The LC which is stands for all non RH certification tests. When CompUSA had contracted to do the MCSE tract then we were not allowed to do the RHCE tract. But when the attendance ratio dropped we were allowed to teach the Linux + and other flavors like SUSE and others which fall under LCs. LCs are allowed at CompUSA and we can still keep the MCSE tract in place. But indirectly fulfilling the LC training brings you up to the first level of RH. You already have your hardware knowledge and it covers all flavors not one in particular. They will have a standard Basic, Intermediate and Advanced. Since no one major flavor of Linux stood out for any commercial applications more than RH this changed their philosophy on RHCE. They are looking to start something here soon when enough individuals show an interest in this. So if I were someone (which I am) interested in achieving RHCE then drop me a very professional letter explaining your interest in taking these classes. Ive just taken the Basics class and we have 14 people in the class due to poor marketing. I dont want this to happen again. Most interested people (around 23) only came after the class already started.
On Sunday 21 July 2002 11:56, you wrote: > Dan, > > LC certification? Could you enlighten us as to what this is? I wrote an > article on Linux Certs a few months back and the "LC" did not come up on > the radar. > http://www.hawaiianharddrive.com/articleview.cfm?articleid=97 > > Mahalo, > Ho'ala > > Dan George said: > > On the other hand many people wanted the LC test to be included which > > is a totally different certification process. I recommend getting as > > many people together and having them send me emails in regards to > > their interest in RHCE or LC certification classes. > > ----------------------------------------- > Free webmail with a statement! > Signup today -> [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > _______________________________________________ > LUAU mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://videl.ics.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/luau