• Regeln für den Video-Bereich:

    In den Börsenbereich gehören nur Angebote die bereits den Allgemeinen Regeln entsprechen.

    Einteilung

    - Folgende Formate gehören in die angegeben Bereiche:
    - Filme: Encodierte Filme von BluRay, DVD, R5, TV, Screener sowie Telesyncs im Format DivX, XviD und x264.
    - DVD: Filme im Format DVD5, DVD9 und HD2DVD.
    - HD: Encodierte Filme mit der Auflösung 720p oder darüber von BluRay, DVD, R5, TV, Screener sowie Telesyncs im Format x264.
    - 3D: Encodierte Filme von BluRay, die in einem 3D Format vorliegen. Dies gilt auch für Dokus, Animation usw.
    - Serien: Cartoon/Zeichentrick, Anime, Tutorials, Dokumentationen, Konzerte/Musik, Sonstiges sind demnach in die entsprechenden Bereiche einzuordnen, auch wenn sie beispielsweise im High Definition-Format oder als DVD5/DVD9/HD2DVD vorliegen. Ausnahme 3D.
    - Bereich Englisch: Englische Releases gehören immer in diesen Bereich.
    - Bereich Talk: Der Bereich, in dem über die Releases diskutiert werden kann, darf, soll und erwünscht ist.


    Angebot/Beitrag erstellen

    - Ein Beitrag darf erst dann erstellt werden, wenn der Upload bei mindestens einem OCH komplett ist. Platzhalter sind untersagt.
    - Bei einem Scenerelease hat der Threadtitel ausschließlich aus dem originalen, unveränderten Releasenamen zu bestehen. Es dürfen keine Veränderungen wie z.B. Sterne, kleine Buchstaben o.ä. vorgenommen werden. Ausnahme Serienbörse:
    - Bei einem Sammelthread für eine Staffel entfällt aus dem Releasename natürlich der Name der Folge. Beispiel: Die Simpsons S21 German DVDRip XviD - ITG
    - Dementsprechend sind also u.a. verboten: Erweiterungen wie "Tipp", "empfehlenswert", "only", "reup", usw. / jegliche andere Zusatzinformation oder Ergänzung, welche nicht in obiger Beschreibung zu finden ist.

    Aufbau des Angebots und Threadtitel

    Der Titel nach folgendem Muster erstellt zu werden. <Name> [3D] [Staffel] [German] <Jahr> <Tonspur> [DL] [Auflösung] <Quelle> <Codec> - <Group>
    Beispiel: The Dark Knight German 2008 AC3 DVDRip XviD - iND
    Beispiel: The Dark Knight 2008 DTS DL BDRip x264 - iND
    Beispiel: The Dark Knight 2008 AC3 DL BDRip XviD - iND
    Beispiel: The Dark Knight German 2008 AC3 720p BluRay x264 iND
    Beispiel: The Dark Knight 2008 DTS DL 1080p BluRay x264 iND
    Beispiel: Die Simpsons S01 German AC3 DVDRip XviD iND
    Beispiel: Die Simpsons S20 German AC3 720p BluRay x264 iND
    Beispiel: Sword Art Online II Ger Sub 2014 AAC 1080p WEBRip x264 - peppermint
    Entsprechend sind also u.a. verboten: Sonderzeichen wie Klammern, Sterne, Ausrufezeichen, Unterstriche, Anführungszeichen / Erweiterungen wie "Tipp", "empfehlenswert", "only", "reup", usw. / jegliche andere Zusatzinformation oder Ergänzung, welche nicht in obiger Beschreibung zu finden ist
    Ausnahmen hiervon können in den Bereichen geregelt sein.

    Die Beiträge sollen wie folgt aufgebaut werden:
    Überschrift entspricht dem Threadtitel
    Cover
    kurze Inhaltsbeschreibung
    Format, Größe, Dauer sind gut lesbar für Downloader außerhalb des Spoilers zu vermerken
    Nfo sind immer Anzugeben und selbige immer im Spoiler in Textform.
    Sind keine Nfo vorhanden z.B. Eigenpublikationen, sind im Spoiler folgende Dateiinformationen zusätzlich anzugeben :
    Quelle
    Video (Auflösung und Bitrate)
    Ton (Sprache, Format und Bitrate der einzelnen Spuren)
    Untertitel (sofern vorhanden)
    Hosterangabe in Textform außerhalb eines Spoiler mit allen enthaltenen Hostern.
    Bei SD kann auf diese zusätzlichen Dateiinformationen verzichtet werden.

