<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">2011/12/29 David Ramsey <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:diamond_ramsey@hotmail.com">diamond_ramsey@hotmail.com</a>></span><br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
<div><div dir="ltr">Hello Everyone,<br><br>Christoph, thank you for your e-mail. ;)<br><br>I hope to see the personnel development for the Fedora Ambassadors interested in learning more about Fedora via #fedora-classroom & study as a seed to be further developed and grow in 2012. :)<br>
<br>Thank You<br>Sincerely,<br>- David -<br><br>> From: <a href="mailto:christoph.wickert@googlemail.com" target="_blank">christoph.wickert@googlemail.com</a><br>> To: <a href="mailto:ambassadors@lists.fedoraproject.org" target="_blank">ambassadors@lists.fedoraproject.org</a><br>
> Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2011 14:18:12 +0100<br>> Subject: Re: [Ambassadors] Survey: Red Hat Certifications/Training for FAms (Just 2 or 3 minutes required)<div><div class="h5"><br>> <br>> Am Donnerstag, den 29.12.2011, 02:15 +0530 schrieb Uditha Bandara<br>
> Wijerathna:<br>> > Hello Everybody,<br>> > <br>> > I've just created a survey to collect information from ambassadors<br>> > regarding RH certifications and Fedora Training.<br>> > This is a small survey and please spend few minutes to complete it. :)<br>
> > <br>> > The idea behind this survey is to collect information from ambassadors<br>> > about their desire to learn Fedora and get certified from RH.<br>> <br>> I think these are two completely different topics in various ways.<br>
> <br>> On the one hand we have Fedora, on the other Red Hat. Although they are<br>> related, they are not the same. People often fail to see the difference<br>> and think that Fedora is just the Beta of the next Red Hat Enterprise<br>
> Linux. This is not true: Fedora is what we make it. It's not only<br>> software but a world wide community. Everybody can get involved and<br>> every contributor can change Fedora. This is not the case the RHEL.<br>
> <br>> And then there is the difference between information or documentation<br>> and certifications or training. Documentation is for users and when we<br>> study it to improve our skills, we do it for ourselves. Certifications<br>
> on the other hand has a commercial value. If you are certified, you can<br>> find a better job and get a higher salary.<br>> <br>> Long story short: I think we should focus on Fedora and on<br>> documentation. I am sure the docs team welcomes some helping hands and<br>
> working on documentation will also help the ambassadors as they get more<br>> understanding of the technical details of Fedora. It's a win-win<br>> situation for both teams, but IHMO it has only very little to do with<br>
> RHEL or certifications. Lets not confuse this and improve one thing at a<br>> time.<br>> <br>> Regards,<br>> Christoph<br>> <br clear="all"></div></div></div></div></blockquote></div><br><br>I bet, if you ask for Oracle DBA track on the same survey, there is a possibility of requesting that too. ;-)<br>
<br>-- <br>Danishka Navin<br><a href="http://danishkanavin.blogspot.com" target="_blank">http://danishkanavin.blogspot.com</a><br><a href="http://twitter.com/danishkanavin" target="_blank">http://twitter.com/danishkanavin</a><br>
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