Showing posts with label coursera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coursera. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Learn for Free

Not just technical skills...


Coursera is one of my favorite places to learn a new topic or even expand my horizons on topics with which I am already familiar.  The pacing of a real class structure, with weekly lectures and homework, applies just enough pressure to keep me motivated throughout the class and permits just enough flexibility to fit it into my real-life schedule.
Coursera is an education platform that partners with top universities and organizations worldwide, to offer courses online for anyone to take, for free.

https://www.coursera.org/




I believe this is a trend we will continue to advance as more and more colleges and universities open up classes for free.
Open.Michigan is a University of Michigan initiative that enables faculty, students, and others to share their educational resources and research with the global learning community.

http://open.umich.edu/


Thursday, March 5, 2015

Software Defined Networking (SDN) class at Coursera

Looking forward to this class starting May 25th, 2015:

https://www.coursera.org/course/sdn

Software Defined Networking

About the Course


This course introduces software defined networking, an emerging paradigm in computer networking that allows a logically centralized software program to control the behavior of an entire network. 

Separating a network's control logic from the underlying physical routers and switches that forward traffic allows network operators to write high-level control programs that specify the behavior of an entire network, in contrast to conventional networks, whereby network operators must codify functionality in terms of low-level device configuration. 

Logically centralized network control makes it possible for operators to specify more complex tasks that involve integrating many disjoint network functions (e.g., security, resource control, prioritization) into a single control framework, allowing network operators to create more sophisticated policies, and making network configurations easier to configure, manage, troubleshoot, and debug.