    Alle benötigten Passwörter sind, sofern vorhanden, in Textform im Angebot anzugeben.
    Spoiler im Spoiler mit Kommentaren :"Schon Bedankt?" sind unerwünscht.


    Releases

    - Sind Retail-Release verfügbar, sind alle anderen Variationen untersagt. Ausnahmen: Alle deutschen Retail-Release sind CUT, in diesem Fall sind dubbed UNCUT-Release zulässig.
    - Im Serien-Bereich gilt speziell: Wenn ein Retail vor Abschluss einer laufenden Staffel erscheint, darf diese Staffel noch zu Ende gebracht werden.62
    - Gleiche Releases sind unbedingt zusammenzufassen. Das bedeutet, es ist zwingend erforderlich, vor dem Erstellen eines Themas per Suchfunktion zu überprüfen, ob bereits ein Beitrag mit demselben Release besteht. Ist dies der Fall, ist der bereits vorhandene Beitrag zu verwenden.
    - P2P und Scene Releases dürfen nicht verändert oder gar unter einem iND Tag eingestellt werden.


    Support, Diskussionen und Suche

    - Supportanfragen sind entweder per PN oder im Bereich Talk zu stellen.
    - Diskussionen und Bewertungen sind im Talk Bereich zu führen. Fragen an die Uploader haben ausschließlich via PN zu erfolgen, und sind in den Angeboten untersagt.
    - Anfragen zu Upload-Wünschen sind nur im Bereich Suche Video erlaubt. Antworten dürfen nur auf Angebote von MyBoerse.bz verlinkt werden.


    Verbote

    - Untersagt sind mehrere Formate in einem einzigen Angebotsthread, wie beispielsweise das gleichzeitige Anbieten von DivX/XviD, 720p und 1080p in einem Thread. Pro Format, Release und Auflösung ist ein eigener Thread zu eröffnen.
    - Grundsätzlich ebenso verboten sind Dupes. Uploader haben sich an geeigneter Stelle darüber zu informieren, ob es sich bei einem Release um ein Dupe handelt.
    - Gefakte, nur teilweise lauffähige oder unvollständige Angebote sind untersagt. Dies gilt auch für eigene Publikationen, die augenscheinlich nicht selbst von z.B. einer DVD gerippt wurden. Laufende Serien, bei denen noch nicht alle Folgen verfügbar sind, dürfen erstellt und regelmäßig geupdatet werden.
    - Untersagt sind Angebote, welche nur und ausschließlich in einer anderen Sprache als deutsch oder englisch vorliegen. Ausnahmen sind VORHER mit den Moderatoren zu klären.


    Verstoß gegen die Regeln

    - Angebote oder Beiträge, die gegen die Forenregeln verstoßen, sind über den "Melden"-Button im Beitrag zu melden.
  • Bitte registriere dich zunächst um Beiträge zu verfassen und externe Links aufzurufen.




Englische Tutorials


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Udemy - Self-Editing Techniques That Make Books Sell
MP4 | PDF | Video: 1280x720 | 48 kbps | 44 KHz | Duration: 1 Hours | 476 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​



Transform Your Writing from Good to Great

This course will teach you simple, yet effective self-editing techniques that will improve your success as a writer. Whether you have already written a book, would like to try writing a book, or just enjoy writing, you will learn to eliminate unnecessary words and phrases while strengthening your story. When you apply the techniques to your writing, they will soon become habits, which will cut your editing time and costs if you are going to publish your book.

These techniques work with fictional and non-fictional writing. The techniques can also help college and high school students write stronger papers.

