Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database Training Classes in Abilene, Texas
Learn Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database in Abilene, Texas 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 Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database related training offerings in Abilene, Texas: Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database Training
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8 December, 2025 - 12 December, 2025 - Python for Scientists
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24 November, 2025 - 25 November, 2025 - See our complete public course listing
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Although reports made in May 2010 indicate that Android had outsold Apple iPhones, more recent and current reports of the 2nd quarter of 2011 made by National Purchase Diary (NPD) on Mobile Phone Track service, which listed the top five selling smartphones in the United States for the months of April-June of 2011, indicate that Apple's iPhone 4 and iPhone 3GS outsold other Android phones on the market in the U. S. for the third calendar quarter of 2011. This was true for the previous quarter of the same year; The iPhone 4 held the top spot. The fact that the iPhone 4 claimed top spot does not come as a surprise to the analysts; rather, it is a testament to them of how well the iPhone is revered among consumers. The iPhone 3GS, which came out in 2009 outsold newer Android phones with higher screen resolutions and more processing power. The list of the five top selling smartphones is depicted below:
- Apple iPhone 4
- Apple iPhone 3GS
- HTC EVO 4G
- Motorola Droid 3
- Samsung Intensity II[1]
Apple’s iPhone also outsold Android devices7.8:1 at AT&T’s corporate retail stores in December. A source inside the Apple company told The Mac Observer that those stores sold some 981,000 iPhones between December 1st and December 27th 2011, and that the Apple device accounted for some 66% of all device sales during that period (see the pie figure below) . Android devices, on the other hand, accounted for just 8.5% of sales during the same period.
According to the report, AT&T sold approximately 981,000 iPhones through AT&T corporate stores in the first 27 days of December, 2011 while 126,000 Android devices were sold during the same period. Even the basic flip and slider phones did better than Android, with 128,000 units sold.[2] However, it is important to understand that this is a report for one particular environment at a particular period in time. As the first iPhone carrier in the world, AT&T has been the dominant iPhone carrier in the U.S. since day one, and AT&T has consistently claimed that the iPhone is its best selling device.

Chart courtesy of Mac Observer: http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/iphone_crushes_android_at_att_corporate_stores_in_december/
A more recent report posted in ismashphone.com, dated January 25 2012, indicated that Apple sold 37 million iPhones in Q4 2011. It appears that the iPhone 4S really helped take Apple’s handset past competing Android phones. According to research firm Kantar Worldpanel ComTech, Apple’s U.S. smartphone marketshare has doubled to 44.9 percent.[3] Meanwhile, Android marketshare in the U.S. dropped slightly to 44.8 percent. This report means that the iPhone has edged just a little bit past Android in U.S. marketshare. This is occurred after Apple’s Q1 2012 conference call, which saw themselling 37 million handsets. Meanwhile, it’s reported that marketers of Android devices, such as Motorola Mobility, HTC and Sony Ericsson saw drops this quarter.
I’ve been a technical recruiter for several years, let’s just say a long time. I’ll never forget how my first deal went bad and the lesson I learned from that experience. I was new to recruiting but had been a very good sales person in my previous position. I was about to place my first contractor on an assignment. I thought everything was fine. I nurtured and guided my candidate through the interview process with constant communication throughout. The candidate was very responsive throughout the process. From my initial contact with him, to the phone interview all went well and now he was completing his onsite interview with the hiring manager.
Shortly thereafter, I received the call from the hiring manager that my candidate was the chosen one for the contract position, I was thrilled. All my hard work had paid off. I was going to be a success at this new game! The entire office was thrilled for me, including my co-workers and my bosses. I made a good win-win deal. It was good pay for my candidate and a good margin for my recruiting firm. Everyone was happy.
I left a voicemail message for my candidate so I could deliver the good news. He had agreed to call me immediately after the interview so I could get his assessment of how well it went. Although, I heard from the hiring manager, there was no word from him. While waiting for his call back, I received a call from a Mercedes dealership to verify his employment for a car he was trying to lease. Technically he wasn’t working for us as he had not signed the contract yet…. nor, had he discussed this topic with me. I told the Mercedes office that I would get back to them. Still not having heard back from the candidate, I left him another message and mentioned the call I just received. Eventually he called back. He wanted more money.
I told him that would be impossible as he and I had previously agreed on his hourly rate and it was fine with him. I asked him what had changed since that agreement. He said he made had made much more money in doing the same thing when he lived in California. I reminded him this is a less costly marketplace than where he was living in California. I told him if he signed the deal I would be able to call the car dealership back and confirm that he was employed with us. He agreed to sign the deal.
As the cloud buzz is getting louder with every passing day you are tempted to take the big leap into the cloud but may have restrained yourself paranoid by ad infinitum cloud security discussions floating on the web. No one can deny the fact that your data is the lifeblood your business. So, undoubtedly its security is of paramount importance for survival of your business. As cloud computing is a paradigm shift from the traditional ways of using computing resources, you must understand its practical security aspects.

Is Cloud Computing Safe?
There can’t be a binary answer (Yes or No) to this question. But with my experience and as an authority on the subject I can tell you that technologies enabling Cloud services are not in any way less secure than the traditional or on-premise hosting model. Also, with the evolution of technology, the cloud providers are getting matured and almost all the providers are offering built-in security, privacy, data backups and risk management as a part of their core service.If you are not a big IT company then you must ask yourself:
· Can an on-premise solution or a traditional hosting provider match the same level of standard security and privacy requirement as provided by the specialist cloud provider whose core competency lies in providing state of the art security and privacy?
