The Learn Enough Story

Learn Enough to Be Dangerous is a leader in the movement to teach technical sophistication, the seemingly magical ability to take command of your computer and get it to do your bidding. This includes everything from command lines and coding to guessing keyboard shortcuts, Googling error messages, and knowing when to just reboot the darn thing. We believe there are at least a billion people who can benefit from learning technical sophistication, probably more. To join our movement, sign up for our official email list now.

Html was created by Tim Berners-Lee here . It's not a programming language, but a markup language. It's used to create web pages. Its not true that Sir Tim invented HTML in order to share pictures of his cat, but it would be cool if it were.

An adorable kitten

Background

Learn Enough to Be Dangerous is an outgrowth of the Ruby on Rails Tutorial and the Softcover publishing platform. This page is part of the sample site for Learn Enough HTML to Be Dangerous, which teaches the basics of HyperText Markup Language, the universal language of the World Wide Web. Other related tutorials can be found at learnenough.com.

Founders

Learn Enough to Be Dangerous was founded in 2015 by Michael Hartl, Lee Donahoe, and Nick Merwin. We believe that the kind of technical sophistication taught by the Learn Enough tutorials can benefit at least a billion people, and probably more.

Michael Hartl

Michael Hartl

Micheal is the creator of the Ruby on Rails Tutorial and the Learn Enough to Be Dangerous series of tutorials. He is an advanced student of Krav Maga and has a passion for teaching others how to code.

Lee Donahoe

Lee Donahoe

When he's not literally swimming with sharks or hunting powder stashes on his snowboard, you can find Lee in front of his computer designing interfaces, doing front-end development, or writing some of the interface-related Learn Enough tutorials. You should follow Lee on Twitter here.

Nick Merwin

Nick Merwin

You may have seen him shredding guitar live with Capital Cities on Jimmy Kimmel, Conan, or The Ellen Show, but rest assured he is a true nerd at heart. He's just as happy shredding well-spec'd lines of code from a tour bus as he is from his kitchen table.

You should follow Nick on Twitter here.