Each lecture includes a short video explanation, a technique to apply to your writing, and additional exercises to reinforce the technique. There are also various handouts for quick reference to be used with future writing projects. These techniques will make the reader experience more enjoyable, and when readers enjoy your writing, you will sell more books.

What are the requirements?

You should have a chapter (or five to ten pages) of your writing to apply the exercises. If you do not have anything written, writing prompts will be given. You will need to choose one and write it out before proceeding with the exercises. Although you can do the exercises without a computer, using a word processor with a search capability will make the exercises quicker and easier to complete.

What am I going to get from this course?

Over 25 lectures and 46 mins of content!
By the end of this course, you will be able to self-edit your writing in a style that is easy to understand, allows the reader to become part of the experience, and creates a more enjoyable read. If publishing your writing, completing this course will save you money when hiring an editor for your final edit. Mastery of this course will also aid in receiving positive ratings and reviews on your books.

What is the target audience?

This course is for any writer who wants to write clearly, concisely, and desires to improve their overall writing skills. This course is not intended for those who do not have a general understanding of basic English grammar and sentence structure.


Self-Editing Techniques That Make Books Sell

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Shell Script Tutorial - Bash Scripting for Linux/Unix/Bash
MP4 | Video: 1280x720 | 50 kbps | 48 KHz | Duration: 2 Hours | 546 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​



Shell Scripting - Bash Scripting Tutorial with examples for Linux/Bash/Unix

This course will take you from basics of shell scripting which includes how to write or save shell scripts, changing permissions fro execution, taking input from user, loop concepts etc. And will take you slowly to advance concepts like pipes, filters, processes, linux utilities like cut, paste, join etc.

Every concept has been explained with lot of examples so you would know when to apply it and how to apply them in real time world. At the end of course you will find full able ebook containing all concepts and related examples.

You will become a shell programming expert with comprehensive knowledge of shell programming
You will learn with more than 60+ programming & real world examples
You will know How to make use of Mathematical, String and Logical operators in shell script to make decisions
How to Create functions in shell scripts and improve reusability
You will learn How to make use of Exit values to determine shell script output status
How to Accept input from a user and then make decisions on that input.
You will know How to make use of Expressions in shell scripts
Dealing with command line arguments and use of it with examples
You will learn How to make use of Pipe & Process concepts while creating shell scripts
Use of utilities like cut, paste, join, tr in shell scripts with examples
Practice exercises with solutions so you can start using what you learn right away.
Real-world examples of shell scripts, how it is used in corporate world.
Last but not least, you will get able material containing the scripts and topics contents


Shell Script Tutorial - Bash Scripting for Linux/Unix/Bash

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The Art of API Documentation
MP4 | Video: 1270x720 | 57 kbps | 44 KHz | Duration: 1 Hours | 177 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​



API Documentation 3: Teaches technical writers how to write API overview material, tutorials, etc.

This is the third in a series of courses for technical writers who want to learn how to write API documentation. The first two courses are called "Learn API Technical Writing: JSON and XML for Writers" and "Learn API Technical Writing: REST for Writers", and it's recommended that you first take those courses, unless you are very familiar with API documentation, and how to document reference material.

This course teaches how to write conceptual API documentation, such as overviews, getting started sections, and tutorials. For the most part, no programming experience is required, but technical writers with programming experience will still find it useful.

In addition to conceptual material, this course covers guidelines for good sample code, tools for making REST requests, and how to find an open source project to document as a way to get into the field of API writing.

What are APIs?

APIs (Application Program Interfaces) define how software systems talk to each other, and API documentation is a rapidly growing field. There is a strong need for writers who can understand APIs and explain them so that software developers can understand how to use them. API writers get to be in on the cutting edge of technology in high-paying positions.

What is Conceptual Material?

API documentation consists of reference material and conceptual material. Reference material describes the details of the API: what are the pieces of each request and response, or each class and member. Conceptual material orients developers so that it's easy for them to get started with a new API.

What is in This Course?

