I think the first step is a book called "The Official PostgreSQL Certification Study Guide - Everything You Need to
Knowto Pass the PostgreSQL Adminsitrator Certification Test (PG-081)" which would be based on the "Official PostgreSQL
CertificationSyllabus."
All the M$ certifications I have I got by buying a $70 book, reading it, then logging on to a testing center website,
paying$115, and driving across town to take the test. I think this is a great model that does not require a big
infrastructureof instructors and classrooms, just a book and a contract with Sylvan (or whoever) to administer tests.
Once that is up and running with the book-learning crowd, training companies would get interested in becoming
"Authorized"to provide "Official" training, for the classroom learning crowd.
My opinion is, as usual, worth exactly what you paid for it.;^)
Ian
<<< Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> 7/ 9 9:50a >>>
Am Freitag, 9. Juli 2004 08:30 schrieb Bret Busby:
> Thus, recognised, international, industry certification of
> open source application systems development, either involving PostgreSQL
> as a database backend by itself, or, involving PostgreSQL as a factor
> could be useful, apart from having the internationally recognised
I don't even think the often-raised question about who would be entitled to
authorize such a certification program is the hard part. Because, just as
PostgreSQL itself, such a program could come to be recognized more or less by
itself if a lot of people use it. The hard part are the economics of the
whole thing. There is no one who has the capacity to organize such a thing
worldwide. And the whole thing doesn't pay off for the organizer unless you
can scale hugely. If you can solve those questions, I'm all ears. I and the
company I work for does PostgreSQL and other training, so I know what the
economics look like.
> From the web page at http://techdocs.postgresql.org/companies.php , that
> company appears to be a small company in Austria, and the company and
> certification appear to be recognised by PostgreSQL.org .
>
> Is that the only PostgreSQL certification that is recognised? Is it
> recognised internationally?
It's the only certification that managed to get a link on
www.postgresql.org. :-)
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