About us and this newsletter
[link] ...
Previous editions:
July 2005 •
May 2005 •
March 2005 •
January 2005 • or
current edition
Keynote article ...
Most popular courses
Lunch question. "What's your most popular course?".
I think I have a finger on our business, but that's a very difficult one to answer. We don't keep all of our eggs in one basket; no one subject accounts for more than a quarter of our business and no one client accounts for more than a tenth of our income in any year.
So far this year, Perl, PHP, Python, Tcl and MySQL has each accounted for over 10% of our training course bookings and there's just a few percentage points between the top two subjects, so "what's top" could easily be reversed by the next order we receive.
Technology develops ... and looking back to 2001, I note that the significant courses were Perl, Java and Internet. Both those latter topics have become more mainstream in the last few years and move away from the niche training arena that we're set up to service well. You can download copies of our old Java notes from our Open Training Notes site; the Internet notes covering HTML and the like have long since been superseded and you wouldn't WANT copies of them ;-).
We write all our own training notes and update them constantly to reflect the changing market we operate in. The last changes that I made to a course module were last weekend, and I have a couple of notes that I've made while I'm travelling this week.
We've learnt that nearly everyone in the training business claims that their notes are constantly being updated, but that it's often not the case. Scanning the web last weekend, Lisa visited the web site of the folks that I trained for in the last Millennium and a description of one of their courses. Dates were current, but the list of content was remarkably similar to the course I wrote for them in 199x. Oh - and the description had the line about "we revise our material regularly"; I think the wording of that phrase too was as I left it, years ago. (this article written on 2005-08-19) |
Other articles ...
[332] Looking up IP addresses
[282] Short weekend
[260] Embperl
[49] Business is the predominant user of Tomcat, Perl and Tcl
[46] Near and far security
Top or
Show all for Apache HTTP and Tomcat Servers
[318] Choosing a theme
[304] Training courses in the C language
Top or
Show all for C and C++ Programming
[413] Save the train
- (new - 2005-08-13)[354] Ballooning from Bath
[344] Walk in Bath
[329] the Stately Homes of England
[315] Supporting local business
Top or
Show all for Melksham
[397] Where now for dial-up providers?
- (new - 2005-07-30)[396] The next technologies
- (new - 2005-07-29)[387] Training course plans for 2006
- (new - 2005-07-23)[378] A word of admiration for the London cabbie
- (new - 2005-07-15)[371] The training team that's looking out for you
- (new - 2005-07-07)
Top or
Show all for Training from Well House Consultants
[408] Can an older person learn a programming language
- (new - 2005-08-10)[407] Theft of training material
- (new - 2005-08-09)[402] Netless
- (new - 2005-08-05)[399] simplicity hides real size
- (new - 2005-07-31)[398] Training course material - why we write our own
- (new - 2005-07-30)[393] Trainer answers phone
- (new - 2005-07-28)[389] Tough Love
- (new - 2005-07-25)[385] Feast or famine
- (new - 2005-07-21)
Top or
Show all for Running a training and hotel company
[427] The Melksham train - a button is pushed
- (new - 2005-08-28)[424] How not to run a forum
- (new - 2005-08-24)[417] Telephone Preference Service - we're registered
- (new - 2005-08-17)[414] Form Madness
- (new - 2005-08-14)[405] Horse's Mouth is a year old
- (new - 2005-08-07)[391] One mans pleasure is another mans poison
- (new - 2005-07-26)[390] Moderating wiki, blog, and forum contributions
- (new - 2005-07-26)[369] CMS - the minefield of Choices
- (new - 2005-07-05)
Top or
Show all for For the Webmaster, Postmaster and moderator
[272] More to programming than just programming
[227] Bellringing and Programming and Objects and Perl
[209] FAQ - Perl or PHP
[202] Searching for numbers
[148] Programming in isolation
Top or
Show all for General Programming Topics
[425] Caching an XML feed
- (new - 2005-08-26)[422] PHP Magic Quotes
- (new - 2005-08-22)[421] Don't repeat code - use loops or functions
- (new - 2005-08-21)[410] Reading a news or blog feed (RSS) in your PHP page
- (new - 2005-08-12)[406] Assignment, equality and identity in PHP
- (new - 2005-08-08)[394] A year on - should we offer certified PHP courses
- (new - 2005-07-28)[376] What brings people to my web site?
- (new - 2005-07-13)[372] Time calculation in PHP
- (new - 2005-07-08)
Top or
Show all for PHP - the language and its application
[127] Conversion and coercion in Java
[124] PHP v Java
[111] Training notes available under Open Distribution license
[79] Last day of Java
[42] Do languages change?
[1294] An example of Java Inheritance from scratch
Top or
Show all for Java and the Java Environment
[400] New in the shops
- (new - 2005-08-01)[358] Use standard Perl modules
[357] Where do Perl modules load from
[355] Context in Perl
[314] What language is this written in?
Top or
Show all for The Perl Programming Language and its use
[411] Javascript examples (some PHP and MySQL too)
- (new - 2005-08-13)[351] Is photoajustment an addiction?
