BTW, here are some good free places to learn web development: ua-cam.com/video/14-xBLhZ4AE/v-deo.html and for transparency, how much programming channels make on youtube ua-cam.com/video/c8NV9XaeoOI/v-deo.html if you are interested in starting one.
@@jamescross ok then here is my question. How can I make a video in one box and subtitles in another next to it in html. Like one big box inside of it one box will be showing with my play pause and stop button and while its playing subtitles will be coming at the other box which is going to be another small box in the big box.
For me it took 9 month to learn, like 6 days a week , 3-6 hours a day. 2 month of interviews and now i am >3 month into my dream job as senior dev ops engineer. Before I was truck driver with flat bed, and before that I was cell phone tower climber/installer.
Sir, which material or source you used to learn. I am in 3rd sem of my CS degree but I am a total noob and I want to persue web development (I know you have to start from Html, JS, CSS) but I don't know how deep will be enough to land a job or be job ready. I really want to learn but I don't have the guidance where to start and which platform is best for learning. Sir, could you please guide me
@Igor You are amazing going through so many careers and learning a completely different new skills set each time. You're the living proof that it can be done. 👍
I'm a senior software engineer with a little over 20+ years experience as a professional developer. I have given thousands of technical and cultural interviews over the years. The three biggest misconceptions/mistakes I see from entry-level applicants: 1. They grossly over-estimate what is expected for an entry-level developer to know. We aren't looking for perfection, we're looking for a basic understanding of the job you're applying for, and an expressed desire to learn. So many applicants graduated 6+ months earlier and haven't touched programming since, and can't even explain a for loop. It's shocking. That's almost always a no go. Keep learning. 2. No bullshitters. You cannot bullshit in this field. The technical questions are black and white, A or B. There is no gray area, and we already know the answers. If you start trying to lie and make things up, you will not get the job. 3. Professionalism. You can be a rock-star technically, but there is more to being a professional developer than sitting there hammering out code all day. You need to be able to communicate clearly with business and other teams that may not have a technical background. You need to be able to prioritize and multitask. You will always be juggling multiple things. Colleagues and management will definitely help you, but you have to bring something to the table too. WORK ON YOUR SOFT SKILLS! I volunteer each semester to give mock interviews at the university here. Soft skills are almost always among the weakest of a new graduate's skillset.
Muchas gracias por tus consejos. Dicen que tengo potencial para prepararme en programación, y el primer consejo que das es el que necesitaba justamente, pues me preocupo por cometer errores o no ser capáz de lograr una carrera en programación. Saludos desde Costa Rica mae 🇨🇷
I have seen too many "junior" positions that require 1 to 3 years of professional (sometimes even internships do not count) to apply. I have been coding and reading books for almost 2 years but many times this nonprofessional experience does not count. Am I supposed to create a freelance company to kind of fake the experience?
@@johnyewtube2286 look for company that would take you for free and in exchange you will get a bit of experience. Let's say extra work for weekends or for afternoon's/evenings. I know it's suck to work for free, but it doesn't has to be full time job, and I think even 2-3 months experience like this would boost your chances
@@BadWeatherfreak I followed same path, I took some classes in CS dropped out. Got some small freelance job offers by a friend. Learned a lot of things and what I liked to do (I could already program a little bit due to CS and doing a lot in my freetime). Applied after 1 year of helping him out, now on my 9th year as software engineer.
I learned by creating a Pinterest type application in Ruby On Rails and I used the code in that application to get my first junior position. I also got a mentor that showed me what I need to learn to be job ready and helped unblock me when I got stuck. If I was to start again I would focus on having really nice tests done in the framework that's most common in your programming language. Focus on developing a restful api. An app with 5-10 models will be sufficient enough to show that you have the foundation for your employer to teach upon. They key skills to show is that you know the basics and can test your application.
I need help I asked chat GPT to built me a super app it made the frame work I need to insert code here insert code here. I need the code fill in for my super app. many many many people are going to want to use it it is a chrome extension. HELP!!
@@AD-wg8ik I was so fed up with being average and not being able to do more with my family... I locked myself in a room every night, literally lost a couple of friends from going slightly crazy. I wasn't playing around anymore. I mean it was 3 months but of course during those 9 months of applying, I continued to learn but at the end of 3 months I felt confident I could land a job. I'm only making 25% more than I was making at my previous job but it's the fact I no longer feel stagnant and I'm working towards my goal.
Congrats Leo! I am currently on the same path, I had about 3 months of consistent learning and now 2 months of applying. Any advice for applying and interviewing? I seem to not get pass the first or second round. It is not motivating at all getting all these rejections. Congrats again!
Stepping away from tutorials is the best thing I've done. I work on my projects and if I can't solve it I just Google and it sticks in my head. Also reading documentation and textbooks is a major help.
I’m 50 year old single mother of two, a litigation paralegal and tech nerd. 🤓 I’ve worn a lot of hats, run a law firm, family restaurant, and many other things, but my journalism and business degrees are worthless pieces of paper. I’m learning to code, and hoping to get my kids involved, too. I know my age is going to cause issues, but I love learning, and solving problems, so I’m ready and going for it! Thanks for sharing your story!
I’m 51. A nanny to my grand babies and my husband retires in 6 years. I have always been the stay at home wife and mom other than the occasion part time job for Christmas help. I want a coding job I can do from home so we can travel in an RV for at least 5 years as we have done nothing. I just started learning JavaScript and praying I can learn with in 12 months so I can land my first job. My son in law is a senior designer for Amazon. He’s been coding since he was 12. All self taught. Makes 350k a year. My goal is 100k a year I am praying for favor as I know I’m old but it’s my time to live. My kids are raised and my grand babies start school in a couple years. I’m ready to live a little for myself. Let me know how it’s going. I’d love to be friends. Maybe we can help each other.
I have spent many years trying to get a job as a firefighter. I currently work as a paramedic in California making $18/h working 56 hour work weeks. I'm on 24-72 hours running back to back 911 calls with 0 sleep everyday. I constantly think to myself if I could only be home learning and creating projects more, I could create so much more and prove to my co-workers they are not stuck in this industry. I am currently learning JavaScript, CSS, HTML and will be moving on to C#. I have never been this motivated to learn.
That’s so ironic I thought of being a fire foghter but I realize I value my sleep I really wanna take advantage of learning to code since I’m still living with my parents
Been learning for about 18 months. I also work in construction (55+ hrs/week) and have been averaging 15hrs/week coding. Been a long 2 years lol. About 3 months ago I really started getting to the point where I'm building more advanced apps (react router, supabase, redux, custom hookes, etc.). Hoping to be ready to start applying by middle of next year!
Been learning for 7-8 months. So much grinding. Just did my first interview. Was great to see what it was actually like. To really feel the pressure was pretty cool.
Been listening to this for 55 minutes and you haven't tried to sell me a single thing. I trust you know how refreshing that is to someone looking to change his life and who doesn't have money to waste on a coaching program or a boot camp or whatever. Thank you. Thank you for understanding, and giving your time freely. If I have a way to pay you back one day, I'll remember you. Edit: do you have a Patreon or even want/need something like that?
I’m a former Police officer and truck driver. I lost my truck driving job due to a heart issue at 28. Now I’m learning pythons with hopes of someday doing cybersecurity and also doing personal development projects.
As someone with a both a computer science degree, a work psychology degree and 20 years software development experience, this content is a gold! Implement implement! I like the advice about ditching tutorials, just build something simple stuff that does a simple thing then iterate and iterate. You need quantity of apps instead of quality of apps at the start.
My story: I currently work as a full time delivery driver for Amazon. I actually enjoy the job for the most part, but it just doesn't pay well enough. I've started this journey before, but I got burnt out and just gave up entirely once I started my Amazon job. I'm picking up where I left off. I'm 1/3 of the way through Colt Steele's course, still going through the freeCodeCamp and Odin Project, and tackling some of Wes Bos's projects. I've used some of the money that I've made from Amazon to buy a proper desk setup which actually helps quite a bit lol, and I'm trying my hardest to stay disciplined and keep moving forward. I estimate for it take me over a year to become anywhere near job-ready because I'm a slow learner :/
I have been teaching myself to code for about 6 months I always come back to this video every month to see what more I understand. It’s helpful for someone who feels like they’re not getting anywhere. At least for me it helps.
I'm in the same boat. Been working construction my whole adult life , but looking to change my career. Thank you for the content . You can always teach a old dog new tricks.
I recommend transferring any notes to a google doc for permanent reference. It's really useful to have a refresher written in your own words. Learning about design can also be really important for presenting your projects - if it looks good people will think of it differently and see you in a new light.
