10 Udemy Courses Every Developer SHOULD Own (NOT just coding)
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- Опубліковано 15 тра 2024
- In this video, I want to share 10 Udemy Courses that I think every developer should have in their toolbox. I owe so much of my success to Udemy and have a pretty large collection of courses myself, most of all being very beneficial to me.
If you are a developer, be sure to check this video out to fill in some gaps you may have in your coding career. These are my recommended top Udemy courses, most of which I own myself and can personally vouch for.
What are your favorite Udemy courses for developers, software engineering, data science, or career growth? Leave a comment below.
Links to all courses are below 👇
Promo codes below 👇
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Timestamps
00:00 Introduction
01:17 A JavaScript Course
02:08 A Cloud Certification Course
04:16 A 100 Days of X Course
06:08 A Linux Course
07:50 An Algorithm/Coding Interview Course
09:20 An API Design Course
12:09 A Clean Code Course
14:02 A "I Want To Be a Senior Dev" Course
15:56 A "I Didn't Get a Computer Science Degree" Course
Udemy Deals Updated Regularly - travis.media/udemy
Courses
1. A JavaScript Course
Course - geni.us/LZvS75
2. A Cloud Certification Course
AWS Cloud Practitioner - geni.us/X08kfh
AWS Solutions Architect - geni.us/eZnE
Azure AZ-900 - geni.us/ZHsiQq
Azure AZ-104 - geni.us/BHx4wLW
Google - geni.us/RgVuS6r
3. A 100 Days of X Course
Python - geni.us/n80Kf
JavaScript - geni.us/TyAC
Data Science - geni.us/VguVVp
4. A Linux Course
Course - geni.us/gbcU
5. An Algorithm/Coding Interview Course
JavaScript - geni.us/WRK31o9
Python - geni.us/3LC9C5C
6. An API Design Course
NodeJs - geni.us/wu9qk
.NET - geni.us/y2H3B
7. A SQL Course
Course - geni.us/KRE0
8. A Clean Code Course
Course 1 - geni.us/Z8yy
Course 2 - geni.us/UYduHpz
9. A "I Want To Be a Senior Dev" Course
Course 1 - geni.us/WLN5p
Course 2 - geni.us/IW7V6D4
10 A "I Didn't Get A Computer Science Degree Course"
A+ Core 1 - geni.us/0UIw
A+ Core 2 - geni.us/4dFqqmU
Network+ - geni.us/4L1g
Security+ - geni.us/KaWhOB
Links
Finding Udemy Coupon Codes Every Time - travis.media/where-i-find-wor...
Udemy Deals Updated Regularly - travis.media/udemy
May 2024 Udemy Promos
All month - IT Certification Courses ($12.99) promo - geni.us/TY8M0x
Sale | 4/30 - 5/3 - (Courses from $11.99 4/30 - 5/3) - geni.us/le1lCi
Sale | 5/7 - 5/9 - (Courses from $13.99 5/7 - 5/9) - geni.us/hKdeKnZ
Sale | 5/14 - 5/24 - (Courses from 85% off 5/14 - 5/24) - geni.us/Bi9u
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Always up to 50% off -geni.us/eDkHN
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Learn to Code Web Developer Blueprint - geni.us/HoswN2
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** Some of the links in this description may be affiliate links that I may get a little cut of. Thank you. - Наука та технологія
3 books that every beginner should give a chance if they feel deeply frustrated with learning to code (like I did for a long time):
1) Eloquent Javascript (if you’re completely new to programming)
2) Smarter Way to Learn Python (the best to learn python)
3) Head First Javascript Programming (great to develop your knowledge on JS)
The beginning is the most difficult part. Get the basics right and learning anything else becomes much quicker after that.
Head first should be the beginners book imo. I easily passed my java oca exam but found Eloquent JS hard.
Hard, have you tried "javascript the definitive guide" from o'reilly ? @@nickwoodward819
Thanks. Do you have any recommendations for APIs?