By the end of the course, you will understand how to write good API conceptual material, how to make REST calls using GUI and command-line tools, and how to find an open source project to document. In this course you'll find:

8 videos that:
Describe how to write good conceptual material
Provide guidelines for good sample code
Demonstrates how to use tools to make REST calls
Leads you through examples of how to find open source projects on the internet
2 hands-on exercises to lead you through making REST requests using tools
PowerPoint presentations as a resource for every video lecture
A PDF with resources for finding open source projects
The course takes approximately 1 hours and 30 minutes to complete, depending on how fast you are with the exercises.


The Art of API Documentation

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The Calling Women And Texting Women Program
3xHDRip | WMV/WMV2, ~2936 kb/s | 1280x720 | Duration: 01:20:33 | English: WMA, 64 kb/s (2 ch)
Audio CDs in MP3 / English: MP3, 192 kb/s (2 ch) | Duration: 02:56:04 | ISBN-10: N/A | 2010 | PDF Guides | 1.17 Gb​

Genre: Dating, Relationships
"The Calling Women and Texting Women Program" is a home-study course that explains what to do after you approach a woman: how to get women's phone numbers, when to call, how many times to call, how to ask women out over the phone, when to text and when to call.


The Calling Women And Texting Women Program

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Origin of Civilization
48xDVDRip | AVI/XviD, ~742 kb/s | 640x480 | Duration: 24:00:04 | English: MP3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | 9,14 GB
Genre: History​

Every single day of your life is spent within a civilization an elaborate system composed of governing bodies, detailed laws, dense urban centers, elaborate trade networks, visual and written cultures, class structures, militaries, and more.

And yet the experience of living inside a civilization has become so interwoven with our lives that it's easy to take for granted just how profound and recent the concept is. Consider that human beings have walked the earth for more than 150,000 years, but it was only 10,000 years ago that our distant ancestors began establishing and living within larger and more complex communities.

Our world is forever indebted to a host of early states that paved the way for our current ways of life, including those of the Sumerians, the ancient Egyptians, the Chinese, and the Maya. Without the critical strides they made in areas of government, law, trade, social hierarchies, culture, and more, human civilization as we know it today would not even exist.

How did these first states come into being?
What defines a state? A civilization?
How were the world's ancient states similar to each other? How did they differ?
Answers to these and other dramatic questions form the core of The Origin of Civilization, a grand 48-lecture course that reveals the stories of how human beings around the world transitioned from small farming communities to the impressive cultural and political systems that would forever alter the course of history. Taking a gripping archaeological and historical approach to these formative states and civilizations, archaeologist and Professor Scott MacEachern of Bowdoin College completes your understanding of the history of human civilization-by exploring it at its earliest stages.

Unlike traditional survey courses of ancient civilizations, which tend to focus only on the glorious achievements of these cultures, The Origin of Civilization brings you those first all-important steps that the world's first civilizations would take on the long and arduous road to glory. It's only by learning about the birth of these complex societies that you'll be able to better understand-and appreciate-the lasting contributions they made to the cultural record.

A Comparative Point of View

Contrary to popular belief, state formation didn't happen in one area and then spread outward. Instead, the emergence of states and regional civilizations occurred throughout the ancient world, from the fertile valleys of the Near East and the savannahs of Africa to the Pacific coast of South America and the plains of China.

To tackle this diversity of early civilizations, Professor MacEachern's lectures incorporate perhaps the most important element of any archaeological study of diverse states and civilizations: a comparative outlook. This all-encompassing perspective-which explores ancient cultures side by side instead of in a vacuum-allows you to better grasp the different (and similar) trajectories through which the first states formed around the world.

"We simply will not be able to assemble a complete and convincing account of ancient civilizations if we don't understand how they developed through time in different environments and circumstances," notes Professor MacEachern. "We must have that comparative point of view."

What caused these new forms of cultural and political complexity to emerge in certain places and not others? How are the processes of state formation the same? How are they different? It is only with the comparative approach of The Origin of Civilization that you can truly begin to answer these and other profound questions about this transformative era in human history.

Explore Fascinating Regions ...

After a series of introductory lectures that draw you into the world of archaeologists and the issues and challenges of their field, you embark on a globe-trotting, time-traveling adventure in which you investigate the earliest examples of state formation. Here is where you plunge into the heart of this captivating new course.