I'm a full stack developer but that really means mostly backend development and then utilizing front-end frameworks (Angular and Bootstrap/Tailwind) but not going super in-depth. We're really backend devs doing basic frontend work. It requires clients/stakeholders that understand things are exponentially more expensive if they have to be pixel perfect or want things the frameworks don't natively support. I completely agree with most of what you said. Getting my first job was the hardest part. After like 6 months at my first job, recruiters were blowing me up and that's continued since. A lot of what I hear about are crap jobs tho. Low pay or not open to hybrid work. Easy to turn down. I job hopped a couple times in the first 2 years as the salary increases were pretty nuts. Worked my first job for 8 months. Got a 30% salary bump at the next job. Worked there for about a year and got a 50% bump at the next job. That put me pretty close to the top of what a dev of my experience could earn and I also got a great team and a very flexible schedule. Working from home whenever I want is super nice.
Bro, can you please help me. I am in year 2 of my CS degree and I want to persue web development. But I just am not sure where to or what to study first (I Know, you have to start from Html, Css, JS) but I don't how much time and how much deep knowledge I must have to become a job ready dev. And Yes, i searched youtube for tutorials but I'm not sure which one to choose for learning. PLease bro, could you give ma a little guidance on this issue.
HI, Quick question. I am considering doing a full stack development bootcamp. It's $4,200 up front for 6 months. They say we will have a complete e-portfolio and build a e-commerce site. Is a bootcamp worth it? Or would it be better to learn as self taught. My goal is to get a job within 1 year.
U will be fine. U will have a cs degree. A lot of these guys are self taught so u have an advantage. They have to prove that they are not bull shiter. U don't have that problem.
Warning, a lot of front end jobs now test algorithms. You'll get an array if complex data and need to sort and filter it precisely. I just had this interview and I'm a 25yr vet don't front end for the last decade. But I did backend processing for a long time so it wasn't difficult for me. But just be warned, its not always simply show front end skills. In the midwest here, Angular and React are king, so know that and you'll have a much better chance of getting a job. Rarely do companies do basic html pages anymore. Also styling add-ons like Material, Bootstrap, etc create themes, which are far better than css variables.
It’s not always just about grit. It’s about learning how to learn based on how your brain works. I have ADHD and I struggled for months trying to keep up with vid tutorials and lectures but once I started learning by using spaced repetition and pair programming on practice projects I totally excelled bc with another person I was able to start engaged. It’s also about developing habits to take care of your brain and create stability so you can practice consistently and progress. Before becoming a dev I was chronically unemployed and battling addiction for 15 years. Learning how my brain works was a life changer. Awesome vids man. ❤
i want to change my life and others for the better so i started learning how to code 3 months ago, basically i have been a physical therapist for more than 12 years and am still that person but, i listen to my old passion about computers and different technologies. i asked myself why i should work in a career that doesn't convince me of my abilities. for 12 years i saw my progress in life as i am walking by chackles. By learning how to code i feel more confident, more useful, more productive, so i am very happy with these videos James. thanks
i had spent many years without doing anything due to my circumstances, but now i want to start learning web development specifically front end, i will spend 3-5 hour's a day for 1 year and see how it works, i am not very smart but hopefully i will get it done! I will come to this comment for updates(:
I'm currently a stay at home mom and always found computers and technical stuff fascinating but never thought to give it a try, figured I could never be able to do it because of ADHD, but then one day I decided to watch a video on it and it seemed so simple so I was like why not just study this as much as I can and see how far I get because I do retain information well if I just study and apply it. I've been learning a little and I love it! Some days are hard though because I have an 8 month old baby and a 3 year old.
@@tobbiesspace5747 front-end development is very granulized and component-based.. wich is actually more suitable for people with adhd than for people who not have it... im more conmfortable at reading a code file with 1000 lines code.. rather than templates and components splits into many files and granulized...
If im not mistaken, women learn stuff theoretically way better than men.. men learn with hands and by doing, and making mistakes. women can probably just read docs, learn the syntax and just write less errors men learn from compilation errors lol and try not to make the same mistake twice.. : - ) after all coding was considered a womanly job back in the grace hopper days.. like a secretary/clerk job there's not many women in tech in terms of % .. but ive noticed that usually when female coders give presentations in conferences etc... they have done something complicated and good, wich benefits everyone
I just started my change of career I’m a structural steel certified welder but Coding is awesome it changes all the time and that’s what I love about it thank you for being a motivator I believe there’s something more in the future for web developments 😊
as a transitioning professional and coding prospect, i truly appreciate how this gentleman actually gets to the point and delivers the pertinent information to what is useful to learn and why. ive seen other "how i transitioned to developing" videos and they seem to be more focused on charisma and theatrics than the objective here. thank you for the insight.
@devsmak I succesfully land a role as front end react dev. Report on duty dec2022. I shift my career from 7 years exp in construction to software. My self taught journey start since 2020. Your channel help me in my journey especially when we have same prev background. I wanna thank you and let u know that your video change people lives.
I went to a bootcamp 2 years ago, but never did anything with it. I'm back into it after a year of pizza delivery and year of help desk. I remember my foundational stuff thankfully! I appreciate this info
I love your videos. I know I’m late to this video but I came across your channel, liked your content so I started at the end and am working my way to recent. I worked construction for 5and a half years framing houses, apartments, pole barns and more. Worked as a farm hand for a few years then went into tree climbing for the last 2 years. Until September 27th 2023 when I was out of work due to an injury. (Not good when having 3 kids) Spent 4 months dealing with the doctors. And this last month learning html right now. Hope this works out I’ve never had this much fun learning something new. Can’t wait to turn it into a career
It took me eight months, since my first line of code in freecodecamp until get my offer letter in my first job at Mexico City. I sign it in january from this year as a front end dev. Right now I am learning topics of data science to apply in my phD related to drug discovery research. So it's a good life. Cheers!
Hey Victor, im starting in the front end dev path and i’m also from Mexico. i’m as well starting with freecodecamp and code academy. How hard was to land the job?
@@luisalexis9828 God has been good with me. Only took me december from last year, I had a lot of interviews that month and gotcha three offer letters. I said to human resources that I am C2 proficient english speaker and that I have the willing to grow as a de dev for my phD and that kind of stuffs. Wish you success in this travel you are onboarding. Have incredible benefits and a good time if you hurry. Cheers!
I tried going into programming for around 3montjs and I realised it wasn't something I am into. Then went onto trading and am still doing it now after 2 years. Its so brilliant to see you building up a community that is self driven and ambitious to make a change in their lives. :) keep up the great work
Started my journey a little over 2 weeks ago now. Currently about to go into my final year of radiation therapy studies, however, the past 3 years or so have taught that I am not cut out for this line of work. Degree itself is relatively chill but doing my internships throughout the course made me realise that there are people who are a lot more suited than I. I am loving the odin project, doesnt make me burn out and makes everything fun.
3 month bootcamp a lot of studying and practice. Applied for a 3 month internship, learned a lot fast on the job now I’m a jr full stack developer for a company that is going to become a unicorn in 2023! Total 6 months. It’s possible network work on your soft skills and just have fun doing it.
Bro, I'm litterally the same EXACT story as you said in beginning of this vid. You have no idea how much this just brought me hope and motivation. I'm 25, and all i've ever worked in my entire life is construction labor, and or warehouse/factory work. I only have G.E.D as far as my education and so I'm very very limited as far as being able to get opportunities to gain some experience in tech related jobs due to not having any professional experience I'm able to list on my resume. Technology has always been a passionate hobby of mine for as long as I can remember. Being a little kid, of course I would play some video games and what not, but also I found joy in the actual concept of computers and just what technology is to the core of what it is. My older brother and I would build PC's together when I was little and things like this always brought me much joy. I just wish I would've made the decision to integrate my passion for computer science into a career path earlier on, as well as maybe doing a bit better in school so I could've had a better education to open more doors for career paths. I made the decision to do this career change roughly 6 months ago, and trying to do this all self-taught. It can definitely be extremely challenging. I'm just trying to do the best I can so I can get any opportunity that is offered to me quite honestly. I'm a humble, realistic person who isn't afraid to work hard and get their hands dirty. I'd be more than content with accepting a job offer that starts me off at a low level position with not so great pay, SO LONG there is opportunity for growth. My dream roles are all computer science roles such as SWE, programming, cyber security, machine learning, web dev, etc. I've struggled because I always hesitate on deciding if I'm taking the correct path as far as my learning goes. I don't have anyone helping me and it's been rough. So this video is a great help and I truly appreciate it. I've been becoming quite discouraged as of very lately to be honest, so this video was just what I needed as a pick-me-up and a reminder to show me that I can do this. Hearing someone that was just like me, a construction worker wanting a better life, a better career for better pay, and they actually made it. That's what I needed right now to keep me going! Thanks james!
Watched the whole thing and I believe this is a quality video to rewatch and really soak the advice. Your video is the most comprehensive and pragmatic approach I've seen for amateurs to understand the web development industry and how to navigate it.
I'm in that boat right now. I got out of the military with no marketable skills to speak of (and got screwed by the VA.) My eife and I both work full time + in dead-end jobs to scrape by paycheck to paycheck in our little 2 bedroom apartment in the not so great part of town. My bank account is at 0 a week before payday most months, and my car got repoed because I couldn't make the payments, so we share 1 20 year old car that's falling part between us. I don't need to be a billionare buy super yachts and privaye jets. I just need basic stability and security so I can actually be a person again, instead of a dead broke cog in a pointless machine with no prospects for the future. This is why, yesterday, I decided to become a programmer. I appreciate your story showing that it's possible in my situation and all the info you provide. If I don't, I'm going to stay a broke, stressed and unfulfilled pest control technician for the rest of my life.