@@user-cw3jg9jq6d what do you want to do?
What's the difference between the books and the course?
A short overview:
1. 01:17 - A Javascript Course
2. 02:08 - A Cloud Certification Course
3. 04:16 - 100 Days of x Course
4. 06:08 - Linux Course
5. 07:52 - Algorithm Course
6. 09:20 - API Design Course
7. 11:00 - An SQL Course
8. 12:09 - Clean Code Course
9. 14:02 - I want to be a Senior Dev Course
10. 15:56 - I didn't get a Computer Science Degree Course
You missed SQL
Thanks!
@@jacksparrow877 Thanks, fixed it
He forgot Git
11. How GPT 5 will kill all software developer jobs.
12. How GPT 8 will eradicate all Desk jobs.
13. How AI will take over the world on a Friday the 13th.
I really appreciate the emphasis on foundational skills and mindset in this list. I feel like most videos like this would be about xyz cool language/trendy technology/etc so it’s nice to get some advice on how to obtain some fundamentals. Being 2 years in as a bootcamp-taught developer it’s become clear how important all these skills are and how badly I lack them, definitely going to work through these courses. Thanks!
Nice list, most of them I had already, and I started a long DevOps course recently that covers the Linux and Cloud. The "I want to be a Senior" is something really underrated, most developers focus only on technical things and forget that there are a lot of important things in your career besides coding.
I really appreciate this video because for me personally I'm always looking to develop my skills no matter how much I know or think I know (I'm a full-stack/front-end focused developer). Some of these I can disagree with to a point but find myself agreeing with you on almost everything to a certain degree and I'm sure this is because my experiences are similar to yours but not the same. Either way there are stages that we go through in our professional endeavors and I think this is a comprehensive way to envelop yourself into a successful environment.
I think you missed Git and Github
Amazing content Travis! I haven't heard abou the 100 days of x courses and just loved the idea, great way to get introduced to a new language and get its common do's and don'ts, thanks for sharing!
Great video Travis! UX design courses like the one on Coursera could be helpful as well. Couldn't hurt to know a few design and accessibility concepts which could help as a developer. I'm sure there are good ones on Udemy as well.
Actually I should have included a UX course. I took one early on and found it really helpful personally and for anyone getting into web dev. Good recommendation!
@@TravisMedia can u mention which UX course ur refering
Please make a "part two" video. Based on the feedback from other comments it could include:
1. containers (docker/kubernetes)
2. front-end (react) and UX
3. git
4. project management/agile/development process
5. system design/architecture
6. functional programming
7. low level programming (c, c++ or rust)
8. regex
9. testing
10. ...
There are so many other good suggestions, thank you so much!
add continuous integration to that list
So much to learn! life-long learning
I think you should include Docker and Kubernetes, they are becoming essential for most frameworks.
True! Good call
@@TravisMedia you are a great teacher... I'm interested in building mobile apps , please how do i start ? And what and what do i have to get aclamitized with ? .. i need your reply my teacher
@@creativeisland1996 Damn you're helpless, take some initiative.
@@mikyhtx don't be so harsh, we were all at this stage at some point in time.
I agree with you @soulofangel1990
Great video. I would recommend courses from Tim Buchalka (Java , API, general programming, etc), Colt Steelee (Git, Web develpment bootcamps, etc) and Mike Meyers (CompTIA).
Thank you for this amazing video! Just realized I have 4 out of 10 lol. Also, maybe add a version control course? I landed on a software developer job with Angela's 100 days Python, AWS cloud practitioner course, and a Git course.
I just find it fascinating and to be honest really sweet of Angela Yu how much love and detail she is putting into her courses, especially the 100 days of Pyhton course. She provides you with all these Cheat Sheets, Motivational posters etc. it is so lovely.
Her course sucked! Jose 100x better. I hated her course
Best 13 USD I've ever spent on any online course.
Hi can you plz suggest some of the best courses from Coursera?
