This was posted 5 years 9 months 27 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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FREE COURSE: Beginner Blockchain and Architecture for $0 from Devslopes.com (Value: $800)

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BLOCKCHAIN_COURSE_10PXCF

Beginner Blockchain and Architecture
Learn the basics of blockchain, cryptocurrency, and the future of money
This training program will cover the basics of blockchain. You’ll learn what blockchains are and where and why they are being used. You’ll then learn about some of the tech behind blockchain from a general perspective. Finally we’ll cover common blockchain architectures that can be used by individuals and for businesses and enterprise.

What you will learn

What is blockchain?
Problems solved by blockchain
Blockchain use cases
Public and private keys
Hashing
Proof of Work
Understanding mining
Proof of Stake
Public blockchains
Private blockchains
Permissioned blockchains
Leading blockchain platforms
Drafting blockchain architectures

Who is this for

This training program is for everyone - people of all skill levels. This should be taken before any other training programs. It’s a great place to start for ICO creators and investors, software developers, solutions and application architects, project managers, or anyone interested in learning about blockchain.

Prerequisites

This training program requires no previous skill sets. You must however own a Mac, PC with Windows 8+ or Linux.

What You Get

Blockchain development lifetime access
Lifetime access to content
Free Blockchain updates
Free Updates
Blockchain certification ready
Certification ready

System Requirements

This training program requires no previous skill sets. You must, however, own a Mac, PC with Windows 8+ or Linux.

Devslopes

We build tools to make blockchain usable for developers and businesses

Check out our new token: https://getcache.io

Related Stores

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devslopes.com

closed Comments

  • The domain name looks like a typo lol

  • +10

    lol @ $800 "value"

  • Just ordered one. Can not comment at the moment.

    • +1

      Can not comment at the moment.

      Did it screw up your keyboard driver perhaps???

  • Sorry for neging a free deal but the course should be delivered online without forcing a software download. Mark me wrong and i'll gladly remove the neg.

    • Why should it? The course provides OS-specific applications that are run natively, leveraging the students' computing power and not requiring the education (providing a free service) from to fund a cloud-service. Nothing wrong with that.

      • +1

        Ok let's ignore the fact that they intend to charge $800 and then save their "computing power".

        Lets get technical.

        Which computing power are you saving? The content video has to download to my machine regardless of its form, as a exe/dmg file (the download) or mp4 (livestream). Moreover the download is merely a library browser which does NOT include the content, unless all their tutorial videos are somehow compressed into one 68MB download file.

        The actual rendering of video playback will still be happening on my own machine, be it in a web-browser or via this tool (which seems to be electron based i.e. an embedded browser).

        Can you shed light how the "computing power" was saved here for anyone? If anything I'm downloading a 68MB library browser that has an embedded web rendering engine an an app that would require updating periodically that was completely avoidable if they followed suit other tutorial delivery platforms like Udemy or Lynda.

        Again, i'll happily remove the neg if you can provide a valid argument against my objection.

        • I'm looking forward to reading the ToS of the tool to see if it includes anything about "leveraging students' computing power" for mining cryptocurrency.

          It may not, but as soon as I see a downloadable application for delivery of courseware I get suspicious.

        • Maybe it's to avoid the hug of death or DDoS-ing by compartmentalizing the coursework info into a large file on the clients computer instead of constant remote access to the server at any given time.

          I know I would rather have the client handle all that computing power separately isolatedly than say having 100 students try to access my server all at the same time.

          So maybe not save on computing power but a computing spike.

          I dunno just always makes sense to avoid a congestion or choke point of any kind in physics or computing.

          TL;DR removes or redirects some of the heavy lifting from the server onto the client yeah kinda I don't know I'm just some random guy on the interwebs..

  • What is blockchain?

  • +3

    Learn how to use the blockchain by mining our tokens for us…?

    • Best way to learn a lesson is to be taught one. Oh snap. Ok I'll stop.

  • Is it scam?

    • I use their platform to learn other languages. They are good. I pay $60 for the whole platform though. Not sure about $400 for a course

  • Lmao imagine paying $800 for this

  • Should this be neg'd?

    It's teaching how to scam people using pyramid schemes (ICO's).

    • +2

      Pay me $800 and I'll teach you how pyramid schemes work. True story.

      • +2

        Only if you buy my new ICO ScamToken.

  • What you will learn

    Problems solved by blockchain

    So, none?

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