I’m literally just starting. Hoping to learn over the course of the next year or two because I’m not a fast learner and I have a lot going on. But I’m motivated. Thank you for this!
Stay focused. I'm the same way, I need to sit with the material a bit longer than most, before it clicks. Don't give up, no matter what, you'll get there!👊🏽
James. You are one of the most articulated front-end developers I have come across... Also a fellow Utah county front-end dev here ... thanks for sharing your journey experience, very motivational, informative, and 100% real. Funny thing I started in a React BootCamp but I just finished at a job that for a year had me working in Angular apps, which I had to learn from nada. Apreciate the tips! Adobe is not an easy place to get in, so congrats! Keep up the great work here on UA-cam and see you around in a meet up sometime.
Thanks Herly. Being familiar with multiple frameworks will be valuable so it's great you got some varied experience. I usually go to utah.js conf each year so if you end going to that, be sure to say hi.
This is very inspiring. I am in my third month of learning front end work, and I am hitting that slump that is making me question everything... I am seriously going to try my best from here on out. Thank you for this video.
I’m currently working as a pool guy and IT SUCKS!! I’ve been learning web dev on and off for about three years now. I’d say I know a good amount of stuff on the topic, but I’ve never had the confidence to actually apply for any jobs because I always think they would judge me because I don’t have a degree or bootcamp to show (I actually went to college for comp sci but never finished the degree). Because of that, I always give up on learning and spend months doing nothing to improve my life. However, now I finally took the step to join a bootcamp (it starts in a couple months), and I have never been more excited to learn coding again. I know people don’t NEED a bootcamp to get a development job but I just feel more comfortable having something that shows I’ve at least spent some time studying and that I studied the right stuff to be able to work as a developer. I actually watched your video during one of the times I tried to get back into learning to code and it got me motivated, but like always, I never actually applied for any jobs and ended up giving up. But, like I said, I’ll be doing a bootcamp in a couple months and watching videos like this really help me, so thank you 😁
There was a lot of useful and genuine advice in this video. You seem 100 percent genuine which is what stands out as compared to many of these UA-cam coding personalities.
Thank you so much for this insight!! I've been overwhelmed with the idea of rejection, what types of questions will be posed, what information to focus on etc. I just graduated with my associates but don't feel prepared at all so this is highly encouraging and motivating to push through and continue with self teaching. Thank you again!!
I love how devsmak is giving concrete ways to become successful in this field. What got me hooked is that he stated that hard work is needed. Probably the best advise is to know what you want and you need to do it relentlessly.
I am a new programmer and am definitely bookmarking this video to refer to later, perhaps many times. This video deserves at least two viewings, once to try and grasp the big picture and a following time making as many notes as possible which are relevant to your own situation. Learning javascript and React are good choices, PHP is insane garbage, CSS is written by Satan if it won't do what you want anyway and you can't figure that out. I am still glad about knowing all the backend stuff by now but it might be nice to never think of it in a "hands on" way ever again thanks to Django and Python, and a little advice from Chat-GPT.
I work in Oncology Clinical Trials. Cancer trials are extremely hard to get on so the majority of my 40 hour work week I do nothing, because I don't have many patients. I have so much extra time on my hands between work and my home life. I'm single and my son is grown that I need some stimulation. I decided I wanted to learn how to code, because why not lol . Obviously I have no experience coming from healthcare, but I am willing to put in the work. I am just starting and hoping to learn as much as I can over the course of next 3-6 months.
Dude! Hi, I'm from Argentina, I lived in Ogden, UT for 8 years. Now I’m kinda lost, but thanks to this video I felt guided again, thanks for all the info you shared. I’m aiming for front end, I did a full stack boot camp, and front end is what got my attention, I enjoy seeing the results. At least for now, I feel the learning curve is shorter this way. And yeah, I hate my current job at a factory, anxiety hits hard sometimes since I’ve been wanting to change for a while now. Deep breaths and keep at it
Hey James, I'm currently in a bootcamp, pretty heavy tbh, 8-5, monday through saturday, learning Ruby, Js, React, WSL usage, GitHub and other basic stuff. I'm loving it so far. I tried to learn by myself before, but now that I have a guide things are sticking and I see actual progress. Watching your videos has been really helpful to keep me motivated when I feel overwhelmed, thank you for sharing your knowledge with all of us. 6 more months to go and I'll start my applications. I hope to get coding experience and eventually move into the videogame industry with some stronger foundations and more akills in other languages. I'll let you know how it goes, cheers from Mexico!
I greatly appreciate your time for all of us! I am new to coding and I am currently in a boot camp for a Full Stack Developer. A lot of this still a foreign language to me, but I am getting it. Ultimately, I'm chiming in to say "THANK YOU!!!" for sharing this experience on here... for me personally... it helps me focus and most importantly helps me rethink my time on things (I feel pressure to hurry things.). Again, thank you!
Thanks for making and sharing this content. This gives clarity and detailed info on my vague roadmap. I have been learning front end dev for three months, still on to learning HTML, CSS and the fundamentals of computer science from CS50. Your videos are encouraging. Thank you 😊
I appreciate how you explained the front end race to the bottom because it shows part of the reason why full stack web development is so profitable. That extra level of intricacy makes all the difference when designing a very complex system that cannot be re-created via WordPress or Wix for example
Currently, I am nearly done with my AS in Computer Science in college right now. I have been thinking about what I want to do after I graduate and learning how to be a front-end wed developer is my goal right now! Thank you so very much for this video as it gives me so much inspiration and push me to keep learning!
Been a chef for 8 years. Im 28 now and tired of the industry and the hours on my feet and never seeing my family. With shit pay and benefits. I actually coded in high school and was really good just dropped it and never went back. Wish someone would’ve pointed me in the right direction. I’m seriously looking into this career change.
Just starting my journey! On my second month now. Focusing on Javascript right now! I've been working at PepsiCo for the last 5 years, and also did music engineering on the side. Realized I no longer wanted to pursue a career in music. Thanks for your content, it's been very useful !
@@Sejal602 Depends what you want to do. If you want to do FrontEnd I would say React since this one of the more popular ones right now or another reactive framework.
@@Cyber-Bison ok.. actually I was so confused about the sequence of learning as some videos says to learn basics of git and github just after learning j.s Some says learn typescript after js Same says learn tailwind, bootstrap And etc.. So I am confused about the roadmap , that that can land me into a nice job..😇😇
Good on you that you were able to transition from construction to web development, self taught at that. I've had a recruiter try to belittle me because after getting laid off from my job, I picked up some general labour work in the meantime. I worked in the mechanical engineering technology field for 10 years. It takes courage fall back temporarily on your profession if it means your survival, and even embark on a career change at that point if it means better outcomes. And it takes a considerable amount of discipline to be able to sit down and teach yourself a new skill such as coding. The problem with companies is that at the forefront there are too many gate-keeping douchbags who forget that they are dealing with people. These smug recruiters will not make me feel bad about my circumstances one bit! They couldn't do what I'm doing. If they were in my position they'd probably give up and cry.
Hey James! This is really a great talk! Even as a frontend developer with 5+ years professional experience, I find this content very helpful and inspiring - not only for junior devs, but for all levels and transitioning as well. The web development field is constantly evolving, and besides the necessity of staying up to date with market trends, we also need to stand out as real people with creative and soft skills. You rocked it at the end with the "Breaking Resume Rules" chapter! Much appreciation:)
I was attending in a Bootcamp, learned for three month and was super lucky to get the job i wanted after just one application. But as i said... i was just lucky. I'm a mediocre dev and some of my fellow bootcamp students are wayyyyy better than i am and many are still looking for a job after like 2years :/ If you guys want to take this path, be sure what you´re doing and commit yourself 100%.
@@kaycampbell364 just look up "neuefische - coding bootcamp". They are located in Hamburg, Köln, Frankfurt, Munich (Germany) and they offer german and english courses. (Full remote ofc)
Currently in a bootcamp for Software Engineering.Thank you for talking about this just started a software engineering bootcamp. I couldn’t get a job either with my undergrad degrees in health admin . Currently still in grad school for MS Psychology taking a ten week SE program with Coding temple. We are learning about blackened now I prefer the front end html and css .
Went to college once, failed out. Went back 3 years later for CS degree and graduated with a 3.8. Don’t love the job I landed but love the courage it gave to start my journey of game development. I now know my passion is developing games. Which I thought I was “too dumb” to do four years ago. After I took my first semester and had HTML/CSS and Python I was hooked on coding, but that quickly became boring until I transferred those skills to game development. (My assignments were things like cleaning data, managing API, setting up servers, deploying VM, python and HTML basics. That just got stale for me - as for work it’s just numbers and excel sheets with some python/pandas for data cleaning.