@@TTT-oj1mj I only did the front end cert from Meta but from the curriculum I found the IBM Backend Course very promising since they also teach you a bit of deployment.
Her course is from 2022. Does it make a difference?
I think you miss some course about Containers like docker or orchestration for containers like k8s .
Thank you so much 👌🏻
This is an awesome guide, thank you! When I was learning to code I would take so many of these courses and I really loves doing them. However since I have become a full time developer I find it so difficult to find the time to learn outside or work. I have been trying to work through the same course now for the past few months : (
Max/Academind has great courses for pretty much anything webdev related (Vue, React, Angular, mobile, Python, Node, SQL, Mongo, GIT...) and they all great. Because of his Vue course I got a well paid job, but all of them are great. This is actually a very good list, great work!
Max classes got me a couple promotions. Love that dude
@@simplymincy Wow that's great, I would like to know what exactly you learn and implemented which helped you
Maximilian is a hack.
Try the Net Ninja, most of his courses are free on UA-cam...he's the best.
@ashok basin I was a QA engineer but wanted to do more besides test automation. So, I took his Javascript class and then his react class. That react class was so good I was able to help developers make components in our ui library when I wasn't updating our test automation suite. I even started fixing bugs I found in the code. After about a year I built my portfolio site up and then got promoted because they know I would go elsewhere if not. I've had another promotion since then and i took his react native class and I'm looking to launch my own app on the app store later this year. I've taken other classes and done other sites like Frontend masters to gain even further knowledge but max was my goto for getting a good understanding of something.
I even got senior and staff engineers singing his praise because a lot of them worked in angular and php so the move to react was even easier with his class
Max is my favorite teacher. I have learned everything related to web development from him and I am currently working to complete all of his courses. He not only possesses the ability to teach effectively but also demonstrates the ability to think critically.
Thank you Travis, great video! the only udemy course that I would add to your list is "React - The Complete Guide (incl Hooks, React Router, Redux)" from Maximilian Schwarzmüller, the best udemy react course, once again thanks for all of your content Travis, it's a great guide!
Great recommendation on a React course. That's a good one!
Max is a hack. 🤦♂️
İn my opinion, the best react course, john smilga. I learned lots of things
@@ecagirbas8323yeah me too. I choose John Smilga, I buy course from max too btw.
@@TravisMedia is there a part 2 of this video coming? maybe also broadening outside udemy. There must be some great free courses on other sites like coursera?
Travis, as far as Java Script is concerned, Anthony Alicea’s “understanding java script the weird parts “ is a great one. It reinforces the fundamentals
But it's way too old (based on an obsolete version of ES). One can learn the basics but has to take another course
@@SShreyas17 yes. I wish he creates more courses.
Great video ! One of few I emailed to myself for further review!
You could have added an 11th topic about Agility/project management
I'm about to go back to school for my masters in computer science, 20 years after getting the bachelors. Seeing as how I barely survived the first time around, I was questioning the wisdom of this decision. They're gonna make me take algorithms again and I still have PTSD from when I took it as an undergrad. Of course, we didn't have UA-cam (never mind things like Udemy) back then to help you out. Your recommendation for the algo course on Udemy just might save my ass. I see it has sections on things like dynamic programming, which to this day sends shivers down my spine. So, thanks for this video!
I personally can't go with the course, but follow instructors who make us think properly. A few of them are already covered in thistle video like ZTM - Andrei Neagoi, Ranga Karanam, Scott duffy, Angela Yu, jose portilla, Maximillian. Some more to consider would be Abdul Bari, Mosh Hamedani, Brad Traversy, Leila Gharani, Peter Hanley, Bharat Thippireddy, Boris Paskhaver, Navin Reddy.
abdul and mosh are some of the best programming teacher i have ever seen.
Damn boi, did you get a Masters from Udemy?! lmao
@@chillydoog 😄😁
I also highly recommend to check Stephen's Grider courses, he's brilliant in giving you deep understanding on how things work under the hood.
