March 12, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Full Stack Developer Online Training & Certification

Full Stack Developer Online Training & Certification
BECOME A CERTIFIED & EXPERIENCED FULL-STACK WEB DEVELOPER About the Course Full Stack Developers are web & software developers that design complete applications and websites. They work on all facets of development fron front-end, to back-end, database to system administration, and even testing. This training and certification program is a 16-week in-depth program that a comprehensive online tutorial on all the latest web & software development technologies, provides individual and team-based projects, and projects that will provide real-world experience working with companies across many different industries. Key Features Instructor led Online Training Detailed textbooks and tutorials with code samples and follow-along programming exercises Individual & Team-based coding assignments for better reinforcement 1-on-1 Mentoring and Coaching from industry professionals Quizzes & Exams to test your knowledge Real world programming assignments and interaction with organizations from various industries Blockchain secured & verifiable certificate Who needs to attend? Entry to mid-level web developers, project managers, or anyone looking to break into the world of web and software development. What programming languages are covered in the course? The Full Stack Developer Training & Certification covers a variety of front-end technologies in-depth, such as HTML5, Bootstrap, CSS3, JavaScript & JavaScript frameworks like Angular.js. The program then dives deep into the concepts and best practices for back-end technologies like PHP, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and Node.js. This training program then provides an introduction and overview of database technologies like MySQL, PostgreSQL and even NoSQL technologies like MongoDB. Then it concludes with an overview of development tools like Git, DevOps and Debugging tools. Why should I use this training program from Samex? Samex's Full Stack Development Training & Certification program is the best value for time & money invested. We stand out because our students & participants: Get trained by the best trainers in the industry Get access to technology-specific training videos and reading material Get an assigned mentor that holds regular meetings to ensure students are on track and understand the technology Get Resume writing tutorials and Interview preparation skills to better market themselves as an experienced software developer Get real-world experience, which many student's don't have after completing a traditional education program All participants will receive their login credentials to the online training platform, as well as the contact information for their assigned mentor one week prior to the start date. Do I receive a certification for this program? Yes. Upon completion of this 16-week training program, you will receive a Samex blockchain secured certification that can be verified by any employer. This content of this course will also prepare you for the following industry certification exams. Microsoft 70-480: Programming in HTML5 with JavaScript and CSS3 PHP & Zend Certification Oracle: MySQL 5.6 Developer  Certification exam vouchers for Microsoft, Zend and Oracle are included with this training program. For more details, please contact us at info@samex.online
starting on 2018-11-06 09:00:00

Address:
Bakersfield, California, United States
Bakersfield, California, United States
Bakersfield
United States

Previous Article

OmiseGO (OMG) Rolls Out 2-D Video Game as Decentralized App

Next Article

Cryptocurrencies: What is the difference between Tokens & Coins?

You might be interested in …

NO2X: Next Week’s Hard Fork Has Been “Suspended” Due to a Lack of Consensus

b2xcancel

There will almost certainly be no bitcoin hard fork next week: the main organizers behind the SegWit2x project have “suspended” their efforts.

In an email to the SegWit2x mailing list, one of the main organizers behind the project, BitGo CEO Mike Belshe, explained that the proposed hard fork has not been able to gain sufficient consensus to proceed:

“Although we strongly believe in the need for a larger blocksize, there is something we believe is even more important: keeping the community together. Unfortunately, it is clear that we have not built sufficient consensus for a clean blocksize upgrade at this time.”

The New York Agreement was originally forged between a group of bitcoin companies in May of this year. An initiative by Digital Currency Group CEO Barry Silbert, the project — later dubbed “SegWit2x” — was to combine activation of the Segregated Witness soft fork with a hard fork to double bitcoin’s block weight limit. With Segregated Witness activated on the bitcoin network this past summer, arguably helped by the SegWit2x project, the hard fork was scheduled to take place next week.

However, the hard fork part of the New York Agreement was always controversial for a number of reasons. As a result, a growing number of signatories dropped out of the agreement over the past weeks and months, while developers, user communities, public polls, future markets and more all indicated limited support for the effort. And as the hard fork date drew closer, it become increasingly clear that SegWit2x would in fact spawn a new currency rather than constitute an upgrade of the bitcoin protocol.

And this was never the plan, Belshe wrote:

“Continuing on the current path could divide the community and be a setback to bitcoin’s growth. This was never the goal of Segwit2x.”

Belshe’s email was also signed on behalf of Xapo CEO Wences Casares, Bitmain CEO Jihan Wu, Bloq CEO Jeff Garzik, Blockchain CEO Peter Smith and ShapeShift CEO Erik Voorhees. In a separate blog post published just before Belshe’s email, BitPay CEO Stephen Pair also called for cancelation of the hard fork.

While the New York Agreement was signed by even more companies (and some individuals), and anyone can still deploy the hard fork, it is unlikely that anyone will proceed with the hard fork in any meaningful way.

Belshe does, however, note that a hard fork to increase bitcoin’s block weight limit might be needed in the future, writing:

“As fees rise on the blockchain, we believe it will eventually become obvious that on-chain capacity increases are necessary. When that happens, we hope the community will come together and find a solution, possibly with a blocksize increase.”

The post NO2X: Next Week’s Hard Fork Has Been “Suspended” Due to a Lack of Consensus appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.