You approach the growth and development of civilization in each fascinating region from a multitude of political, social, cultural, and spiritual perspectives. Covering the most vital regions in the earliest development of human societies, The Origin of Civilization takes you to places such as

Mesopotamia, where you explore the ways that agriculture laid the foundation for groundbreaking experiments in social and political development throughout the Near East in places like Uruk and Sumer;
the eastern Mediterranean, where you discover how expanding maritime trade during the Bronze Age increasingly knit the different societies of these islands into an integrated web of political, ideological, and economic relationships;
Asia, where you survey the evolution of China from early farming communities to literate states and dynasties and explore the ancient states of Southeast Asia, which developed distinct ideologies from competing Chinese and Indian influences;
Sub-Saharan Africa, where you join Professor MacEachern on a journey through the early communities and states of the Inland Niger Delta, the Lake Chad Basin, and the Zimbabwe Plateau-areas essential to the story of human civilization; and
Mesoamerica, where you comb through the indigenous states in and around what are now Mexico, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and witness the full flowering of Olmec and Maya civilization.

In these and other cases, your explorations bring you up close and personal with a host of intriguing topics central to the study of the world's earliest states. These include issues of territoriality, cycles of rise and collapse, the development of writing systems, questions of archaeological interpretation, and much more.

Lectures:
00. Professor Bio
01. Ancient States and Civilizations
02. The History of Archaeological Research
03. Studying the Origins of States
04. Archaeological Interpretation-Çatalhöyük
05. Stepping Stones to Civilization
06. Trajectories of Cultural Development
07. When Is a State a State?
08. A Complex Neolithic-Halafian and Samarran
09. Hierarchy and Urbanism-'Ubaid Mesopotamia
10. The Uruk World System
11. Sumer and Afterward
12. Civilization and Pastoralism in Mesopotamia
13. The Development of Writing in Mesopotamia
14. The Gift of the Nile
15. The Egyptian Predynastic Period
16. The Unification of Upper and Lower Egypt
17. Divinity and Display in Dynastic Egypt
18. Why So Different? Mesopotamia and the Nile
19. Borders and Territories of Ancient States
20. The Levantine Copper and Early Bronze Ages
21. Hierarchy and Society in the Aegean
22. Early Minoan and Mycenaean Civilizations
23. Palace and Countryside on Crete
24. How Things Fall Apart-The Greek Dark Ages
25. First Farmers in the Indus Valley
26. Cities along the Indus
27. Seeing What We Expect-Power and Display
28. Sedentism and Agriculture in Early China
29. State Formation in Ancient China
30. Origins of the Chinese Writing System
31. From Human Sacrifice to the Tao of Politics
32. Spread of States in Mainland Southeast Asia
33. Axumite Civilization in Ethiopia
34. Inland Niger Delta-Hierarchy and Heterarchy
35. Lake Chad Basin-Settlement and Complexity
36. Great Zimbabwe and Its Successors
37. Sedentism and Agriculture in Mesoamerica
38. The Olmec of Lowland Mexico
39. Teotihuacán-The First American City
40. Beginnings of States in Lowland Mesoamerica
41. The Great Maya City-States
42. Epigraphy-Changing Views of the Maya
43. Was There a Maya Collapse?
44. Adaptations in Pacific South America
45. Pyramids and Precocity in Coastal Peru
46. Andean Civilization-Chavín to Chimú
47. The Florescence of the Inka Empire
48. Ancient States-Unity and Diversity?


TTC Video - Origin of Civilization

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Plato's Republic
24xDVDRip | AVI/XviD, ~540 kb/s | 640x432 | Duration: 12:13:18 | English: MP3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | + PDF Guide | 3,53 GB
Genre: Philosophy​

It is the first work in the history of Western political philosophy and, arguably, the most influential-so influential that the entire European philosophical tradition has been described as being nothing more than a "series of footnotes" to its author. Yet Plato's Republic, more than 2,000 years after its appearance, and in spite of the many provocative directions those footnotes have taken, still remains astonishingly relevant in its own right.
It poses one question after another that might well have been drawn from the headlines and debates of our nation's recent history:

What sort of person should rule the state? Is it ever permissible for a ruler to lie to the citizens? Should women be given the same political opportunities as men? What is the role of education in politics?
Should citizens be allowed full freedom when it comes to sexual relationships and private property?
Are all citizens equal before the law?
Is censorship of music and literature ever justifiable?
Should everyone have equal access to health care?