Great video! I have been developing for 25+ years and there is always something to learn or to brush up on. These online course are great for Jr developers to get up to speed quickly. Also, they are great for us old timers trying to stay current.
I am learning cybersecurity in a community college. As an experienced person in the field of coding do u think i will need to learn about coding to be successful in cybersecurity
As a Tech Writer, I found this extremely helpful. It will help me develop the programming conversational skills I need to be able to communicate effectively with my SMEs. Thank you! Much appreciated.
This is great information thanks as a almost new grad of a boot camp front end developer course I’m finding it hard to getting my foot in the door so seeing these will hopefully get my skill up and sharp until I land my first role.
Impressive, you really gave me a guideline of which I know will benefit me in the future. No more randomized learning as a self taught developer. Thank you 😊
This is exactly what I want right now, you are so amazing! Thank you so much.
I'm working my way through several of these, they are long, it takes time and effort. I agree with one of the comments, Colt Steele's Git/Github course is pretty much essential.
i have to say one of the courses you missed was about the different UML diagrams In my opinion they are really important to work on a project and provide its stability over the time
Jonas' course on JavaScript is incredible.
I've been taking it for a little over a month now, and it's crazy how I went from no knowledge to where I am now, I've made a couple of small webapps. And that isn't much, but I'm only a third of the way through.
Take that course if you need to know JS. Seriously.
Hey i am also doing this Jonas course and i had just completed clousre and dive into arrays ,where u have been in course
@@abusalim49 Section 10: A closer look at functions
I absolutely love this collection and will definitely take them at some point in my learning journey. Of course, udemy can't replace a couple of years studying for a cs degree but it sure provides some clear and fast track way to get an understanding of a certain technology. Big thanks 🤝
Very useful, I will definetly check this video again in the future, I really trust your recommendations as I took the Jonas Schmedtmann JS course and it is incredibly good. Will you recommend any specific Angular course?
These are all good recommendations. I am a front end web dev but I still have to use most/all of the skills taught in these courses, even if only in an infrequent/surface level capacity, on some occasion at my job.
I like the idea of having a course as sort of a reference, a textbook or a cheatsheet. It's good if these courses are made with that in mind. Awesome
Can you explain what do you mean as a Cheatsheet? Like what do you reference.
@@GoodByeSkyHarborLive um e.g. a course of setting up an nginx server, a course on mTLS in Java, etc., to revisit when struggling to achieve something in particular. But such a course would have to a wide gradient of information, ranging from the fundamentals to the advanced cases. Usually it's the former, and one has to go build himself the complex picture from the bits on Stackoverflow... Which is inefficient and full of dead ends
When a list contains courses like #9, you know it's a great one.
Thanks for the great recommendations! could you please suggest one for functional programming may be in C# and system design?
Great List Travis. I was looking something like this list. Thank you for your Hard work For this video.
I started becoming a self taught programmer when I was 14. By the time I got to college, my college courses didn't teach me much on coding, as I already understood the fundamentals. What really helped me to grow, was my first coding job, working under a senior software developer. He helped me learn best practices and how to code in a cleaner, more efficient style, that I wouldn't have learned just working on my own. Now I have been working in software for almost 15 years and I still find that his instruction was invaluable. My biggest recommendation to all junior software developers, or anyone who is getting started with coding, is usually to find a mentor who already knows these clean design styles. Glad to see that you included a course like that in your list!
That’s awesome, thanks for sharing Patrick!
But the mentoring would only help one you understood the fundamentals like you took in the class or learned by your own right?
You are indeed a great man, you shared us this awesome information and structured now our brain knows which direction we need.
Absolutely loved that list!!! I should have found your channel much sooner, but it's never too late 🔥
jonas course changed my life i just watched his first two modules of his course and i just understood dart easily .
I think Udemy such a underrated platform to learn and upskill. I took couple of courses by max/academind and I learned a lot. btw thanks for sharing this, this will certainly help.
