I just got a job as an enterprise mobility developer at capgemini (starting when I graduate in a few months) even though I've only made basic apps using java and firebase. Do you have a course that could help me? I'm terrified that I won't be qualified to do the job in Kotlin
Congrats on the new job 🎉 I've got a couple of courses/playlists that might help 9 Week Android Development With Kotlin Course. Covers Android fundamentals in Kotlin ua-cam.com/video/pO-g88X0TEw/v-deo.html Kotlin Language Tutorial Series ua-cam.com/video/6kKXkaSIPJg/v-deo.html Using the Android course to help see how to use Kotlin to build for Android (which you already know how to do) and using the Kotlin series to dive deeper into Kotlin features will hopefully be a good combo for learning. If you have any specific questions/challenges I'm more than happy to help!! Good luck!
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Great episode with the state of the art of mobile development in 2021. I agree that the only thing that seems to impact in the industry at this moment is foldables...
It'll be really interesting to see if 2021 brings a really popular foldable; something to really motivate teams to consider that form factor and provide really strong support
I have learned spring boot and hibernate and i am very comfortable with it. Next thing is i want to learn android ( kotlin ) . But my friend says learn angular instead if android . Android facinates me i never get bored in reading google codelabs. If i will choose android will my previous knowledge go in vain ?
I don't think your learning will be wasted. There will certainly be some level of cross over from what you've already done. And having some server-side experience can come in really valuable when building mobile apps
Thank u for dis great content and keep up d good work. Pls is Java still relevant for beginners android developer to learn and how much is learning Java increase my chances of getting a job?
Great questions! Next week's podcast actually gets into this in more detail. The short answer is yes. Java is still relevant. I think Kotlin is becoming a must have for many employers, but knowing Java will continue to be a very valuable skill. Being comfortable with both languages (you don't have to be an expert) will help when working in older code bases and in finding solutions in older documentation
Check out more podcast episodes ➡️ ua-cam.com/play/PLEPZdzLLJH96lPEbwdXDSqqsykpZW3Z6o.html
I just got a job as an enterprise mobility developer at capgemini (starting when I graduate in a few months) even though I've only made basic apps using java and firebase. Do you have a course that could help me? I'm terrified that I won't be qualified to do the job in Kotlin
Congrats on the new job 🎉
I've got a couple of courses/playlists that might help
9 Week Android Development With Kotlin Course. Covers Android fundamentals in Kotlin
ua-cam.com/video/pO-g88X0TEw/v-deo.html
Kotlin Language Tutorial Series
ua-cam.com/video/6kKXkaSIPJg/v-deo.html
Using the Android course to help see how to use Kotlin to build for Android (which you already know how to do) and using the Kotlin series to dive deeper into Kotlin features will hopefully be a good combo for learning. If you have any specific questions/challenges I'm more than happy to help!!
Good luck!
Great episode with the state of the art of mobile development in 2021. I agree that the only thing that seems to impact in the industry at this moment is foldables...
It'll be really interesting to see if 2021 brings a really popular foldable; something to really motivate teams to consider that form factor and provide really strong support
I have learned spring boot and hibernate and i am very comfortable with it.
Next thing is i want to learn android ( kotlin ) . But my friend says learn angular instead if android .
Android facinates me i never get bored in reading google codelabs.
If i will choose android will my previous knowledge go in vain ?
I don't think your learning will be wasted. There will certainly be some level of cross over from what you've already done. And having some server-side experience can come in really valuable when building mobile apps
Thank u for dis great content and keep up d good work. Pls is Java still relevant for beginners android developer to learn and how much is learning Java increase my chances of getting a job?
Great questions! Next week's podcast actually gets into this in more detail. The short answer is yes. Java is still relevant. I think Kotlin is becoming a must have for many employers, but knowing Java will continue to be a very valuable skill. Being comfortable with both languages (you don't have to be an expert) will help when working in older code bases and in finding solutions in older documentation
finally should i learn Kotlin for android developing???
My most recent podcast episode actually covers this very question: ua-cam.com/video/CAeam9gs4f0/v-deo.html