Love this video, great advice, brilliant editing and this advice is useful for experienced devs too. I'm a web developer of 4-5 years in the UK, focussed on WordPress, PHP, JS and I'm learning react, but I would love to see a video that's focussed on intermediate or mid level devs who have already got their foot in the door, and how they can stay ahead of the curve. One thing I've found is that moving from startup culture to enterprise level companies is a huge leap especially with waterfall / agile based companies. In startups you have far more freedom I find where as in larger companies there are clear cut standards which is both good and infuriating especially if you want to implement new tech as there's usually a huge process rolling it out and training people. What advice would you give for experienced devs who have fallen behind on self improvement and dedicating time to personal projects to master their craft? Keep the content coming!
Current CS student. I served in the Marine Corps for 4 years and did just under a year in construction. I am in love with CS and I am not looking back on my previous occupations. CS / software / web dev or related fields is the escape from jobs that kill you physically . This is the way.
Construction worker for 13 years. I’m 31 years old…Always been into tech & computer science. I’m 3 weeks into my coding journey as far as learning goes. I’m excited but I know this will be hard with no college experience. I do have dev friends in the industry that are helping me everyday. Currently doing about 3-5 hours a night of hard core studying. My dev friends swear I can land a job in under a year but I think it will take longer
I'm in a similar situation, I'm 27 and been working in residential construction for almost 2 years, and I've really grown to loathe the work-yourself-to-death culture that permeates the industry. I'm on week 2 of learning Python, but after seeing this video I think I'll enjoy front end development much more. Hope all goes well
I’ve been a trucker for 10 years and really excited to get into coding. Also got back into music recently and want to be able to work from home. Taking my first baby step.
My story is kind of similar to yours, I graduated from Civil Engineer, I was hopping to work with my dad in his construction company but he lost the company a year before I graduate, during quarentine I was trying to find some jobs but most of them were for a very low salary and my thought was that any other person without a degree could do the same job so talking with a friend he told me about programming and last year I started learning to code now I know Java, made an JavaFx app, and currently learning Javascript to build a portfolio I'm exited to work in this industry because I'm very passionate to code sometimes I lost my sense of time while coding, i start coding in the morning and suddenly it's night time, sorry if my English is bad I'm a native Spanish speaker but love your story and tips
I am an architect and now I am looking forward to see that transition which went through. I just completed my masters in Estonia. fingers crossed. Thanks for this.
Just starting on this path. I used to code when I was young, hack the highschool network etc... haha Went on to start my own tile business but at 34 my body is already starting to feel it. Hard to take a cut in pay, so I've continued doing it... Then I discovered you could get hired as a self taught dev and the pay is generally comparable. So excited. I love the grind - both mental and physical - but my body will be happy to rest. Thanks for the vid.
I have been a handyman & landscaper for the past 14 years. I am 40 years old and I am looking at making a career change due to the physical nature of my work. I am sick and tired of my line of work as it has given me a few injuries over the years. Is it still possible for me to study this course and consider a career change? I have always been interested in Information Technology specifically cybersecurity and networking. Have you already started the transition over to working in IT ? What are you currently studying? I don't know where to start yet. I was thinking of going to community college but I feel I am too old now.
I have seen the terms front end developer 1000 times and had no idea I had those exact skills. I know how to work an HTML and CSS I'm not as great in Java but I'm learning but it is so exciting to me to see a beautiful webpage come to life. Thank you for this video.
I totally agree with your experience. I started work-life as a commercial photographer, quit and jumped into trucking (needed more money), quit, and attended computer tech school where I was taught JCL, COBOL, ALC, RPG (mainframe stuff, a really long time ago). My first job was at a company that built industrial radios and communications equipment. I had to learn CP/M, FORTRAN and Z80 assembly language to work on the project. On my first day they dropped off a desktop computer, and a few books on my desk and told me I had four weeks to learn how to use it. In short, what you learn, may not be the knowledge to help you earn. Now that I’m retired, I’m hoping to freelance as a front-end dev and copywriter. My research over the last month shows that the two dovetail. Some folks aren’t just looking for dazzling content, they want you to add the style and animation too. I guess I could do that with Figma prototypes, but I would love to simply package the HTML, CSS, and JS into a zip file as a deliverable.
Great video, subscribed! In my case I started developing just html, css and jQuery 13 years ago. I always preferred building everything from scratch including the PHP backend and SAAS like projects, and recently started using NextJS with React and I am sold big time to the new NextJS framework. NextJS is amazing together with ChatGPT now a days life hasn't been better like this in a long time!
I've been in the fitness industry for the past 6 years. I love it, but can't do it forever as a coach. I've been learning for the past 10 months, going to work on my resume and portfolio soon. My hope is to work in tech health/fitness, I think the bridge between them can still use a lot of work.
I'm a mom of 3 teaching myself how to code so I can make my vision of creating a video game started. First step is to create a fully functional and fun virtual pet site game where those who are waiting for the game I want to build in Unreal Engine 5 can have something to pass plenty of time each day. I literally just started to teach myself how to code on Friday, and already have a nearly functional welcome page for the site made.
Very good overview. I learned HTML, CSS and Javascript years ago, but I couldn't figure out how to turn it into a career. I wish I had seen a video like this back then.
man this incredible. I am in the process of looking for jobs after i finished a 6 month frontend bootcamp and i can relate so much to what you offered here. thank you for that amazing overview, you managed to press so much value and information into such a short amount of time !
Really glad I found this video. I just started Udemy's Zero to Mastery: Web Development, and I have to say, i already love what I'm learning. I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I do but it's really become a joy to learn. I'm trying to dedicate at least 3 hours a day learning but I'm going to up it to at least 4 hours now after watching your video. I'm currently an Arabic interpreter, which is cool but it's not challenging and there isn't much room to increase your pay. Wish me luck!!
I am currently starting on Odin Projectl like you mentioned in the other video. Been watching your vids since early last year, and finally gain the confidence to give it a try without feeling I am all over the place. Your insight has been amazing and really appreicate you my dude.
Coming from no real career at 28 to coding. Got a job in IT in the meantime. Started JS and am picking it up pretty quick but shifting into CSS and HTML.
That's cool. what's your IT job? Do you have software engineers at your company that you can ask questions and maybe get them to let you contribute a little to start getting experience?
@@jamescross I start the IT job in December. In the interview I was open about my plans to work towards a dev job and they told me I'd have access to developers and encouraged me to reach out. It's for DXC Technologies so a massive company, whether or not they help me I'll be self teaching.
Thank you so much for all the information you have shared if this sort of content was shared by someone else he/she could link a hundred companies link and sponsor their useless courses to make money but you did it without covering or including a third party to your success or others. great job! I'm software developer with 12 yr of experience and agree with all you shaed
Ill be 24 in just about 3 months. Ive tried going to college about 4 times now and it just never works for me. I feel stuck and like im not doing anythign with my life, so I decided to go the self-taught route of coding. I hope to eventually land a (hooefully) well paying job, so that i can care for my family, hopefully give back to my grandparents
On a journey to learn front end development. Enjoying the JavaScript language, but still a bit to go before becoming 'comfortable' with the language. React is definitely on radar to tackle and learn. Thank you for the video and advice!!
@James cross±𝟭𝟰𝟳𝟵𝟯𝟭𝟳𝟰𝟬𝟲𝟭 Man, from what i hear from my dev friends front end is absolutely dying and is being all automated. It's a bummer since i just started learning all of this like a month ago. Not even sure where to go from here at this point....
10 years in the infantry. 2 years in armed security. I've been programming for about 9 months. I've learned a lot, and I'm pretty great at solving problems. But the job hunt is grueling. It's also difficult trying to balance familiarizing myself with the variety of technologies in use with mastering a couple things. Ha, I constantly feel like I'm being jerked around.
I am in my 5th month of learning to code! As I go through the course, I always have questions in the back of my mind, such as how will I get a job and what will the interview be like. Sometimes I feel like I don't even know what I'm doing, and there are moments when I want to give up. However, my current job is motivating me to continue, and I'm excited to pursue a career as a software developer.😊
I recently got out the army last year I took a course for wordpress development and ended up landing a software developer apprenticeship with less than 6 months of coding knowledge I have the basics of Javascript but I need more practice by next year i plan to be extremely more proficient than i am now
I've been a full-stack engineer for the last 16 months with my first job out of college. It really hit home for me when you talked about the leaky bucket of "best practices" because I am in that situation right now. I was just throw into the fire with no professional experience, which I enjoyed at first to learn. Now, being on a larger scale project with no mentor or previous mentor, I sometimes find myself being extremely lost and feeling like an imposter. WHAT DO I DO?
