RubyLearning.Org by Satish Talim

RubyLearning.org was set up by Satish Talim, a Pune based entrepreneur who chanced upon the meta-programming language as a hobby back in 2005. The heydays of Ruby, that is. Today, as much as over 25,000 rubyists from over 140+ countries have benefited through his forum that provides basic to ultimate level of Ruby proficiency in a very simple web 2.0 format. As Satish puts it, the age range that benefits is from 12 to 80 years!

The core ruby course is for free.

Recently, Satish took to spreading the word about Ruby based products/companies from India. And if you are one from the Ruby RoR world, you can request for addition of your entry in the RubyLearning list with your comments below. Or spread the word among your friends who play with Ruby.

Satish has been involved in bringing Ruby and Rails course into the computer science syllabus at the University of Pune as well. A kickass initiative to bring in agile development concept early on. He has setup RubyLearning in chinese to break the barriers of English, which according to me is a great milestone achieved in the line of work he has chosen.

So if you wanna hack in Ruby, or congratulate Satish for his work, you can join rubylearning.org or follow him on twitter. Cheers.

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  • comment(s) on RubyLearning.Org by Satish Talim

    21 Responses to RubyLearning.Org by Satish Talim

    1. makuchaku says:

      Satish’s work in helping Ruby community is unparalleled.

      Good going Satish!


      Maku

    2. vijaymishra says:

      Nice one Pi. Keep up the good work Satish!

    3. Matt Chen says:

      Satish’s guide really helped me understand the underlying principles and core concepts of ruby, and his rubylearning.org are full of great learning materials and practices about ruby and rails, which makes huge contribution to ruby community and help lots of people like me to shorten learning curve on ruby.

      Satish, thanks again for your help.

      Thanks,
      Matt

    4. Gautam Rege says:

      Way to go Satish! This mention is thoroughly well deserved.

    5. Satish Sir is doing great work! His Ruby learning tutorials helped me understand Ruby in early days. Keep up the great work Sir!

    6. Yogesh says:

      Satish is Computer Boffin as well as good person.

      Yogesh ?

    7. Michael Uplawski says:

      Keep it up a little longer and Satish may finally turn the whole blue planet into a Ruby. ;-)

    8. arvind says:

      Really? That is a great fan following Satish…:-)

      Cheers,
      Arvind
      @marvindanig

    9. abhishek says:

      i’m fan of satish talim,
      :)

    10. Anuj Rathi says:

      Is that a blog post or a paid PR exercise?

      • arvind says:

        What crap?? Dude learn to appreciate efforts from people… It’s damn easy to talk crap about genuine work by using standard stupid terms like “paid PR exercise”.

        And if you can’t figure out difference between paid PR exercises and real good work, one can only leave you alone in the caves that you are living in.

        -Arvind

      • makuchaku says:

        There had to be one such comment…
        Best when ignored.

    11. rubysiddhi says:

      The Ruby Learning course takes you to places where intro Ruby books do not go it seems. It is not a course for someone who has never programmed more than HTML or CSS. For those newbies I would suggest reading the first several chapters of Ruby intro books. Then when you get to the course, the impact will not make you want to quit. We see many people join the course but it seems only 1/15th of them actually participate in the forums. I figure the rest are not serious or just give up since they are overwhelmed. Just a heads up for newbies.

      • Michael Uplawski says:

        @rubysiddhi, this aspect is returning frequently and I still feel, there is s contrast to the “old days”, when I remember Newbies having been able to follow the course.

        Anyway, IMO, it *should* be possible and I like to make this one of the main objectives of my own engagement on RubyLearning.org. The ambiance changes in each batch the ways of teaching may too. I had always seen this as the unequaled, unbeatable charm of the project. But if we really close out newbie-programmers, we have a problem. *I* have.

        • rubysiddhi says:

          @MichaelUplawski I suppose it can be expected that total newbies have been coming in recently. My background is pure right brain as I was just an artist. Now I am working on the left brain by learning Ruby and that means I am bringing a whole new set of newbie issues to this course. Newbie 2.0 perhaps? :) I will keep posting these issues in the course forums. S33 ya there!

          • Dave says:

            To all newbies (and i consider myself to one – even tho I’m listed on the site as a mentor) *IS TO BE INVOLVED*

            Ask the stupid question, ask it again and again until you DO GET IT as it is everyones collective roll to HELP the novice to understand!

            I’ve never found it easy to learn by doing little exercises but by doing something that I want to do.

            If that is you then try and use what is done in the weekly classes and put it into your program.

            JUST GET INVOLVED in the discussions also helps with the understanding of the topic being studied.

        • Michael Uplawski says:

          and then, it is *not* the “Newbie” which causes me the most trouble, but the experienced programmers.

          Those may be the reasons, that some of us ignore the sometimes less demanding task to introduce people to programming… Convincing people, longer in the business, than ourselves, that they *have to* smash their darned paradigms to the benefit of a fresh Ruby-experience is so much more difficult. I hate that. At the same time, I have been doing that for almost twenty years, though not always in IT.
          Newbies of the world: You may be much less of a nuisance, than you are willing to admit to yourself. EOF.

      • Victor Goff says:

        Some folks learn by reading, and from the participants that are actively posting. Sometimes that is enough for them to get from the course what they want or need. Other times, it is simply that they are ‘shy’ and won’t speak up. Those that submit code and are obviously having difficulties understanding are invited to have more one on one assistance, and I take the time to walk them through the exercises, assisting where I can.

        Sometimes it is simply language barrier problems. We work through those, as we have mentors that aren’t limited to only english.
        Sometimes it is just getting them over the first few hurdles, especially for those that are coming from 0 experience programming, where Ruby is their first programming language. We have had successful students coming from very little computer experience as a user, and zero experience programming to being able to adequately solve problems with Ruby.

    12. Satish Talim says:

      Ruby-Talk is the most popular mailing-list and deals with general topics about Ruby. Ruby-Talk is mirrored by the comp.lang.ruby newsgroup -
      news:comp.lang.ruby
      and Ruby-Forum.com -
      http://ruby-forum.com/

      Hope that helps.