I paid only 450 rupees ($5.5 ) for their course which is far more lower then most of the platform. By underrated I mean they are providing good courses at very cheap price. I would be happy to give even $100 for their courses. may be its their customer acquisition strategy but they have very good price to knowledge ratio.
For those having trouble finding promo codes, I have added this month's promo codes in the description or look to travis.media/udemy. What courses would you recommend?
Thank you so much for listing these excellent courses.
The 100 days python course is never in sale. Never, ever. I've wishilsted it ages ago and every single time when I check Udemy during the special week sale, the price is always the same. In other hand, Portilla's courses always have some oscillation.
@@edydossantos any other similar course that you would recommend on its place?
@@zeminem35 unfortunately no. It seems like the people from app brewery is on a very long vacation. They don't respond posts on Facebook for two years already. So do in the twitter. It's a shame.
Maybe this other one from Portilla, that was referred by the UA-camr, something lime zero to hero, José Portilla.
Thanks Travis, I missed the 25-26 Jan codes, but went through your blog article for finding coupons. Took me longer than I'd have liked to find a code that worked for the courses I wanted, but eventually found one that brought most of my cart down to the $11-$16 range you suggested. Thanks for the tips!
Great list!
The AWS Certified Cloud course would be helpful for me.
Wow! Great video! Great advice! Really enjoyed this content. I will check out some of these courses the next time there is a sale.
Great work! I will add this to number 10:
1. Computer Organization and Architecture
2. Data Structure & Algorithms in pure C language courses
I have paid for some courses, but found a free course here on UA-cam to be much better. Here's the channel name: Neso Academy. I hope this helps some people.
Thanks for sharing!
I honestly would give a huge credit to Dr Angela Yu whose courses on Web Development literally helped me learn the basics of coding. And I don't think anyone would question Angela Yu's skills as a teacher.
This video again was insightful with all tips.
What wonderful content, I'm a software developer and this video was very useful for me, I think it'll help many people who are starting with programming too. thank you Travis, you got a new subscriber.
Thanks for sharing! It's valuable for me to get in the right track toward to the career transfer.
What Udemy courses do you recommend? What other one(s) should I have included?
you told everything
Maybe one focused on system design
Great video, like it
I don't know if these courses cover it, but programming principles like oop, functional, etc
I think it helps when you can do functional programming in lisp or clojure to be a better programmer in any other language
To avoid big issues like stack trace, and global mutation
Git?? Version Control
Could you recommend a good indepth golang course?
perhaps monitoring tools, like grafana, opsgenie, etc
You should check Colt Steele courses. He makes really great stuff
Yes he does. He’s a great teacher and I have a few of his courses. I’ve recommended his Python courses many times.
Thank you, sir! It is a really helpful video. Quite a handy list for a beginning developer like myself.
I would love to see this same video but for C# and everything you need revolving around that. but awesome video! still need everything here :)
I think for some of these more fundamental subjects (e.g. Linux/SQL) it is better to just buy good books. Way more practical to use them as reference in the future.
Good advice. Many definitely would prefer books.
The best and smartest comment in this whole thread.
What books are good?
Honestly the internet does the same thing and doesn't require keeping a pile of books on hand.
The quality of the courses can vary greatly, with some being highly informative and others being of poor quality. Keep in mind that not all instructors are qualified teachers, so it's important to be cautious when making a purchase, even if the course is on sale. I have taken several courses from this platform and while some were useful, others were a waste of time.
which ones are great and which ones are not that great?
Loved your video... not only informative but it has a lot of value beyond every course you suggest. It will be very useful and resourceful for my peers. Thanks! Ah, SUBSCRIBED by the way
A Udemy teacher who teaches computer science concepts in detail is Vignesh Sekar. He has course series on operating systems, computer architecture, the theory of computation, discrete math and database management. I think the first two categories might be helpful for programmers specializing in IoT, C++, apps that depend a lot on multithreading, and so forth. I'm not sure who the third and fourth categories would be useful for: I took a discrete math class in college (university) and I think it helps me a little with logic and binary numbers, but I'm not sure how much. The last category could be useful for SQL developers, aspiring DBA's, etc. I'm taking the database management series now. The best thing to do is either take a CS series that you're curious about or wait until you need to learn a topic, rather than trying to learn a lot of theory just because you think you should.