It took me about 5 months total - I took the free 100 days of SwiftUI course from Paul hudson, finished it in just over 3 months. I began working on my own native iOS applications and applying to jobs, 2 months and 180 applications later I got my first interview. Got the second interview, and then offered a position at about $55/hour in the Pittsburgh, PA area. I was lucky, but even then it wasn't easy. Single dad, I'd wake up at 4:30am to code and learn until 7:30 when I had to get ready for work and get my kid ready for pre-school. After dropping her off, I'd get to work by 8:30am and work until 4:30pm, pick her up by 5:30pm thanks to traffic, make it to the gym by 6. Leave the gym, get home by 7:15 and make dinner, eat, play until 8:30pm when my kid and I both would have the same bed time. Repeated this for the full 5 months, swapping out learning from the course to making my own apps and applied for jobs during the down time of my day job.
I've been a back-end developer for 12 years now (C++/Java/PL-SQL) and I can tell you I'm jealous of our front-end guys and gals! They do all the cool and pretty stuff and all the clients love them, while nobody even knows I exist here! I mean they know my job matters but they never want to talk to me about what I do at all... At any level... :(
Man, when you talk about code problems and such in interviews, it's what really gets me. I can't remember that stuff on the spot. As an ADHD programmer, my memory is bad. I have great logic skills and I can read and understand and plan, but the idea of writing something unaided on the spot? Nah. It takes me 5 seconds to refresh my memory with google though. My weakness is definitely raw knowledge and my strength is in problem solving, which includes finding answers to things I can't pull out from memory. I completed a Diploma in Web dev, I've been self learning for 6 months extra, I don't think I'll ever feel ready.
Med school Grad. Havent secured residency so degree pretty much not that useful. So Ive been looking for other oppertunties and tech seems to be it. Enjoying the journey. Thanks for all the informational videos.
I love front-end development. I've been doing it since 1996, but mostly on my own projects/websites, and not professionally. But, I'm addicted to extreme minimalism, and hate javascript and animations. I just love a text only websites. The front page of craigslist is the best thing ever made online - fight me! I'm not a dev, but I've done a lot of front end, and understand DOM, HTML, CSS, and a bit of Javascript. I'm really quite tempted to learn more and become a legit front-end dev. This video was great, thanks!
Love this long-form video format. I'm a noob and was expecting a tutorial, but got something so much better!! Great work organizing and articulating your wisdom and experience. Will definitely be a video I come back to again and again. Subscribed!
I am a former back-end programmer analyst (university of Montreal grad in computer science). Interviews, in my days, contained a technical part (1994-2003). The interviewers themselves were technical. Sometimes, there were 2 or 3 interviews. In those cases, 1 enterview was entirely technical. I would not go back in that field. I switched to telecom technician. It pays less, but it's more fun. I travel. I see a lot of different people.
I've started coding in Aug '22. Halfway through JavaScript and it's been rough, but I'm persistent. I went to a trade school and been a nail artist/nail therapist for 15 years, self-employed, independent contractor, paying out of pocket for benefits. I want to apply my nail art skills in front end development so we'll see how it goes! I appreciate what the beauty industry has taught me, but I'm ready for new challenges!
Hey man I've watched a view of your videos and they really helped to motivate me. I watched this video before my first interview a couple weeks ago. I just got a call back today and was offered the position. I started learning a year ago exactly this month. It was a long hard road but I made it. I appreciate all the help!
BTW, here are some good free places to learn web development: ua-cam.com/video/14-xBLhZ4AE/v-deo.html and for transparency, how much programming channels make on youtube ua-cam.com/video/c8NV9XaeoOI/v-deo.html if you are interested in starting one.
hey how can I reach u privately and wanna ask u sth about my problem coding?
@Nebil I prefer to keep discussions here so more people can benefit from answers.
And please add time stamp too...
@@jamescross ok then here is my question. How can I make a video in one box and subtitles in another next to it in html. Like one big box inside of it one box will be showing with my play pause and stop button and while its playing subtitles will be coming at the other box which is going to be another small box in the big box.
@@MediterraneaMaris JUST DO IT! -Nike
For me it took 9 month to learn, like 6 days a week , 3-6 hours a day. 2 month of interviews and now i am >3 month into my dream job as senior dev ops engineer. Before I was truck driver with flat bed, and before that I was cell phone tower climber/installer.
Sir, which material or source you used to learn. I am in 3rd sem of my CS degree but I am a total noob and I want to persue web development (I know you have to start from Html, JS, CSS) but I don't know how deep will be enough to land a job or be job ready. I really want to learn but I don't have the guidance where to start and which platform is best for learning. Sir, could you please guide me
Can you tell us which courses/websites/languages you learned from?
@Igor
You are amazing going through so many careers and learning a completely different new skills set each time. You're the living proof that it can be done. 👍
I’m a truck driver now trying to learn what to study and which direction to go!
Please shine some light down
I'm a senior software engineer with a little over 20+ years experience as a professional developer. I have given thousands of technical and cultural interviews over the years. The three biggest misconceptions/mistakes I see from entry-level applicants:
1. They grossly over-estimate what is expected for an entry-level developer to know. We aren't looking for perfection, we're looking for a basic understanding of the job you're applying for, and an expressed desire to learn. So many applicants graduated 6+ months earlier and haven't touched programming since, and can't even explain a for loop. It's shocking. That's almost always a no go. Keep learning.
2. No bullshitters. You cannot bullshit in this field. The technical questions are black and white, A or B. There is no gray area, and we already know the answers. If you start trying to lie and make things up, you will not get the job.
3. Professionalism. You can be a rock-star technically, but there is more to being a professional developer than sitting there hammering out code all day. You need to be able to communicate clearly with business and other teams that may not have a technical background. You need to be able to prioritize and multitask. You will always be juggling multiple things. Colleagues and management will definitely help you, but you have to bring something to the table too. WORK ON YOUR SOFT SKILLS! I volunteer each semester to give mock interviews at the university here. Soft skills are almost always among the weakest of a new graduate's skillset.
excellent advice. totally agree.
Thank you for this guide. I totally fall into the first category. I always feel like there is more to be learnt. I hope to do better.
Muchas gracias por tus consejos. Dicen que tengo potencial para prepararme en programación, y el primer consejo que das es el que necesitaba justamente, pues me preocupo por cometer errores o no ser capáz de lograr una carrera en programación. Saludos desde Costa Rica mae 🇨🇷
I have seen too many "junior" positions that require 1 to 3 years of professional (sometimes even internships do not count) to apply. I have been coding and reading books for almost 2 years but many times this nonprofessional experience does not count. Am I supposed to create a freelance company to kind of fake the experience?
@@johnyewtube2286 look for company that would take you for free and in exchange you will get a bit of experience. Let's say extra work for weekends or for afternoon's/evenings. I know it's suck to work for free, but it doesn't has to be full time job, and I think even 2-3 months experience like this would boost your chances
6 months of self taught programming now im on my 8th year full time as a software engineer. Best decision of my life.
Where did you learn?
@@BadWeatherfreak I followed same path, I took some classes in CS dropped out. Got some small freelance job offers by a friend. Learned a lot of things and what I liked to do (I could already program a little bit due to CS and doing a lot in my freetime). Applied after 1 year of helping him out, now on my 9th year as software engineer.
I learned by creating a Pinterest type application in Ruby On Rails and I used the code in that application to get my first junior position. I also got a mentor that showed me what I need to learn to be job ready and helped unblock me when I got stuck.
If I was to start again I would focus on having really nice tests done in the framework that's most common in your programming language. Focus on developing a restful api. An app with 5-10 models will be sufficient enough to show that you have the foundation for your employer to teach upon. They key skills to show is that you know the basics and can test your application.
I need help I asked chat GPT to built me a super app it made the frame work I need to insert code here insert code here. I need the code fill in for my super app. many many many people are going to want to use it it is a chrome extension. HELP!!
im trying to take this path bro, should i know more than 1 cpu language?
3 months of learning, 9 months of applying, 5 months into my first dev job.
That's awesome! Congrats!
@@jamescross Thanks for your vids, they're motivational and encouraging.
3 months is crazy.
@@AD-wg8ik I was so fed up with being average and not being able to do more with my family... I locked myself in a room every night, literally lost a couple of friends from going slightly crazy. I wasn't playing around anymore. I mean it was 3 months but of course during those 9 months of applying, I continued to learn but at the end of 3 months I felt confident I could land a job. I'm only making 25% more than I was making at my previous job but it's the fact I no longer feel stagnant and I'm working towards my goal.
Congrats Leo! I am currently on the same path, I had about 3 months of consistent learning and now 2 months of applying. Any advice for applying and interviewing? I seem to not get pass the first or second round. It is not motivating at all getting all these rejections. Congrats again!
1 and a half years learning whilst working full time, about 3 months of applying, and 4 months in my first job as a full stack developer!
awesome! congrats!
Can you tell me a bit more about ur journey ? What did you struggle with, advices, resources, what you learned, etc.
Stepping away from tutorials is the best thing I've done. I work on my projects and if I can't solve it I just Google and it sticks in my head. Also reading documentation and textbooks is a major help.
You said tutorial hell ? Why sir
That's what I'm doing too. This way the principles stick to your fingers
Can u please help me with books I can buy am a newbie in the world of coding
where do you find projects??
