I've watched screencasts from about half of this list (I am a bit of a junkie...) and I can say, without a doubt, that the best one of the bunch is Destroy All Software.
Others may be better if you are new to program and want specific help with a certain tech (Ember.js, Rails, etc) but if you want the most bang for your buck, DAS is where it's at.
Avdi, love the tapas! :) What do you think about collaborating with some of the other wonderful content creators on this list to bundle, say, "Any 5 for $30"?
Thank you, great list and kudos to those who produce the screencasts.
But man, screencasts will date fast. I learned a lot from [Node Tuts](http://nodetuts.com/), like how to use expressJS and MongoDB using Mongoose. Now all those contents are gone (well not technically, I saved them somewhere and it's still on Vimeo - but the tutorials are basically wrong). Don't get me wrong, I'm very grateful for the tuts, I can pickup Mongoose today, and have no problem adapting.
For those new to the platform, there's nothing more frustrating than spending 30-60 minutes watching a few videos, then follow the instructions down to a T and failed.
I do the SQL Server relational and multidimensional videos - we do full-blown courses that are roughly equivalent to a 5-7 day in-person course so it's not quite the same, I guess.
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[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 52.1 ms ] threadMore here: http://pineapple.io/resources/tagged/screencasts
Others may be better if you are new to program and want specific help with a certain tech (Ember.js, Rails, etc) but if you want the most bang for your buck, DAS is where it's at.
Is there any c/c++ ?
http://recordmydesktop.sourceforge.net/about.php
But man, screencasts will date fast. I learned a lot from [Node Tuts](http://nodetuts.com/), like how to use expressJS and MongoDB using Mongoose. Now all those contents are gone (well not technically, I saved them somewhere and it's still on Vimeo - but the tutorials are basically wrong). Don't get me wrong, I'm very grateful for the tuts, I can pickup Mongoose today, and have no problem adapting.
For those new to the platform, there's nothing more frustrating than spending 30-60 minutes watching a few videos, then follow the instructions down to a T and failed.
http://www.learnitfirst.com/
I do the SQL Server relational and multidimensional videos - we do full-blown courses that are roughly equivalent to a 5-7 day in-person course so it's not quite the same, I guess.