It's interesting that all of those options broke your $15 rule. 😉
I'm going through a CSS/JS course on Udemy at the moment, so will look at some of those once I've completed that. Ta! 🙂
Idk if you're being sarcastic but when he says you shouldn't pay too much for a course, he's referring to the fact that Udemy has constant "2 hours left!!!" sales that bring the price way down for new users.
@@HandledToaster2 did you not see my using the 😉 emoji?
@@toranshaw4029 I didn't think that meant sarcasm.. the standard sarcasm sign is "/s". For all I know it could've meant condescending, like "Maybe you should've studied better 😉"
Also the emoji looks different on different phones, changing its interpretation.
@@HandledToaster2 it was more bemusement than anything!
To all beginners out there: be very careful with these "advice" - you will not need any courses and do not need to waste your money on them. If you are genuinely interested in the software development fields and very curious, you will get there by yourself (for free) with hard work.
Bro this is the way if
you have money
Free UA-cam courses are mostly dogshit
@@rizkyma5566its not even expensive just wait till its on sale at most 25$ thats like nothing just skip on eating out for a bit and you have enough😭
This is a really silly take. $15 per 20-30hr course is not breaking the bank. If you really want it, you would be afraid to invest $15 for your future career.
$10 to $15 for a 20+ hour course is much cheaper than "doing your own research". I literally built my SRE / DevOps career using these courses spending essentially the equivalent of a trip to Costco.
very informational video Travis... from my side, I'm on an AWS cloud/5G network/business analysis 12 months Learnership. for the past 2 month, I've managed to cover as much AWS services, learnt Linux (for the first time). Linux is also found on the AWS canvas documentation, which also covers the basics of python programming.
bang on!! love this content, your selflessness, and your presentation style. good work!!!
"Dont buy any course for more than $15"
The first course recommended is $149
Good tips, one of the things I do before to select a course is see what say people that give a low rate of qualify, then I can understand if these things will me affet or not. The most important tip that you give here is to read the course content and the needed 10 topics that we need to cover. Thanks.
Maybe adding a Product Management related course would've also been helpful
Man, you opened my eyes! HUGE appreciations! Continue!
Thanks so much. Helpful as always. It would be great to have a career path guide for software testers. Essential courses to do in Udemy one after another to become a good software tester.
Solid advice
Some of them I already took prior to this video and was happily surprised that you mentioned it.
This is perfect collection and as "Huma" mentioned, yes would have best if included Docker and Kubernetes. Anyway superb one.
Good recommendation, I would add containers and ci/cd courses.
The way you think and produce vids and the links you provide. Such A class. idk how to put it in words. but are u a jedi who can read minds? Thanks again for the cool vids u produce
Good video, i'm agreed almost in everything you say because it make sense, but the only thing that idk it's why you didn't mention any compiled language.. i think that maybe taking a course of a compiled language such as C# or C++ to mention two of them, it's always a great way to amplify the opportunities in a job seek (unity | Unreal) spectrum, and even for go deeper on concepts that in a weakly typed languages you don't see often.
This is great. I'm feeling very lost in my career now and those courses could help a lot. Thank you very much!
You da man Travy🤙🏾🤙🏾shout out from NYC
*Really helpful. SUBSCRIBED*
Taking the JavaScript course of Jonas Schmedtmann as my first programming language.
I've learn the 2 JS and DS course i find it really easy to understand as a beginner especially Jonas JS course.
I would add one course, which has to do with docker and containerization technology. Good video thanks.
