Microsoft Training Classes in Minneapolis, Minnesota
Learn Microsoft in Minneapolis, Minnesota and surrounding areas via our hands-on, expert led courses. All of our classes either are offered on an onsite, online or public instructor led basis. Here is a list of our current Microsoft related training offerings in Minneapolis, Minnesota: Microsoft Training
Course Directory [training on all levels]
- .NET Classes
 - Agile/Scrum Classes
 - AI Classes
 - Ajax Classes
 - Android and iPhone Programming Classes
 - Azure Classes
 - Blaze Advisor Classes
 - C Programming Classes
 - C# Programming Classes
 - C++ Programming Classes
 - Cisco Classes
 - Cloud Classes
 - CompTIA Classes
 - Crystal Reports Classes
 - Data Classes
 - Design Patterns Classes
 - DevOps Classes
 - Foundations of Web Design & Web Authoring Classes
 - Git, Jira, Wicket, Gradle, Tableau Classes
 - IBM Classes
 - Java Programming Classes
 - JBoss Administration Classes
 - JUnit, TDD, CPTC, Web Penetration Classes
 
- Linux Unix Classes
 - Machine Learning Classes
 - Microsoft Classes
 - Microsoft Development Classes
 - Microsoft SQL Server Classes
 - Microsoft Team Foundation Server Classes
 - Microsoft Windows Server Classes
 - Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database Classes
 - Perl Programming Classes
 - Python Programming Classes
 - Ruby Programming Classes
 - SAS Classes
 - Security Classes
 - SharePoint Classes
 - SOA Classes
 - Tcl, Awk, Bash, Shell Classes
 - UML Classes
 - VMWare Classes
 - Web Development Classes
 - Web Services Classes
 - Weblogic Administration Classes
 - XML Classes
 
- RHCSA EXAM PREP 
17 November, 2025 - 21 November, 2025 - RED HAT ENTERPRISE LINUX SYSTEMS ADMIN II 
8 December, 2025 - 11 December, 2025 - Object-Oriented Programming in C# Rev. 6.1 
17 November, 2025 - 21 November, 2025 - Fast Track to Java 17 and OO Development 
8 December, 2025 - 12 December, 2025 - Introduction to Spring 6, Spring Boot 3, and Spring REST 
15 December, 2025 - 19 December, 2025 - See our complete public course listing 
 
Blog Entries publications that: entertain, make you think, offer insight
	
 Once again Java tops C as the number one sought after programming language on the internet.  According TIOBE Programming Community Index for February 2013 and five search engines: Google, Bing, Yahoo!, Wikipedia, Amazon, YouTube and Baidu, Java regained its position after being bumped by C in May 2012.
Despite the recent urging by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security of computer users to disable or uninstall Java due to a flaw in Runtime Environment (JRE) 7, Java, has increased its market share of all languages by (+2.03%) in the past six months. The jump in Java’s popularity does not come as a surprise as the Android OS claims massive success in the mobile space. The top twelve programming languages listed in the index are:
- Java
 - C
 - Objective-C
 - C++
 - C#
 - PHP
 - Python
 - (Visual) Basic
 - Perl
 - Ruby
 - Java Script
 - Visual Basic.NET
 
Also rising, Python and PHP which are competing to becoming the most popular interpreted language.
	
Millions of people experienced the frustration and failures of the Obamacare website when it first launched. Because the code for the back end is not open source, the exact technicalities of the initial failings are tricky to determine. Many curious programmers and web designers have had time to examine the open source coding on the front end, however, leading to reasonable conclusions about the nature of the overall difficulties.
	
	Lack of End to End Collaboration
	The website was developed with multiple contractors for the front-end and back-end functions. The site also needed to be integrated with insurance companies, IRS servers, Homeland Security servers, and the Department of Veterans Affairs, all of whom had their own legacy systems. The large number of parties involved and the complex nature of the various components naturally complicated the testing and integration of each portion of the project.
	
	The errors displayed, and occasionally the lack thereof, indicated an absence of coordination between the parties developing the separate components. A failed sign up attempt, for instance, often resulted in a page that displayed the header but had no content or failure message. A look at end user requests revealed that the database was unavailable. Clearly, the coding for the front end did not include errors for failures on the back end.
	
	Bloat and the Abundance of Minor Issues
	Obviously, numerous bugs were also an issue. The system required users to create passwords that included numbers, for example, but failed to disclose that on the form and in subsequent failure messages, leaving users baffled. In another issue, one of the pages intended to ask users to please wait or call instead, but the message and the phone information were accidentally commented out in the code.
	
	While the front-end design has been cleared of blame for the most serious failures, bloat in the code did contribute to the early difficulties users experienced. The site design was heavy with Javascript and CSS files, and it was peppered with small coding errors that became particularly troublesome when users faced bottlenecks in traffic. Frequent typos throughout the code proved to be an additional embarrassment and were another indication of a troubled development process.
	
	NoSQL Database
	The NoSQL database is intended to allow for scalability and flexibility in the architecture of projects that will use it. This made NoSQL a logical choice for the health insurance exchange website. The newness of the technology, however, means personnel with expertise can be elusive. Database-related missteps were more likely the result of a lack of experienced administrators than with the technology itself. The choice of the NoSQL database was thus another complication in the development, but did not itself cause the failures.
	
