LMS Collaborator is a best solution for companies from 50 employees. Also it used in trainig centers, goverment and non-profit organizations. It gives three solutions in one platform - eLearning, Knowledge Base, and Communication Center.
The LMS Collaborator Task maintain any content such as: simple resource - page, file, audio, video, image gallery, document, presentation, e-book, etc. - all can be shown in browser for reading and view; interactive web-application in SCORM (1.2 or 2004) and HTML formats; quizz and polls for testing knowledge and organizing surveys (votes, feedbacks, polls); interactive workshops - the assignment of practical tasks and their estimation in the personal chat; assessment tool - checklist of compliense or 360 degree survey; webinar or inperson meetup in classroom; e-learning course; big learning program with many learning subtasks and conditions of their completion and access to them. Each Task supports different options of assigning users, options of during period, commenting ability, publication into a catalog, score parameters, ability of getting badge or certificate, and other settings of learning process. Some tasks parameters depend on content type. It's a testing process params if content is a quizz, or polls setting if content is a survey for example.
Collaborator offers an REST API, which allows businesses to integrate the platform with third-party solutions or anyone corporate information system.
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Resource: Coursera, edX, and Microsoft Learn offer certification programs. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
I did a bootcamp a couple years ago when I was 35, so I can understand the inherent concern learning something new in your 30s. Bootcamps can be expensive, time intensive, and frustrating if you don't have some coding knowledge already. They're not terrible but they're marketed as a quick way to get into a SWE career, which they hardly are. Some people do make it work for them but I've seen more people go through... Source: almost 2 years ago
Should you move to self-taught, research the sub-field you're interested in and learn the languages around that (i.e. JS, TS, Ruby, Python, etc. For web; Java for Android app dev; Kotlin, R, or Python for data science; Swift for iOS app dev; or any of C++, C#, Assembly, etc. For what they're best for). Focus on getting familiar with those languages, take the popular CS 50 course and/or freeCodeCamp, look at taking... Source: almost 2 years ago
Power Platform: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/certifications PL900 and PL400. Source: almost 2 years ago
Also, check out this dashboard of certs to explore various roles. Source: about 2 years ago
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