Thanks for this video, surely looking forward to add them to my learning plan. already subscribed!
Thank you for giving a shout out to Jonas 1:59 . I love his courses
Very good video! as a recent computer science grad, these tools will super come in handy in a clutch! thank you!
I am a fan of Colt Steele. Structured, fun, practical and updated. At some point, I got some courses just because I loved his teaching and thought I might be interested in the theme in the future.
Travis amo tu contenido! Te felicito! Excelentes tus videos
Outstanding! A course on the basics of Data Science/Machine Learning/Deep Learning/Artificial Intelligence will become important in every field. Sooner or later, every industry will be embedding some commercial or open source ML\DL capability into every software application. You need to understand the general concepts behind Data Science, not how to use the many different ML/DL frameworks but a conversational understanding.
Your API Design course chapter overlaps your SQL discussion chapter in your timeline. Well done on the vid!
Great list. Concise and hits all the important components.
Great video Travis! I've bookmarked some of these courses to buy when they go on sale :-)
This video is so so so underrated. Compared to the other self taught dev you go into the most details
I have the AWS from the same guy.. great course...and yes Udemy course and some dedication from your side will turn you a god mode developer
Thank you, new viewer and subscriber, quite frankly never heard of you before this video popped up into my feed. I'm in a new role that doesn't require most of the things you have outlined, but nice to know. Again, thanks, and God bless,
Thank you so much for the recommendation. I'm currently half way on 100 days of Python by Angela Yuu, but there are just too many things to learn.
At least this allows me to plan ahead and know what courses to take.
You dont have to do the 100 days of Python in 100 days. I’ve only used this course as a starting point for projects and I went off and did my own thing.
I missed something specific about containers, docker, kubernets and all other dev ops practices. Also database modeling is very important too, besides the knowledge on how to write sql.
Hey Travis! Thanks for this wonderful video, really helpful
I get access to a lot of Udemy courses through my city's library. All courses aren't available, but I always check there first. For anything that isn't available, I load up the cart and check daily for sales.
This video is brilliant. Thank you. Exactly I missed as self taught.
Hello Travis, thank you for such great insight. I'd like to know your approach in going through these courses. Do you take notes or do more hands on? The reason why I ask is because I tend to take too much time to finish these 20+ hr courses.
I would be tempted to add a course about systems programming or low level programming like C, C++ or Rust. I would recommend Daniel Gakwaya's and Dmitri Nesteruk 's courses. I think Daniels courses were really good with regard to Qt framework and QML
Thanks for the suggestions!
Yeah, not mentioning C++ was sad. To this point I haven't found anything more interesting than C++. Its learning curve and complexity exposed me to some mind-blowing stuff and I'm so happy for that. Especially when I started learning about Accelerated|Distributed Computing (CUDA C++ and MPI)
Had that Javascript course for a while and really is a great one.
Need a chart to lay out what should be learned simply at a high level, as once you understand everything at a high level, with a little debugging skills thrown in, you can learn to prompt LLMs to produce your desired code or result from a process.
I'm a horrible coder, but I have built some awesome stuff with the help of LLMs
Good recommendations. I like that the courses themselves give an outline for what to learn so even if you decide not to take the course, you have a curriculum to follow. That said the recommendation for "I Didn't Get a Computer Science Degree" doesn't actually cover things that are taught in Computer Science. It was more Information Systems/IT focused which is a fine but a bit of a misnomer.
What type or concepts does it cover then? Less data structures and algorithms and more security and network?
Hello Travis.
Invaluable content.
Any recommendations for someone who is trying get to DevOps.
Thank you for helping me kick-start 2023. Wishing you the utmost best.
Great video! Thanks Travis.
I just discovered your channel and subscribed.
A huge part of Udemy courses suffer from serious QUALITY defects judging from the users' negative comments.
Yeah. Definitely need to stick to reputable teachers and weigh the comments on every course as people are pretty honest on their experiences.
Thank you !!! I will give a shot for the JS one