	Another factor of consequence is that the website was built with both agile and waterfall methodology elements. With agile methods for the front end and the waterfall methodology for the back end, streamlining was naturally going to suffer further difficulties. The disparate contractors, varied methods of software development, and an unrealistically short project time line all contributed to the coding failures of the website.
I’ll get straight to the point. Why should companies invest more in management training? Here are 10 simple reasons.
1) An employee’s relationship with his or her direct manager is the most important single factor in employee engagement.
2) Engaged employees are happier and more productive. Disengaged employees are frustrated and more disruptive.
3) Because there’s no widely agreed-on skillset for management (good managers come in all shapes and sizes), there’s an assumption everyone knows how to do it. This is akin to someone who’s never driven before being given keys to a car and told: “Drive.” (Many many years ago, this is how I first learned to manage. I blundered my way through it. Trial and error. It wasn’t pretty.)
Unlike Java, Python does not have a string contains method. Instead, use the in operator or the find method. The in operator finds treats the string as a word list whereas the find method looks for substrings. In the example shown below, 'is' is a substring of this but not a word by itself. Therefore, find recoginizes 'is' in this while the in operator does not.
s = "This be a string"
if s.find("is") == -1:
    print "No 'is' here!"
else:
    print "Found 'is' in the string."
    
if "is" in s:
    print "No 'is' here!"
else:
    print "Found 'is' in the string."
#prints out the following:
Found 'is' in the string
No 'is' here!
Tech Life in Minnesota
| Company Name | City | Industry | Secondary Industry | 
|---|---|---|---|
| The Affluent Traveler | Saint Paul | Travel, Recreation and Leisure | Travel, Recreation, and Leisure Other | 
| Xcel Energy Inc. | Minneapolis | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities | 
| Thrivent Financial for Lutherans | Minneapolis | Financial Services | Personal Financial Planning and Private Banking | 
| CHS Inc. | Inver Grove Heights | Agriculture and Mining | Agriculture and Mining Other | 
| Hormel Foods Corporation | Austin | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging | 
| St. Jude Medical, Inc. | Saint Paul | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals and Biotech | Medical Devices | 
| The Mosaic Company | Minneapolis | Agriculture and Mining | Mining and Quarrying | 
| Ecolab Inc. | Saint Paul | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals | 
| Donaldson Company, Inc. | Minneapolis | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery | 
| Michael Foods, Inc. | Minnetonka | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging | 
| Regis Corporation | Minneapolis | Retail | Retail Other | 
| Fastenal Company | Winona | Wholesale and Distribution | Wholesale and Distribution Other | 
| Securian Financial | Saint Paul | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management | 
| UnitedHealth Group | Minnetonka | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management | 
| The Travelers Companies, Inc. | Saint Paul | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management | 
| Imation Corp. | Saint Paul | Computers and Electronics | Networking Equipment and Systems | 
| C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | Eden Prairie | Transportation and Storage | Warehousing and Storage | 
| Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | Minneapolis | Financial Services | Securities Agents and Brokers | 
| Best Buy Co. Inc. | Minneapolis | Retail | Retail Other | 
| Nash Finch Company | Minneapolis | Wholesale and Distribution | Grocery and Food Wholesalers | 
| Medtronic, Inc. | Minneapolis | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals and Biotech | Medical Devices | 
| LAND O'LAKES, INC. | Saint Paul | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging | 
| General Mills, Inc. | Minneapolis | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging | 
| Pentair, Inc. | Minneapolis | Manufacturing | Manufacturing Other | 
| Supervalu Inc. | Eden Prairie | Retail | Grocery and Specialty Food Stores | 
| U.S. Bancorp | Minneapolis | Financial Services | Banks | 
| Target Corporation, Inc. | Minneapolis | Retail | Department Stores | 
| 3M Company | Saint Paul | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals | 
training details locations, tags and why hsg
The Hartmann Software Group understands these issues and addresses them and others during any training engagement. Although no IT educational institution can guarantee career or application development success, HSG can get you closer to your goals at a far faster rate than self paced learning and, arguably, than the competition. Here are the reasons why we are so successful at teaching:
- Learn from the experts.  
                                
- We have provided software development and other IT related training to many major corporations in Minnesota since 2002.
 - Our educators have years of consulting and training experience; moreover, we require each trainer to have cross-discipline expertise i.e. be Java and .NET experts so that you get a broad understanding of how industry wide experts work and think.
 
 - Discover tips and tricks about Microsoft programming
 - Get your questions answered by easy to follow, organized Microsoft experts
 - Get up to speed with vital Microsoft programming tools
 - Save on travel expenses by learning right from your desk or home office. Enroll in an online instructor led class. Nearly all of our classes are offered in this way.
 - Prepare to hit the ground running for a new job or a new position
 - See the big picture and have the instructor fill in the gaps
 - We teach with sophisticated learning tools and provide excellent supporting course material
 - Books and course material are provided in advance
 - Get a book of your choice from the HSG Store as a gift from us when you register for a class
 - Gain a lot of practical skills in a short amount of time
 - We teach what we know…software
 - We care…
 