And these questions, no matter how vital they may be on their own, are only intellectual stepping stones along the pathway of Plato's greater inquiry-the question of defining justice itself and the reasons why a man or woman would choose a life aligned with that virtue.

In Plato's Republic, Professor David Roochnik leads you through the brilliant dialogue Plato crafted both to define and examine the issues with which political philosophy still grapples.

Chapter by chapter-what the Republic presents as "books"-Professor Roochnik introduces you to Plato's literary recasting of his own great teacher, Socrates, and the dialogue through which Socrates and the Republic's other characters create the hypothetical ideal city. It is by dissecting life in this presumably just city-the "Republic" of Plato's title-that the nature of justice itself can be examined.

Explore Justice through the Socratic Method
Socrates presents question after question, refuting each in a manner that leads to still another question, as Socrates's-and Plato's-ideas about the nature of justice and the society necessary for justice's emergence gradually unfold.

Many of those ideas will startle contemporary readers, who may recognize in them the foreshadowing of some of humankind's darkest moments.

Plato, for instance, has Socrates present what has come to be known, notoriously, as the "noble lie," the assertion that human beings are not born of their parents but of the city itself. Moreover, those men and women are born into three predetermined social classes-with souls containing gold, silver, or bronze-that must never mingle.

Preserving that purity of class-very similar to a caste system-also means the careful supervision of reproduction. If a bronze-souled child, for example, is born to a gold-souled woman, it is taken away to be raised by citizens of like soul.

If this sounds suspiciously like what we have come to know as the eugenics once offered as a route to racial purity, making you uncomfortable and suggesting why some have called the Republic the "great-great-grandfather of all totalitarian experiments," then Professor Roochnik would be far from disappointed.

Indeed, that discomfort with one of the great names in philosophy-literary character or not-is something he believes is a very good thing.

"Socrates's proposals will cause readers to object. They will find, however, that even if they disagree with what Socrates recommends, developing arguments against his proposals is a most valuable exercise," he says.

"They will be forced to think through basic assumptions concerning politics. For example, almost all of us believe political freedom is a good thing, and that all citizens should be counted as equal before the law. But why? Plato will encourage us to defend our most cherished beliefs."

Repeatedly, Plato puts those beliefs to the test.

Lectures:
00. Prof. Intro
01. Plato's Life and Times
02. Book I The Title and the Setting
03. Book I Socrates versus Thrasymachus
04. Book II The City-Soul Analogy
05. Books II and III Censorship
06. Book III The Noble Lie
07. Book III Socrates's Medical Ethics
08. Book IV Justice in the City and Soul
09. Book V Feminism
10. Book V Who Is the Philosopher?
11. Book VI The Ship of State
12. Book VI The Idea of the Good
13. Book VI The Divided Line
14. Book VII The Parable of the Cave
15. Book VII The Education of the Guardians
16. Book VIII The Perfectly Just City Fails
17. Books VIII and IX The Mistaken Regimes
18. Book VIII Socrates's Critique of Democracy
19. Books VIII and IX The Critique of Tyranny
20. Book IX The Superiority of Justice
21. Book X Philosophy versus Poetry
22. Book X The Myth of Er
23. Summary and Overview
24. The Legacy of Plato's Republic


TTC Video - Plato's Republic

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Tutsplus - Getting Started With Manga Studio
20 Lessons | 1.8 hours | .MP4 | aac, 44100 Hz, stereo | h264, yuv420p, 1280x720, 25fps | 1 GB
Genre: E-learning | George Bletsis | English​



Manga Studio is a fantastic tool in any illustrator's arsenal, but if you're coming to it for the first time having used other software, it can seem a little unusual and daunting. This course will get you up to speed on the basics, and have you using Manga Studio in your own work in no time!