I’m 50 year old single mother of two, a litigation paralegal and tech nerd. 🤓 I’ve worn a lot of hats, run a law firm, family restaurant, and many other things, but my journalism and business degrees are worthless pieces of paper. I’m learning to code, and hoping to get my kids involved, too. I know my age is going to cause issues, but I love learning, and solving problems, so I’m ready and going for it! Thanks for sharing your story!
That's cool. How are you getting your kids involved?
I’m 51. A nanny to my grand babies and my husband retires in 6 years. I have always been the stay at home wife and mom other than the occasion part time job for Christmas help. I want a coding job I can do from home so we can travel in an RV for at least 5 years as we have done nothing. I just started learning JavaScript and praying I can learn with in 12 months so I can land my first job. My son in law is a senior designer for Amazon. He’s been coding since he was 12. All self taught. Makes 350k a year. My goal is 100k a year I am praying for favor as I know I’m old but it’s my time to live. My kids are raised and my grand babies start school in a couple years. I’m ready to live a little for myself. Let me know how it’s going. I’d love to be friends. Maybe we can help each other.
I'm with you 💯
I'm 43 year old mother of 2 little babies and looking for a bootcamp and start software engineer , let me know where you are going to start!!
@@aprendeabcpr do you have discord? I’m starting with html. I live in North Carolina
I have spent many years trying to get a job as a firefighter. I currently work as a paramedic in California making $18/h working 56 hour work weeks. I'm on 24-72 hours running back to back 911 calls with 0 sleep everyday. I constantly think to myself if I could only be home learning and creating projects more, I could create so much more and prove to my co-workers they are not stuck in this industry. I am currently learning JavaScript, CSS, HTML and will be moving on to C#. I have never been this motivated to learn.
Best wishes on the journey. My brother is a firefighter and I've encouraged him to consider the switch, but so far he's been hesitant.
I hope you will get somewhere, brother. My story is very similar to yours. Hope we will break this vicious cycle one day.
That’s so ironic I thought of being a fire foghter but I realize I value my sleep I really wanna take advantage of learning to code since I’m still living with my parents
Dude any update on your coding journey. Did you find a job?
Been learning for about 18 months. I also work in construction (55+ hrs/week) and have been averaging 15hrs/week coding. Been a long 2 years lol. About 3 months ago I really started getting to the point where I'm building more advanced apps (react router, supabase, redux, custom hookes, etc.). Hoping to be ready to start applying by middle of next year!
Keep it up mate!
Took me 10 years to learn on my own. I started before UA-cam University. But I still learned.
Been learning for 7-8 months. So much grinding. Just did my first interview. Was great to see what it was actually like. To really feel the pressure was pretty cool.
Coolness! Hopefully you land something soon!
Any updates? Did they hire you? :)
any luck?
any update? what are you doing now?
Been listening to this for 55 minutes and you haven't tried to sell me a single thing.
I trust you know how refreshing that is to someone looking to change his life and who doesn't have money to waste on a coaching program or a boot camp or whatever.
Thank you. Thank you for understanding, and giving your time freely.
If I have a way to pay you back one day, I'll remember you.
Edit: do you have a Patreon or even want/need something like that?
Thanks is enough. I don't have a patreon or course. Appreciate the feedback. Glad you liked it.
I’m a former Police officer and truck driver. I lost my truck driving job due to a heart issue at 28. Now I’m learning pythons with hopes of someday doing cybersecurity and also doing personal development projects.
Wow You seem Warrior in the world of Cyber
you could use some coenzyme q10 for heart issue
How is it going, mate?
As someone with a both a computer science degree, a work psychology degree and 20 years software development experience, this content is a gold! Implement implement! I like the advice about ditching tutorials, just build something simple stuff that does a simple thing then iterate and iterate. You need quantity of apps instead of quality of apps at the start.
My story: I currently work as a full time delivery driver for Amazon. I actually enjoy the job for the most part, but it just doesn't pay well enough. I've started this journey before, but I got burnt out and just gave up entirely once I started my Amazon job. I'm picking up where I left off. I'm 1/3 of the way through Colt Steele's course, still going through the freeCodeCamp and Odin Project, and tackling some of Wes Bos's projects. I've used some of the money that I've made from Amazon to buy a proper desk setup which actually helps quite a bit lol, and I'm trying my hardest to stay disciplined and keep moving forward. I estimate for it take me over a year to become anywhere near job-ready because I'm a slow learner :/
I have been teaching myself to code for about 6 months
I always come back to this video every month to see what more I understand.
It’s helpful for someone who feels like they’re not getting anywhere. At least for me it helps.
I'm in the same boat. Been working construction my whole adult life , but looking to change my career. Thank you for the content . You can always teach a old dog new tricks.
thanks for the feedback and best wishes with the career change Steven!
construction seems like you can stay fit and dont need to go gym much tho. pros and cons? I always thought construction earns decent money too
I was pretty fit until I injured my back.
I recommend transferring any notes to a google doc for permanent reference. It's really useful to have a refresher written in your own words. Learning about design can also be really important for presenting your projects - if it looks good people will think of it differently and see you in a new light.
I'm a full stack developer but that really means mostly backend development and then utilizing front-end frameworks (Angular and Bootstrap/Tailwind) but not going super in-depth. We're really backend devs doing basic frontend work. It requires clients/stakeholders that understand things are exponentially more expensive if they have to be pixel perfect or want things the frameworks don't natively support.
I completely agree with most of what you said. Getting my first job was the hardest part. After like 6 months at my first job, recruiters were blowing me up and that's continued since. A lot of what I hear about are crap jobs tho. Low pay or not open to hybrid work. Easy to turn down. I job hopped a couple times in the first 2 years as the salary increases were pretty nuts. Worked my first job for 8 months. Got a 30% salary bump at the next job. Worked there for about a year and got a 50% bump at the next job. That put me pretty close to the top of what a dev of my experience could earn and I also got a great team and a very flexible schedule. Working from home whenever I want is super nice.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts
Bro, can you please help me. I am in year 2 of my CS degree and I want to persue web development. But I just am not sure where to or what to study first (I Know, you have to start from Html, Css, JS) but I don't how much time and how much deep knowledge I must have to become a job ready dev. And Yes, i searched youtube for tutorials but I'm not sure which one to choose for learning. PLease bro, could you give ma a little guidance on this issue.
for me the opposite, I am a full stack too but in my current job I mostly work on frontend and a little bit backend
HI, Quick question. I am considering doing a full stack development bootcamp. It's $4,200 up front for 6 months. They say we will have a complete e-portfolio and build a e-commerce site. Is a bootcamp worth it? Or would it be better to learn as self taught. My goal is to get a job within 1 year.
U will be fine. U will have a cs degree. A lot of these guys are self taught so u have an advantage. They have to prove that they are not bull shiter. U don't have that problem.
Warning, a lot of front end jobs now test algorithms. You'll get an array if complex data and need to sort and filter it precisely. I just had this interview and I'm a 25yr vet don't front end for the last decade. But I did backend processing for a long time so it wasn't difficult for me. But just be warned, its not always simply show front end skills. In the midwest here, Angular and React are king, so know that and you'll have a much better chance of getting a job. Rarely do companies do basic html pages anymore. Also styling add-ons like Material, Bootstrap, etc create themes, which are far better than css variables.
Thanks for this advice!
It’s not always just about grit. It’s about learning how to learn based on how your brain works. I have ADHD and I struggled for months trying to keep up with vid tutorials and lectures but once I started learning by using spaced repetition and pair programming on practice projects I totally excelled bc with another person I was able to start engaged. It’s also about developing habits to take care of your brain and create stability so you can practice consistently and progress. Before becoming a dev I was chronically unemployed and battling addiction for 15 years. Learning how my brain works was a life changer. Awesome vids man. ❤
Great perspective
i want to change my life and others for the better so i started learning how to code 3 months ago, basically i have been a physical therapist for more than 12 years and am still that person but, i listen to my old passion about computers and different technologies. i asked myself why i should work in a career that doesn't convince me of my abilities. for 12 years i saw my progress in life as i am walking by chackles. By learning how to code i feel more confident, more useful, more productive, so i am very happy with these videos James. thanks
i had spent many years without doing anything due to my circumstances, but now i want to start learning web development specifically front end, i will spend 3-5 hour's a day for 1 year and see how it works, i am not very smart but hopefully i will get it done!
I will come to this comment for updates(:
I'm currently a stay at home mom and always found computers and technical stuff fascinating but never thought to give it a try, figured I could never be able to do it because of ADHD, but then one day I decided to watch a video on it and it seemed so simple so I was like why not just study this as much as I can and see how far I get because I do retain information well if I just study and apply it. I've been learning a little and I love it! Some days are hard though because I have an 8 month old baby and a 3 year old.
I’m 100% in your shoes, seeing this lifted my spirit. I’m afraid to start cos of my ADHD and I also have a toddler. Can we be friends?
