I did have the thought after this that perhaps the open source app should be a framework for any sort of training app. A full course is just like a month's long structured training plan. Each interval would be like a course exercise and the whole workout would be like a planned day of learning. Idk how useful that would be since there are LMS already out there. Maybe there is an idea in there for us to use an LMS.
I just started the app to learn #ApacheCamel but that ship sailed months ago.
There's zero chance KY can't afford it. The people in Lexington and Louisville just don't want to. Same is definitely true of Alabama (though its Huntsville and Tuscaloosa) and Tennessee (though it's Nashville).
MS...well, idk all that much about it. My suspicion is there are enough lawyers/bankers/physicians from Memphis and NOLA that they could make it work.
WV...it's literally part of the DC train system, so I suspect they could do it. Of course, the mountains do limit traffic between DC and WV.
An easy fix would be to just make it $11, see what happens and go from there.
USPS returned something to my friend that clearly had the right address. The only problem that I could see was that she only used Doug & Wendy versus any last names, but....come on.
that's a grotesque assessment of pluralsight. YouTube doesn't offer project files.
Now, might some websites that use YouTube for video have project files? sure, but that's not "YouTube". That's a random YouTuber with a development site.
If you want to learn something very specific and don't have the time for a longer course and aren't going to actually do the assignments, then the ROI for YouTube is definitely higher. If you want to just flat out learn a language starting from scrartch, it's no contest. Pluralsight is better.