes are also available for free.

  • Just quit. They don't get it. I was trying to explain loops and variables in a small scripting language to a girl at work who "knows" C#. She acted like I was talking about splitting the atom. She went back to her desk to "review" what I had explained so she could "get it".

    If the girl who "knows" C# can't get a simple scripting language, good luck with average folks. It doesn't work teaching non-programmers to program. Just stop.

    • I've programmed in assembler, and I have trouble understanding anything written in scripting languages. I think it's because by the time I've got to end.of.ridiculouslyKZF_long.identifier.poettering.factory.subobject.valInt223a I've forgotten what day it is, never mind what the beginning of it was or what problem I'm trying to solve.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    1. Spend $2000 making super simple "beginner" course materials that look real snazzy
    2. Charge 100,000+ rubes $199/mo for the privelege of looking at it
    3. Laugh all the way to the bank

  • Knowing google the resulting tutorial will result in:

    "Would you like to install the following app: 'Hello World' "

    The app will require the following permissions:
    contacts
    messages
    Read call state
    microphone
    video camera
    storage - all files and folders

    But seriously their tutorial ought to at least touch on security - ie don't mess with it if you don't understand/need it. ...

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Thursday June 23, 2016 @03:17PM (#52376313) Journal

    An industry-specific intro, and $199/mo? You could take intro CS at a community college, pay about the same if it's a 3 month course [nvcc.edu], and get actual credits towards a degree--a few centidegrees if you will, as opposed to a nanodegree. Community college is orders of magnitude better!

    • I was pretty excited to see this, for my homeschooler, but, yeah, wow, $199 per month is more than I can swing for our homeschool budget. In States where the money follows the child, this would work out fine, but here we still have to pay the school tax but get none of it in rebate.

  • I teach Android programming at an Australian university.

    For various reasons, it was decided that all engineering students had to learn mobile app development in their first year of the degree. Every single person in the faculty who had any experience with Android told them it was a terrible idea.

    They ultimately ended up getting them to write web apps instead; Javascript web programming is horrible but you can at least have a relatively gentle introduction to programming in it.

  • "The company has partnered with Udacity to offer a "nanodegree" class designed for people with no programming experience at all. " So aside from the improvement in quality, won't be much difference.
  • I was cool with it until the cost. I mean, $200? Google wipes its ass with 100 dollar bills.

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