Yeah but software engineering is doing so badly this year, especially web development. Have you checked job opportunities news, especially for juniors and entry level? They're almost inexistent.
i'm 18 trying to figure out what to do in IT there is some much out there and don't not what to pick and what to learn. I'm going to collage for IT for 2 yrs don't plan to go for a Bachler's degree. I'm leaning more to cyber security and tips on where to start?
Find an IT internship and get some work experience. After about 1 to 2 years of work, you will have a better understanding of what part of IT to choose
Feels so good to get confirmation on my research. My current goals: Data analytics > Data scientist > ML/AI Engineer. Study path: Google Data Analytics > Google Advanced Data Analytics > Cloud Fundamentals > Mathematics For ML & Data Science > Introduction To Statistics > ML Specialization > Deep Learning Specialization > NLP Specialization
Im not done with all of these yet. Before I actively start applying for jobs I need to build a portfolio, and to build a solid portfolio that will land me a job I need more knowledge. Very soon tho. Im average at math and the courses: math for ML and DS, introduction to statistics and ML specialization was challenging. Tips for you, apply for financial aid to get the courses for free, especially the Stanford ones as they are not part of the coursera plus subscription. Also look up Alex the analyst as he have everything you need to know on yt for free.
@@KHALAF-i8h Just landed two jobs, applied for like 20 before projects and then 5 more after I made a portfolio and got two offers. I applied for onsite/hybrid positions nearby where I live where competition is lower than the remote ones.
Hi, sir. I am Gokul. As a fresher, I have a question: Which certification is good to start, CKA or CKAD? Because certification costs are high in India, please let me know where to start. It will be helpful in my career. In 2025, my goal is to complete AWS SYSOPS, Terraforms, and K8s.
ua-cam.com/video/Z2Lk1sxqo40/v-deo.htmlsi=tv2XAfcwB3Pbo5QX Hi, the learning path depends up on which domain you would like to end up in ? like Cloud Engr role, SRE , DevOps, NOC, Secops OR, platform engr role. all these are kinda subsets that falls under Infra(class sre implements devops, there is a nice video from Liz Fong Jones on SRE vs DevOps difference available online) Also there are some great videos in this DM Community UA-cam channel to help you out. However, if you’re a complete newbie, I’d recommend going through these books first to build a foundation: 1. **The Phoenix Project & The Unicorn Project** (Hard copies are available on Amazon, or you can find them on Libgen. Since Piracy is against community policy I’m totally against I can’t suggest further how to get them for free online.) 2. **Google SRE Books** (Available for free at [sre.google/books/](sre.google/books/)) 3. **Infrastructure as Code** (PDF versions are widely available.) 4. The last two books suggested by the Kodecloud guy are also recommended, but they can be skipped if needed. 5. Once you’ve done some reading, build your CV using a real-world project. A great way to do this is by taking on the **Cloud Resume Challenge**: [www.reddit.com/r/devops/s/zMgWlO4Z5q](www.reddit.com/r/devops/s/zMgWlO4Z5q) Start with one cloud platform (AWS is a good choice), and refer to user guides like the **AWS VPC User Guide PDF** for help. 6. Finally, check out the **DevOps Roadmap**: [github.com/milanm/DevOps-Roadmap](github.com/milanm/DevOps-Roadmap) 7. Explore various Reddit, Discord, and Slack channels to learn about fresher expectations in the industry. 8. If possible, try to join a **product-based startup** (personal opinion). Startups, especially those in the bootstrap or hyper-scale phase (like Zepto or Cred), offer great learning opportunities. For instance, Cred is hiring freshers: [workat.tech/company/cred/jobs/site-reliability-engineering-intern-8bQrqPyq] Working at a startup as a fresher will help you gain end-to-end experience in infrastructure implementation (again, just my personal opinion). 9. In addition, you’ll need to learn some basics in Agile, software development (especially Backend development, mostly in Java(&using some framework like Spring etc including Log, metrics, tracing implementations), Databases, and DataLakes(CDC/ETL etc..)), and Networking, Container Runtime mgmt(esp Docker). 10. Certifications are not mandatory-it’s a personal choice.
@techwithsoleyman but how do you keep learning things and not getting distracted by things online. People make it look so easy and people like Indians and asains keeps getting these roles. How do you know what to concentrate on? What is right?
@techwithsoleyman it's already happening bro. My company is pushing AI hard and went on hiring freeze. They had 2 roles open which they cancelled for now. We're looking at a future where few senior devs will be managing AI agents
You can grab my Beginner’s Guide to Cloud for FREE ->
www.cloudengineeracademy.io
You mentioned a lot of jobs in Data, but i think you missed one, that has a very high demand and growth potential: Data Engineers
Following you since 15k subs.
Glad to see you grow !
Software engineering jobs have the largest market share in the industry. It should be on this list.
Yeah but software engineering is doing so badly this year, especially web development. Have you checked job opportunities news, especially for juniors and entry level? They're almost inexistent.
@ I would learn Java or C#. There are tons of jobs in backend.
@@zach.intech in what sectors precisely?
@@zach.intech are you talking about web dev?
Too much competition would rank it down
Just found your channel, good stuff!
i'm 18 trying to figure out what to do in IT there is some much out there and don't not what to pick and what to learn. I'm going to collage for IT for 2 yrs don't plan to go for a Bachler's degree. I'm leaning more to cyber security and tips on where to start?
Find an IT internship and get some work experience. After about 1 to 2 years of work, you will have a better understanding of what part of IT to choose
Once the cloud is up and running, the consultant and devs aren’t needed in their numbers anymore
You're wrong.