From Brennan's Blog which is no longer up and running:
I use Remote Desktop all the time to work inside of my development systems hosted by Microsoft Virtual Server. I use the host system to browse the web for documentation and searches as I work and when I need to copy some text from the web browser I find many times the link between the host clipboard and the remote clipboard is broken. In the past I have read that somehow the remote clipboard utility, rdpclip.exe, gets locked and no longer allows the clipboard to be relayed between the host and the client environment. My only way to deal with it was to use the internet clipboard, cl1p.net. I would create my own space and use it to send content between environments. But that is a cumbersome step if you are doing it frequently.
The only way I really knew to fix the clipboard transfer was to close my session and restart it. That meant closing the tools I was using like Visual Studio, Management Studio and the other ancillary processes I have running as I work and then restarting all of it just to restore the clipboard. But today I found a good link on the Terminal Services Blog explaining that what is really happening. The clipboard viewer chain is somehow becoming unresponsive on the local or remote system and events on the clipboards are not being relayed between systems. It is not necessarily a lock being put in place but some sort of failed data transmission. It then goes on to explain the 2 steps you can take to restore the clipboard without restarting your session.
- Use Task Manager to kill the rdpclip.exe process
- Run rdpclip.exe to restart it
The clipboard communications should be restored. My clipboard is currently working because I just restarted my session to fix it, but I wanted to test these steps. I killed rdpclip.exe and started it and was able to copy/paste from the remote to the host system. The next time my clipboard dies I will have to check to see if these steps truly do work.
Tech Life in Texas
| Company Name | City | Industry | Secondary Industry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dr Pepper Snapple Group | Plano | Manufacturing | Nonalcoholic Beverages |
| Western Refining, Inc. | El Paso | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Frontier Oil Corporation | Dallas | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals |
| ConocoPhillips | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Dell Inc | Round Rock | Computers and Electronics | Computers, Parts and Repair |
| Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P. | Houston | Transportation and Storage | Transportation & Storage Other |
| GameStop Corp. | Grapevine | Retail | Retail Other |
| Fluor Corporation | Irving | Business Services | Management Consulting |
| Kimberly-Clark Corporation | Irving | Manufacturing | Paper and Paper Products |
| Exxon Mobil Corporation | Irving | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Cameron International Corporation | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Energy and Utilities Other |
| Celanese Corporation | Irving | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals |
| HollyFrontier Corporation | Dallas | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Kinder Morgan, Inc. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Marathon Oil Corporation | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| United Services Automobile Association | San Antonio | Financial Services | Personal Financial Planning and Private Banking |
| J. C. Penney Company, Inc. | Plano | Retail | Department Stores |
| Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. | Dallas | Energy and Utilities | Energy and Utilities Other |
| Atmos Energy Corporation | Dallas | Energy and Utilities | Alternative Energy Sources |
| National Oilwell Varco Inc. | Houston | Manufacturing | Manufacturing Other |
| Tesoro Corporation | San Antonio | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals |
| Halliburton Company | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Energy and Utilities Other |
| Flowserve Corporation | Irving | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Commercial Metals Company | Irving | Manufacturing | Metals Manufacturing |
| EOG Resources, Inc. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Whole Foods Market, Inc. | Austin | Retail | Grocery and Specialty Food Stores |
| Waste Management, Inc. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Waste Management and Recycling |
| CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Valero Energy Corporation | San Antonio | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals |
| FMC Technologies, Inc. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Alternative Energy Sources |
| Calpine Corporation | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Texas Instruments Incorporated | Dallas | Computers and Electronics | Semiconductor and Microchip Manufacturing |
| SYSCO Corporation | Houston | Wholesale and Distribution | Grocery and Food Wholesalers |
| BNSF Railway Company | Fort Worth | Transportation and Storage | Freight Hauling (Rail and Truck) |
| Affiliated Computer Services, Incorporated (ACS), a Xerox Company | Dallas | Software and Internet | E-commerce and Internet Businesses |
| Tenet Healthcare Corporation | Dallas | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals and Biotech | Hospitals |
| XTO Energy Inc. | Fort Worth | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Group 1 Automotive | Houston | Retail | Automobile Dealers |
| ATandT | Dallas | Telecommunications | Telephone Service Providers and Carriers |
| Anadarko Petroleum Corporation | Spring | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Apache Corporation | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Dean Foods Company | Dallas | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging |
| American Airlines | Fort Worth | Travel, Recreation and Leisure | Passenger Airlines |
| Baker Hughes Incorporated | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gasoline and Oil Refineries |
| Continental Airlines, Inc. | Houston | Travel, Recreation and Leisure | Passenger Airlines |
| RadioShack Corporation | Fort Worth | Computers and Electronics | Consumer Electronics, Parts and Repair |
| KBR, Inc. | Houston | Government | International Bodies and Organizations |
| Spectra Energy Partners, L.P. | Houston | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Energy Future Holdings | Dallas | Energy and Utilities | Energy and Utilities Other |
| Southwest Airlines Corporation | Dallas | Transportation and Storage | Air Couriers and Cargo Services |
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 Texas 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 Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database programming
- Get your questions answered by easy to follow, organized Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database experts
- Get up to speed with vital Oracle, MySQL, Cassandra, Hadoop Database 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…