@@tobbiesspace5747 front-end development is very granulized and component-based.. wich is actually more suitable for people with adhd than for people who not have it...
im more conmfortable at reading a code file with 1000 lines code.. rather than templates and components splits into many files and granulized...
If im not mistaken, women learn stuff theoretically way better than men.. men learn with hands and by doing, and making mistakes.
women can probably just read docs, learn the syntax and just write less errors
men learn from compilation errors lol and try not to make the same mistake twice.. : - )
after all coding was considered a womanly job back in the grace hopper days.. like a secretary/clerk job
there's not many women in tech in terms of % .. but ive noticed that usually when female coders give presentations in conferences etc... they have done something complicated and good, wich benefits everyone
I have a set of 6 month old twins!! We can do this. You’ve somewhat inspired me to start❤️
YOU GOT THIS! :)
I just started my change of career I’m a structural steel certified welder but Coding is awesome it changes all the time and that’s what I love about it thank you for being a motivator I believe there’s something more in the future for web developments 😊
as a transitioning professional and coding prospect, i truly appreciate how this gentleman actually gets to the point and delivers the pertinent information to what is useful to learn and why. ive seen other "how i transitioned to developing" videos and they seem to be more focused on charisma and theatrics than the objective here. thank you for the insight.
@devsmak I succesfully land a role as front end react dev. Report on duty dec2022. I shift my career from 7 years exp in construction to software. My self taught journey start since 2020. Your channel help me in my journey especially when we have same prev background. I wanna thank you and let u know that your video change people lives.
Congrats on the job! That is super awesome! Thanks for sharing Pixel Bulb!
What languages did you learn, did you attend a Bootcamp
This is awesome 👍. Well done
Where you started and what source you used to learn?
I went to a bootcamp 2 years ago, but never did anything with it. I'm back into it after a year of pizza delivery and year of help desk. I remember my foundational stuff thankfully! I appreciate this info
it's great you already have that foundation. best wishes!
shoulda bought aaron pauls course instead of the boot camp
I love your videos. I know I’m late to this video but I came across your channel, liked your content so I started at the end and am working my way to recent.
I worked construction for 5and a half years framing houses, apartments, pole barns and more. Worked as a farm hand for a few years then went into tree climbing for the last 2 years. Until September 27th 2023 when I was out of work due to an injury. (Not good when having 3 kids) Spent 4 months dealing with the doctors. And this last month learning html right now. Hope this works out I’ve never had this much fun learning something new. Can’t wait to turn it into a career
It took me eight months, since my first line of code in freecodecamp until get my offer letter in my first job at Mexico City. I sign it in january from this year as a front end dev. Right now I am learning topics of data science to apply in my phD related to drug discovery research. So it's a good life. Cheers!
that's cool. congrats on the job!
Hey Victor, im starting in the front end dev path and i’m also from Mexico. i’m as well starting with freecodecamp and code academy. How hard was to land the job?
@@luisalexis9828 God has been good with me. Only took me december from last year, I had a lot of interviews that month and gotcha three offer letters. I said to human resources that I am C2 proficient english speaker and that I have the willing to grow as a de dev for my phD and that kind of stuffs. Wish you success in this travel you are onboarding. Have incredible benefits and a good time if you hurry. Cheers!
@@victorizquierdo5320 Thank you so much! I’m enjoying so far what i have learned. Wish you the best in your career bro 🤝
Did you complete the freecodecamp course
I tried going into programming for around 3montjs and I realised it wasn't something I am into. Then went onto trading and am still doing it now after 2 years. Its so brilliant to see you building up a community that is self driven and ambitious to make a change in their lives. :) keep up the great work
Really? How did you start and how can i?
Coding makes trading easier
Started my journey a little over 2 weeks ago now. Currently about to go into my final year of radiation therapy studies, however, the past 3 years or so have taught that I am not cut out for this line of work. Degree itself is relatively chill but doing my internships throughout the course made me realise that there are people who are a lot more suited than I. I am loving the odin project, doesnt make me burn out and makes everything fun.
3 month bootcamp a lot of studying and practice. Applied for a 3 month internship, learned a lot fast on the job now I’m a jr full stack developer for a company that is going to become a unicorn in 2023! Total 6 months.
It’s possible network work on your soft skills and just have fun doing it.
that's awesome!
The trickiest thing for me is choosing the right boot camp that will boost you to competency the fastest. How did you go about choosing a bootcamp?
Bro, I'm litterally the same EXACT story as you said in beginning of this vid. You have no idea how much this just brought me hope and motivation. I'm 25, and all i've ever worked in my entire life is construction labor, and or warehouse/factory work. I only have G.E.D as far as my education and so I'm very very limited as far as being able to get opportunities to gain some experience in tech related jobs due to not having any professional experience I'm able to list on my resume.
Technology has always been a passionate hobby of mine for as long as I can remember. Being a little kid, of course I would play some video games and what not, but also I found joy in the actual concept of computers and just what technology is to the core of what it is. My older brother and I would build PC's together when I was little and things like this always brought me much joy. I just wish I would've made the decision to integrate my passion for computer science into a career path earlier on, as well as maybe doing a bit better in school so I could've had a better education to open more doors for career paths.
I made the decision to do this career change roughly 6 months ago, and trying to do this all self-taught. It can definitely be extremely challenging. I'm just trying to do the best I can so I can get any opportunity that is offered to me quite honestly. I'm a humble, realistic person who isn't afraid to work hard and get their hands dirty. I'd be more than content with accepting a job offer that starts me off at a low level position with not so great pay, SO LONG there is opportunity for growth. My dream roles are all computer science roles such as SWE, programming, cyber security, machine learning, web dev, etc.
I've struggled because I always hesitate on deciding if I'm taking the correct path as far as my learning goes. I don't have anyone helping me and it's been rough. So this video is a great help and I truly appreciate it. I've been becoming quite discouraged as of very lately to be honest, so this video was just what I needed as a pick-me-up and a reminder to show me that I can do this. Hearing someone that was just like me, a construction worker wanting a better life, a better career for better pay, and they actually made it. That's what I needed right now to keep me going! Thanks james!
Thanks for sharing your story Rex! And thanks for the feedback! Best wishes.
Watched the whole thing and I believe this is a quality video to rewatch and really soak the advice. Your video is the most comprehensive and pragmatic approach I've seen for amateurs to understand the web development industry and how to navigate it.
I'm in that boat right now.
I got out of the military with no marketable skills to speak of (and got screwed by the VA.)
My eife and I both work full time + in dead-end jobs to scrape by paycheck to paycheck in our little 2 bedroom apartment in the not so great part of town. My bank account is at 0 a week before payday most months, and my car got repoed because I couldn't make the payments, so we share 1 20 year old car that's falling part between us.
I don't need to be a billionare buy super yachts and privaye jets. I just need basic stability and security so I can actually be a person again, instead of a dead broke cog in a pointless machine with no prospects for the future.
This is why, yesterday, I decided to become a programmer. I appreciate your story showing that it's possible in my situation and all the info you provide.
If I don't, I'm going to stay a broke, stressed and unfulfilled pest control technician for the rest of my life.
best wishes on your journey!
You can do it!
I’m literally just starting. Hoping to learn over the course of the next year or two because I’m not a fast learner and I have a lot going on. But I’m motivated. Thank you for this!
Same here good luck on your adventure!
best wishes on your journey!
so Smart
Stay focused. I'm the same way, I need to sit with the material a bit longer than most, before it clicks. Don't give up, no matter what, you'll get there!👊🏽
Where are you right now? I'm currently doing CS50.
James. You are one of the most articulated front-end developers I have come across... Also a fellow Utah county front-end dev here ... thanks for sharing your journey experience, very motivational, informative, and 100% real. Funny thing I started in a React BootCamp but I just finished at a job that for a year had me working in Angular apps, which I had to learn from nada. Apreciate the tips! Adobe is not an easy place to get in, so congrats! Keep up the great work here on UA-cam and see you around in a meet up sometime.
Thanks Herly. Being familiar with multiple frameworks will be valuable so it's great you got some varied experience. I usually go to utah.js conf each year so if you end going to that, be sure to say hi.
This is very inspiring. I am in my third month of learning front end work, and I am hitting that slump that is making me question everything... I am seriously going to try my best from here on out. Thank you for this video.
I’m currently working as a pool guy and IT SUCKS!!
I’ve been learning web dev on and off for about three years now. I’d say I know a good amount of stuff on the topic, but I’ve never had the confidence to actually apply for any jobs because I always think they would judge me because I don’t have a degree or bootcamp to show (I actually went to college for comp sci but never finished the degree). Because of that, I always give up on learning and spend months doing nothing to improve my life. However, now I finally took the step to join a bootcamp (it starts in a couple months), and I have never been more excited to learn coding again.
I know people don’t NEED a bootcamp to get a development job but I just feel more comfortable having something that shows I’ve at least spent some time studying and that I studied the right stuff to be able to work as a developer.
