Treehouse gets $7M to bring learn-to-code programs to high schools
"All the kids are from at-risk homes. These kids have never coded before, and I’ve talked to them in person, and I’m 99 percent confident we will be able to place them in jobs."
"All the kids are from at-risk homes. These kids have never coded before, and I’ve talked to them in person, and I’m 99 percent confident we will be able to place them in jobs."
If you've been simultaneously intimidated and allured by the command line for too long, learn-to-code company Treehouse is here to help.
Learning to write a programming language often goes hand-in-hand with building a startup. Treehouse to the rescue!
Treehouse, a learn-to-code-online company, is putting its platform where its mouth is and taking on one of America's toughest towns, economically speaking: Detroit.
What's Treehouse got that Codecademy ain't got? A book deal, for one thing, says founder Ryan Carson.
Course helps you learn how to build animations, interactions, and other dynamic content into their creations.
More and more people are getting the itch to learn how to code -- or wake up one day and realizing their futures depend on it. The "Geekfather" Ryan Carson is helping them through a series of onine courses, the latest one teaching PHP.
Ryan Carson, the web design guru behind Carsonified, wants to teach you how to code. And he says he can do it in just five minutes using a web-based game.
Carson’s latest endeavor is Code Racer, a multi-player game designed …