GoDaddy.com adopts Linux Professional Institute Certification

“We are pleased to have this opportunity to work with Go Daddy and share their values on the importance of workforce development of IT professionals in Linux and Open Source solutions. LPI will continue to work with industry leaders such as Go Daddy to ensure a program that measures the Linux skills needed for the enterprise environment,” said Jim Lacey, president and CEO of LPI.

GoDaddy.com approached the Linux Professional Institute earlier this year and noted that LPI’s exam objectives complemented Go Daddy’s skill requirements for their in-house staff responsible for Debian and CentOS webservers. In addition, the company sought a global standard in Linux knowledge to use as an ongoing recruitment tool for anticipated needs in new IT staff. Go Daddy has doubled in size in the last four years and is always looking to add employees skilled in Linux technologies to support their growing operations.

“Continuing education is vital to the success of Go Daddy. Technology changes so quickly, that employees need to have the opportunity to access the most up-to-date information. LPI’s vendor-neutral certification gives Go Daddy the ability to have employees increase their personal knowledge while helping the company,” said Lane Jarvis, Vice President – Human Resources of GoDaddy.com.

Jarvis also pointed out that an attractive element in their adoption of LPI certification was a flexible training program that would enable the company to develop in-house training aligned with LPI’s exam objectives: “Working with Gurulabs has provided the necessary courseware and expertise for a ‘train-the-trainer’ program – enabling Go Daddy to develop our own in-house solution for LPI certification training of our employees.”

The Linux Professional Institute is globally supported by the IT industry, enterprise customers, community professionals, government entities and the educational community. LPI’s certification program is supported by an affiliate network spanning five continents and is distributed worldwide in multiple languages at more than 7,000 testing locations. Since 1999, LPI has delivered over 290,000 exams and 95,000 LPIC certifications around the world.

Linux AIR gets cut by Adobe

it’s been another scorching few days here in the Linux blogosphere, where summer appears to have set spring on fire and kicked it out the back door.

It’s no wonder tempers are running hot, but the latest news from the gang over at Adobe(Nasdaq: ADBE) has done nothing to help.

“We will no longer be releasing our own versions of Adobe AIR and the AIR SDK for desktop Linux,” wrote Adobe blogger Mark Hopper last Tuesday.

Apparently Adobe’s desktop Linux releases have accounted for less than 0.5 percent of its AIR downloads, causing the company to pack up the effort and focus on mobile instead.
Continue reading