Difference between revisions of "M@S:Mozilla for beginners:Videos"

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== Introduction ==
 
== Introduction ==
 
In the Mozilla Developer Center(MDC) there is page ([http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Video_presentations Video Presentations] and also on [http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=mozilla+lecture&hl=en Google Videos]) that has the videos they are producing that can help you learn how the Mozilla codebase works and how to take advantage of its technology in your own applications and extensions.
 
In the Mozilla Developer Center(MDC) there is page ([http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Video_presentations Video Presentations] and also on [http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=mozilla+lecture&hl=en Google Videos]) that has the videos they are producing that can help you learn how the Mozilla codebase works and how to take advantage of its technology in your own applications and extensions.
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Some of these videos have been recorded in Seneca on the Fall 2006 semester, check the [[Guest Lectures]].
 
Some of these videos have been recorded in Seneca on the Fall 2006 semester, check the [[Guest Lectures]].
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NOTE: The video files follow this license, [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ CC-BY-SA]
  
 
These are the videos we suggest you to go over:
 
These are the videos we suggest you to go over:

Revision as of 13:15, 7 April 2007

Introduction

In the Mozilla Developer Center(MDC) there is page (Video Presentations and also on Google Videos) that has the videos they are producing that can help you learn how the Mozilla codebase works and how to take advantage of its technology in your own applications and extensions.

Some of these videos have been recorded in Seneca on the Fall 2006 semester, check the Guest Lectures. NOTE: The video files follow this license, CC-BY-SA

These are the videos we suggest you to go over:

  • Video 1 - It talks about...
  • Video 2


Extra videos

This section one day will be in another page, for the moment will be here until we find the use and they way to present it.

  • Go to Google Videos and look for "open source" and you will see some videos from the user "Google engEDU" (ask Tiago he told me about this)