[220] When to use Frames
Top or
Show all for Client Side Languages (HTML, CSS, Javascript)
[401] What is an SQL injection attack?
- (new - 2005-08-02)[375] Oops - I got my initial database design wrong
- (new - 2005-07-12)[361] Binary Large Objects or bars
[334] Symbolic links and hard links
[279] Getting a list of unique values from a MySQL column
Top or
Show all for SQL and MySQL
[409] Functions and commands with dangerous names
- (new - 2005-08-11)[404] How to check that a string contains a number in Tcl
- (new - 2005-08-06)[366] Error handling in Tcl through catch
- (new - 2005-07-02)[364] pu daily and p hourly
- (new - 2005-06-30)[362] The ireallyreallywanna operator
Top or
Show all for Tcl, Tcl/Tk and Expect
[426] Robust checking of data entered by users
- (new - 2005-08-27)[418] Difference between import and from in Python
- (new - 2005-08-18)[386] What is a callback?
- (new - 2005-07-22)[383] Overloading of operators on standard objects in Python
- (new - 2005-07-19)[382] Central London Courses - Perl, PHP, Python, Tcl, MySQL
- (new - 2005-07-18)[381] Exceptions in Python
- (new - 2005-07-17)[380] Bridging to the customer requirement
- (new - 2005-07-16)
Top or
Show all for Python Programming
[429] Charlie on Monday
- (new - 2005-08-30)[423] A Victorian Lady
- (new - 2005-08-23)[420] Towards Tebay
- (new - 2005-08-20)[416] Mixing up swallows and martins
- (new - 2005-08-16)[415] Campaign Drift and efficiency.
- (new - 2005-08-15)[412] Bristol Balloon Festival
- (new - 2005-08-13)[403] Full circle - made it back to an old haunt
- (new - 2005-08-05)[392] No Smoking
- (new - 2005-07-27)[388] BBQ Season
- (new - 2005-07-24)[384] Managing conflict and disappointment
- (new - 2005-07-20)[377] A Strengthened City
- (new - 2005-07-14)[374] Instant availability
- (new - 2005-07-11)[373] Vik, Iceland to Melksham, England
- (new - 2005-07-10)[370] From Iceland
- (new - 2005-07-06)[368] Vacation Week
- (new - 2005-07-04)[365] Letterbox Pictures
- (new - 2005-07-01)
Top or
Show all for And also ...
[428] Swindon - Chippenham - Melksham - Trowbridge - Westbury train service
- (new - 2005-08-29)[187] a popular bus number
[154] Railway train service, Melksham station
[119] PHP course. Come by train.
Top or
Show all for Public Transport
[395] Making Orangutangs
- (new - 2005-07-28)[346] No Smoking Pubs
[331] 08:45 is a difficult time
[323] 1 in 48 steel
[300] Dentist's Waiting Room Syndrome
Top or
Show all for Fun and Flames
[419] Most popular courses
- (new - 2005-08-19)[295] Pricing strategy - simple and fair
[225] 10 years and counting
[164] Well House Consultants - review of 2004
Top or
Show all for Keynote Articles
[431] File permissions of Linux and Unix systems
- (new - 2005-08-31)[430] Linux commands - some basics
- (new - 2005-08-31)[367] Ajax
- (new - 2005-07-03)[267] Searching security holes
[249] An easy way out
Top or
Show all for Linux and Shell Programming
Public Transport • Training from Well House Consultants • And also ... • Tcl, Tcl/Tk and Expect • Programming in Lua • Python Programming • Well House Manor - Hotel and Training Centre • Apache HTTP and Tomcat Servers • The Perl Programming Language and its use • Ruby and Ruby on Rails • PHP - the language and its application • C and C++ Programming • Linux and Shell Programming • Melksham • SQL and MySQL • For the Webmaster, Postmaster and moderator • Java and the Java Environment • Fun and Flames • Running a training and hotel company • Around, about and nearby to Wiltshire • Client Side Languages (HTML, CSS, Javascript) • Keynote Articles • General Programming Topics
A little more about this newsletter ...
At Well House Consultants, we run niche IT training courses ... and we run a hotel for delegates on those courses and other visitors to Melksham too. And we make a lot of friends - have a lot of ambassadors with whom we want to keep in touch. So every day Graham (that's me, writing this piece) puts together an article or two which might include the latest sample programs that I've written during the current course, new information about
Well House Manor - our business hotel, tips on search engine optimisation,
announcements of upcoming public courses, pictures of local places, and even (on occasions) rants and whimsical pieces to keep those friends up to date and in touch. The feeds are available directlt via the Blog -
"The Horse's Mouth", they're on our
Twitter Feed and you can find me at my
LinkedIn profile.
But most people just want to look us up occasionally - every month or two, and then to catch up on the latest news just for their particular subjects of interest ... and that's what this newsletter is about
You'll find above the titles of ALL the new articles written in the last two months, listed by major subject area, and showing as
(new) with their date of publication. You'll find additional articles in each category too - topping each category up to a minimum of five articles. And you'll find a link at the end of each section which lets you expand that section to show the titles of every article that's been published in that section. After all, "the old ones are often the best ones", aren't they?