Great!
Feels so good to get confirmation on my research. My current goals:
Data analytics > Data scientist > ML/AI Engineer.
Study path:
Google Data Analytics > Google Advanced Data Analytics > Cloud Fundamentals > Mathematics For ML & Data Science > Introduction To Statistics > ML Specialization > Deep Learning Specialization > NLP Specialization
Where did you get these courses from?
All on Coursera
@@JohannesVinterand did you get a job? Were you good in math beforehand?
Im not done with all of these yet.
Before I actively start applying for jobs I need to build a portfolio, and to build a solid portfolio that will land me a job I need more knowledge. Very soon tho.
Im average at math and the courses: math for ML and DS, introduction to statistics and ML specialization was challenging.
Tips for you, apply for financial aid to get the courses for free, especially the Stanford ones as they are not part of the coursera plus subscription.
Also look up Alex the analyst as he have everything you need to know on yt for free.
@@KHALAF-i8h Just landed two jobs, applied for like 20 before projects and then 5 more after I made a portfolio and got two offers.
I applied for onsite/hybrid positions nearby where I live where competition is lower than the remote ones.
Are these numbers applicable to Canada ??
How about ux design? I am learning it ib coursera right now
Hi, sir. I am Gokul. As a fresher, I have a question: Which certification is good to start, CKA or CKAD? Because certification costs are high in India, please let me know where to start. It will be helpful in my career. In 2025, my goal is to complete AWS SYSOPS, Terraforms, and K8s.
ua-cam.com/video/Z2Lk1sxqo40/v-deo.htmlsi=tv2XAfcwB3Pbo5QX
Hi, the learning path depends up on which domain you would like to end up in ? like
Cloud Engr role, SRE , DevOps, NOC, Secops OR, platform engr role.
all these are kinda subsets that falls under Infra(class sre implements devops, there is a nice video from Liz Fong Jones on SRE vs DevOps difference available online)
Also there are some great videos in this DM Community UA-cam channel to help you out. However, if you’re a complete newbie, I’d recommend going through these books first to build a foundation:
1. **The Phoenix Project & The Unicorn Project**
(Hard copies are available on Amazon, or you can find them on Libgen. Since Piracy is against community policy I’m totally against I can’t suggest further how to get them for free online.)
2. **Google SRE Books**
(Available for free at [sre.google/books/](sre.google/books/))
3. **Infrastructure as Code**
(PDF versions are widely available.)
4. The last two books suggested by the Kodecloud guy are also recommended, but they can be skipped if needed.
5. Once you’ve done some reading, build your CV using a real-world project. A great way to do this is by taking on the **Cloud Resume Challenge**:
[www.reddit.com/r/devops/s/zMgWlO4Z5q](www.reddit.com/r/devops/s/zMgWlO4Z5q)
Start with one cloud platform (AWS is a good choice), and refer to user guides like the **AWS VPC User Guide PDF** for help.
6. Finally, check out the **DevOps Roadmap**:
[github.com/milanm/DevOps-Roadmap](github.com/milanm/DevOps-Roadmap)
7. Explore various Reddit, Discord, and Slack channels to learn about fresher expectations in the industry.
8. If possible, try to join a **product-based startup** (personal opinion). Startups, especially those in the bootstrap or hyper-scale phase (like Zepto or Cred), offer great learning opportunities. For instance, Cred is hiring freshers:
[workat.tech/company/cred/jobs/site-reliability-engineering-intern-8bQrqPyq]
Working at a startup as a fresher will help you gain end-to-end experience in infrastructure implementation (again, just my personal opinion).
9. In addition, you’ll need to learn some basics in Agile, software development (especially Backend development, mostly in Java(&using some framework like Spring etc including Log, metrics, tracing implementations), Databases, and DataLakes(CDC/ETL etc..)), and Networking, Container Runtime mgmt(esp Docker).
10. Certifications are not mandatory-it’s a personal choice.
@@neeltnt1992 Thanks for the reply sir, I will check it, sir
Are "Data Scientists" forgotten now because of all the LLM hype?
Hi whata should ibtakenin courser since i have no background in i.t. is it google i.t or microsoft i.t. thanks.
Soleyman have you seen the new OpenAI model release?
What about data engineer
you know what else is massive?
😂
Are Jobs really there in the uk, your course will sell of course
Can someone working on the helpdesk transistion to cloud engineer?
1000% - very easy aswell
SO, SWE, IS IT OVER?
So Data is the way to go for the next several years.
Data, Cloud, Security, AI all very good
@ that’s really good to hear
@@techwithsoleyman they are all pretty much dead at the moment.
Skill issue, always room for the best at any company
@techwithsoleyman but how do you keep learning things and not getting distracted by things online. People make it look so easy and people like Indians and asains keeps getting these roles. How do you know what to concentrate on? What is right?
Depend on countries.
Did you check out the o3 model which is AGI? That will remove a lot of IT jobs
Its not
@techwithsoleyman it's already happening bro. My company is pushing AI hard and went on hiring freeze. They had 2 roles open which they cancelled for now. We're looking at a future where few senior devs will be managing AI agents
Sounds like what’s going on in the corporate space, their going to remove roles
SoundHound AI...that stock is going nuts right now...
AI 🤖 will replace Tech Job ☠️💀🪦⚰️
Amazon employees are striking again😹😹😹😹
Think I heard their forced RTO plan is falling. I also saw a study that said remote work produces more productivity