Tutsplus - Getting Started With Manga Studio

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Tutsplus - Using Custom Content Types in WordPress
Duration: 1.6 Hours | Video: h264, yuv420p, 1280x720 30fps | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2 ch | 1.1 GB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​

WordPress is a powerful and easy-to-use content management system (CMS) out of the box. The default "Page" and "Post" content types are enough for many websites and blogs. In order to really harness the power of WordPress as a CMS, though, you'll want create custom content types with fields and taxonomies specific to your particular application.

In this course, Envato Tuts+ instructor Rachel McCollin will show you how to create custom content types in WordPress. You'll learn how custom content types work with the WordPress database, plugin and templating system. Along the way, you'll use custom post types, custom taxonomies, and custom fields to build a simple astronomy CMS for displaying information about the largest moons in the solar system!


Tutsplus - Using Custom Content Types in WordPress

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Udemy - The Java Spring Tutorial: Learn Java's Popular Web Framework
.MP4, AVC, 1000 kbps, 1280x720 | English, AAC, 64 kbps, 2 Ch | 174 Lectures | 28 hours | 5.01 GB
Instructor: John Purcell​



Learn the hottest, most in-demand Java web framework, including web programming with Spring MVC and Hibernate.

An introduction to the widely-used Java Spring framework. Discover how to wire together your Java objects using Spring and dependency injection. You'll learn how to set up your system for Spring development, how to use Maven, and how to work with databases using Spring and Hibernate and how to create web applications with Spring MVC. We'll also look at managing user accounts with Spring Security,JDBC, working with web forms, Apache tiles for building modular web pages, aspect-oriented programming (AOP) and using Log4J and JUnit.


Udemy - The Java Spring Tutorial: Learn Java's Popular Web Framework

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Pluralsight - Web Applications Without a Server
Duration: 2h40 | MP4 | Video: h264, yuv420p, 1280x720 | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2 ch | 474.75 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​



In this course, Rob Conery will show you how to hook up a static site (just HTML) to a series of online services, creating a "No-Backend" application quickly and simply.
Level: Intermediate


Web Applications Without a Server

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Pluralsight - Website performance with Robert Boedigheimer
5h 03mins | Video: h264, yuv420p, 1280x720 | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2 ch | 2.08 GB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English​



With the rise of mobile networks and devices, website performance is now absolutely critical to building good websites and web applications. Kyle dives deep into everything web performance from resource loading, to thread, animations, JSON, minification, image optimization and more!


Website performance with Robert Boedigheimer

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A Journey into the Dreams!
Duration: 58m | Video: h264, yuv420p, 1280x720 30fps | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2 ch | 419 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Project files Included​



A Photo Manipulation in Photoshop for Beginners

This course is for you if :-

You're someone who's creative, interested in Photo Manipulation, and, most of all, You love to Play with different tools in Photoshop.
So now that we've covered who you are, let's get into what we'll be covering in this course?Learn How we can Create Background from Scratch! Different methods Like using Gradient or Brush Tool.

Learn How we can Create Sky from Scratch and then How we can Convert Ground into Sea or Waterscape stuff.
Learn to Extract the Objects from the Background Quick Selection Tool in Action.
Learn How to Place the Extracted Boat & Child into our composition/composite.
Learn How to create realistic Shadows underneath objects to Make them parts of the Composite/Composition.
Learn How to create Rim Light or Light Effect to put the Realism into the scene.
Learn How to create Sun or Fake the Sun in Photoshop into our Composite/composition.
Learn How to Add Birds into the sky-using Different Layer Blend Modes to suit the Scene.
Learn How to Add Lens Vignette effect to Bring Drama to our Scene.
Learn How to Color Grade the image in Photoshop to give it a Dramatic or Cinematic Look.
Learn How to use Visual Techniques to make the images More Powerful.

or even if you are just watching this course you would enjoy the Process How I create this Amazing Photo Manipulation which would feed creative juices to your mind.
I would request you to post your Photo Manipulation to the Discussion Board and let me and other student give feedback to you, so that you can strengthen your learning.


A Journey into the Dreams!

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