I love your videos, I see that you aren't trying to clickbait, hype them up or dumb them down to get more likes and views, mostly because UA-cam isn't your income stream. As a result, we just get a great analysis of whats out there. Legend
Mate, if in almost the exact opposite situation. 65yrs old with skills from waaaayy back. I'm lucky enough to have found an employer who needs these skills, but then the fact that they need these ancient skills probably doesn't speak well for their future planning!
Not too surprising, since this was a snapshot of postings it could fluctuate a lot in weeks or months. For example, if the moment I got the data a large company that uses a specific provider posts a ton of jobs, it will skew things. Imagine if MSFT happened to post 100 azure jobs the same day. It'd be cool to get frequent snapshots to see how it trends over time to eliminate that variation, some day I'll have the time!
Hi Sir, your videos were very helpful to understand what data engineering is. I am looking to learn data engineering and I have no prior coding experience. If you can make a video for absolute beginners where to learn from. it would be really great. thank you.
Respectful counter argument: if you decide to specialize in something that is not "modern" or popular, then you can reach the top easier. There are SOO many legacy systems which mostly work but then crap out twice a year. That's where the 600k a year Fortran expert comes in.
Certainly a route you can take, I knew a CICS/Cobol guy who had a great career. But it can take some work to become an expert when there aren't a lot of opportunities to get experience.
@nullQueries yup, you're right on that. That's why they're paid so well. They're more scarce than elves 😂 certainly on average, your video's point stands true.
Each is a percentage of the total looked at. They don't add up because postings can contradict themselves, one line will talk about using azure, the next aws. So it will count for both. Same with remote/hybrid or levels.
I love your videos, I see that you aren't trying to clickbait, hype them up or dumb them down to get more likes and views, mostly because UA-cam isn't your income stream. As a result, we just get a great analysis of whats out there. Legend
I barely leave a comment on youtube, but your videos are so factual and informative
Thanks for summarizing, in this extreme confuse world.
Your videos are great, keep up, your channel will continue to grow!
thanks mate!!, greetings from Argentina
This video was great, nice info. Would love one for Data Science jobs
Mate, if in almost the exact opposite situation. 65yrs old with skills from waaaayy back. I'm lucky enough to have found an employer who needs these skills, but then the fact that they need these ancient skills probably doesn't speak well for their future planning!
Yeah, that was actually helpful. Thanks
Hey, i have watched another youtuber doing the same project and he came up with different numbers. Specially on cloud stuff
Not too surprising, since this was a snapshot of postings it could fluctuate a lot in weeks or months. For example, if the moment I got the data a large company that uses a specific provider posts a ton of jobs, it will skew things. Imagine if MSFT happened to post 100 azure jobs the same day. It'd be cool to get frequent snapshots to see how it trends over time to eliminate that variation, some day I'll have the time!
that was so helpful, thanks
What do you do as a data scientist though?
i see people do believe in you sir!
Hello nullQueries, I just had a question. After learning sql and python, what is the skill that I should focus on next to become a data engineer?
Hi Sir, your videos were very helpful to understand what data engineering is. I am looking to learn data engineering and I have no prior coding experience. If you can make a video for absolute beginners where to learn from. it would be really great. thank you.
Respectful counter argument: if you decide to specialize in something that is not "modern" or popular, then you can reach the top easier. There are SOO many legacy systems which mostly work but then crap out twice a year. That's where the 600k a year Fortran expert comes in.
Certainly a route you can take, I knew a CICS/Cobol guy who had a great career. But it can take some work to become an expert when there aren't a lot of opportunities to get experience.
@nullQueries yup, you're right on that. That's why they're paid so well. They're more scarce than elves 😂 certainly on average, your video's point stands true.
Hey, thanks for this, but how are the percentages calculated ? I see they exceed a 100.
Each is a percentage of the total looked at. They don't add up because postings can contradict themselves, one line will talk about using azure, the next aws. So it will count for both. Same with remote/hybrid or levels.
is it possible for high school education to break in data engineer ? or industry only recruit bachelor ?