Mastodon

Get more awesome Pluralsight content than ever for zero dollars!

Pluralsight content remains enormously popular among a growing audience of technology pros not just because of the breadth of content (we’re talking about well over 4,000 courses now), but because it’s so cheap to get into. Less than a dollar a day and you’ve got access to some really top notch content that’s created by some of the best in the business then scrutinised and peer reviewed to ensure it’s right up there as the best possible training material you can find on the web. It’s amazing the lengths people will go to get their hands on Pluralsight courses…

But here’s the good bit – more content than ever is now available without spending a cent and there are two reasons for that.

Firstly, if you’re an MSDN subscriber there’s 15 courses you can go and watch right now that are free with your subscription:

  1. SOLID Principles of Object Oriented Design
  2. Building a Web App with ASP.NET 5, MVC 6, EF7 and AngularJS
  3. Getting Started with JSON in C# Using Json.NET
  4. C# Fundamentals with Visual Studio 2015
  5. C# Best Practices: Improving on the Basics
  6. WCF End-to-End
  7. Visual Studio 2015: Essentials to the Power-User
  8. Visual Studio Code
  9. Building Highly Scalable Web Applications in Azure
  10. Modernizing Your Websites with Azure Platform as a Service
  11. LINQ Fundamentals
  12. Getting Started with Entity Framework 6
  13. Building Cross-Platform iOS/Android Apps with Xamarin, Visual Studio, and C# – Part 1
  14. Building Cross-Platform iOS/Android Apps with Xamarin, Visual Studio, and C# – Part 2
  15. Building Cross Platform Mobile Apps with C#, Xamarin, and Azure

My obvious bias has lead me to highlight one in particular and I’m really pleased to see my Azure course being made available to so many people. This is a real practical “from the trenches” style course with a heap of knowledge from building and running Have I been pwned? now available to everyone in that course.

Secondly, Microsoft has just announced Visual Studio Dev Essentials and here’s the really awesome bit: if you sign up to that – and it’s free so so there’s nothing stopping you – you get all of Pluralsight’s library for free for six months! That’s massive!

Just to make sure I hadn’t misinterpreted things and you had to sign away your kids or something else nutty first, I went through and signed up myself and sure enough, yes, it is what it says it is. Right after signing up to Dev Essentials I was able to activate the Pluralsight subscription:

Activating the Pluralsight subscription from Dev Essentials

All I gave them was a name and an email address, not credit card details or other personal data, that is all. Literally within 5 minutes I had access to the entire course library for the next six months:

Pluralsight subscription running for another six months

This is awesome value because, well, it’s free. In case you’re wondering, for me as an author I still get all the usual royalties so that’s nice and for the sake of full disclosure, yeah, I still get all the usual royalties!

So that’s it, a totally legitimate and totally free way to get Pluralsight content right now. Enjoy!

Pluralsight
Tweet Post Update Email RSS

Hi, I'm Troy Hunt, I write this blog, create courses for Pluralsight and am a Microsoft Regional Director and MVP who travels the world speaking at events and training technology professionals