I actually watched your video during one of the times I tried to get back into learning to code and it got me motivated, but like always, I never actually applied for any jobs and ended up giving up. But, like I said, I’ll be doing a bootcamp in a couple months and watching videos like this really help me, so thank you 😁
It's great to see you're motivated again. You've got this!
There was a lot of useful and genuine advice in this video. You seem 100 percent genuine which is what stands out as compared to many of these UA-cam coding personalities.
thanks for the kind words
Thank you so much for this insight!! I've been overwhelmed with the idea of rejection, what types of questions will be posed, what information to focus on etc. I just graduated with my associates but don't feel prepared at all so this is highly encouraging and motivating to push through and continue with self teaching. Thank you again!!
Glad it was helpful!
I love how devsmak is giving concrete ways to become successful in this field. What got me hooked is that he stated that hard work is needed. Probably the best advise is to know what you want and you need to do it relentlessly.
thanks for the feedback Joseph!
I am a new programmer and am definitely bookmarking this video to refer to later, perhaps many times. This video deserves at least two viewings, once to try and grasp the big picture and a following time making as many notes as possible which are relevant to your own situation. Learning javascript and React are good choices, PHP is insane garbage, CSS is written by Satan if it won't do what you want anyway and you can't figure that out. I am still glad about knowing all the backend stuff by now but it might be nice to never think of it in a "hands on" way ever again thanks to Django and Python, and a little advice from Chat-GPT.
I got my first job but I'm making things I've never done before, it's hard but I'm going to give it my best
I work in Oncology Clinical Trials. Cancer trials are extremely hard to get on so the majority of my 40 hour work week I do nothing, because I don't have many patients. I have so much extra time on my hands between work and my home life. I'm single and my son is grown that I need some stimulation. I decided I wanted to learn how to code, because why not lol . Obviously I have no experience coming from healthcare, but I am willing to put in the work. I am just starting and hoping to learn as much as I can over the course of next 3-6 months.
I hope you made it!!
Dude! Hi, I'm from Argentina, I lived in Ogden, UT for 8 years. Now I’m kinda lost, but thanks to this video I felt guided again, thanks for all the info you shared. I’m aiming for front end, I did a full stack boot camp, and front end is what got my attention, I enjoy seeing the results. At least for now, I feel the learning curve is shorter this way. And yeah, I hate my current job at a factory, anxiety hits hard sometimes since I’ve been wanting to change for a while now. Deep breaths and keep at it
I am really motivated by everybody's stories here. I am leaving behind 20-odd years of baking and retail work.
Hey James, I'm currently in a bootcamp, pretty heavy tbh, 8-5, monday through saturday, learning Ruby, Js, React, WSL usage, GitHub and other basic stuff. I'm loving it so far. I tried to learn by myself before, but now that I have a guide things are sticking and I see actual progress. Watching your videos has been really helpful to keep me motivated when I feel overwhelmed, thank you for sharing your knowledge with all of us. 6 more months to go and I'll start my applications. I hope to get coding experience and eventually move into the videogame industry with some stronger foundations and more akills in other languages. I'll let you know how it goes, cheers from Mexico!
that's awesome! best wishes!
Is the boot camp online, can u please share some projects y working on if possible
I greatly appreciate your time for all of us! I am new to coding and I am currently in a boot camp for a Full Stack Developer. A lot of this still a foreign language to me, but I am getting it. Ultimately, I'm chiming in to say "THANK YOU!!!" for sharing this experience on here... for me personally... it helps me focus and most importantly helps me rethink my time on things (I feel pressure to hurry things.). Again, thank you!
Thanks for making and sharing this content. This gives clarity and detailed info on my vague roadmap. I have been learning front end dev for three months, still on to learning HTML, CSS and the fundamentals of computer science from CS50. Your videos are encouraging. Thank you 😊
Glad it was helpful!
Ia CS50 enough to learn Web development. Is it worth it? Or is there any better course available for it?
I appreciate how you explained the front end race to the bottom because it shows part of the reason why full stack web development is so profitable. That extra level of intricacy makes all the difference when designing a very complex system that cannot be re-created via WordPress or Wix for example
Currently, I am nearly done with my AS in Computer Science in college right now. I have been thinking about what I want to do after I graduate and learning how to be a front-end wed developer is my goal right now! Thank you so very much for this video as it gives me so much inspiration and push me to keep learning!
hey, is your degree a 2 yr associates or bachelors?
Been a chef for 8 years. Im 28 now and tired of the industry and the hours on my feet and never seeing my family. With shit pay and benefits.
I actually coded in high school and was really good just dropped it and never went back. Wish someone would’ve pointed me in the right direction. I’m seriously looking into this career change.
Just starting my journey! On my second month now. Focusing on Javascript right now! I've been working at PepsiCo for the last 5 years, and also did music engineering on the side. Realized I no longer wanted to pursue a career in music. Thanks for your content, it's been very useful !
thanks for sharing your story and best wishes on the new journey!
Can u please give a brief roadmap after learning JavaScript, because I am also on my way of learning js☺️
@@Sejal602 Depends what you want to do. If you want to do FrontEnd I would say React since this one of the more popular ones right now or another reactive framework.
@@Cyber-Bison ok.. actually I was so confused about the sequence of learning as some videos says to learn basics of git and github just after learning j.s
Some says learn typescript after js
Same says learn tailwind, bootstrap
And etc..
So I am confused about the roadmap , that that can land me into a nice job..😇😇
@@Cyber-Bison can u please give me a step by step guidance
Good on you that you were able to transition from construction to web development, self taught at that.
I've had a recruiter try to belittle me because after getting laid off from my job, I picked up some general labour work in the meantime. I worked in the mechanical engineering technology field for 10 years. It takes courage fall back temporarily on your profession if it means your survival, and even embark on a career change at that point if it means better outcomes. And it takes a considerable amount of discipline to be able to sit down and teach yourself a new skill such as coding.
The problem with companies is that at the forefront there are too many gate-keeping douchbags who forget that they are dealing with people. These smug recruiters will not make me feel bad about my circumstances one bit! They couldn't do what I'm doing. If they were in my position they'd probably give up and cry.
yes yes the gate keeping is real. Alas, we move. Good luck!
Hey James! This is really a great talk! Even as a frontend developer with 5+ years professional experience, I find this content very helpful and inspiring - not only for junior devs, but for all levels and transitioning as well. The web development field is constantly evolving, and besides the necessity of staying up to date with market trends, we also need to stand out as real people with creative and soft skills. You rocked it at the end with the "Breaking Resume Rules" chapter!
Much appreciation:)
Glad you enjoyed it!
I was attending in a Bootcamp, learned for three month and was super lucky to get the job i wanted after just one application. But as i said... i was just lucky. I'm a mediocre dev and some of my fellow bootcamp students are wayyyyy better than i am and many are still looking for a job after like 2years :/ If you guys want to take this path, be sure what you´re doing and commit yourself 100%.
What Bootcamp did you attend
@@kaycampbell364 just look up "neuefische - coding bootcamp". They are located in Hamburg, Köln, Frankfurt, Munich (Germany) and they offer german and english courses. (Full remote ofc)
Currently in a bootcamp for Software Engineering.Thank you for talking about this just started a software engineering bootcamp. I couldn’t get a job either with my undergrad degrees in health admin . Currently still in grad school for MS Psychology taking a ten week SE program with Coding temple. We are learning about blackened now I prefer the front end html and css .
Went to college once, failed out. Went back 3 years later for CS degree and graduated with a 3.8. Don’t love the job I landed but love the courage it gave to start my journey of game development. I now know my passion is developing games. Which I thought I was “too dumb” to do four years ago. After I took my first semester and had HTML/CSS and Python I was hooked on coding, but that quickly became boring until I transferred those skills to game development. (My assignments were things like cleaning data, managing API, setting up servers, deploying VM, python and HTML basics. That just got stale for me - as for work it’s just numbers and excel sheets with some python/pandas for data cleaning.
Love this video, great advice, brilliant editing and this advice is useful for experienced devs too.
I'm a web developer of 4-5 years in the UK, focussed on WordPress, PHP, JS and I'm learning react, but I would love to see a video that's focussed on intermediate or mid level devs who have already got their foot in the door, and how they can stay ahead of the curve. One thing I've found is that moving from startup culture to enterprise level companies is a huge leap especially with waterfall / agile based companies. In startups you have far more freedom I find where as in larger companies there are clear cut standards which is both good and infuriating especially if you want to implement new tech as there's usually a huge process rolling it out and training people.
What advice would you give for experienced devs who have fallen behind on self improvement and dedicating time to personal projects to master their craft?
Keep the content coming!
From my experience of being a full stack dev I worked 80% backend and 20% frontend. The frontend would usually be simple using boostrap etc.
Thanks for the new video! I’m looking forward to seeing what other content you post! Always good to learn as much as you can!
Current CS student. I served in the Marine Corps for 4 years and did just under a year in construction. I am in love with CS and I am not looking back on my previous occupations. CS / software / web dev or related fields is the escape from jobs that kill you physically . This is the way.
Construction worker for 13 years. I’m 31 years old…Always been into tech & computer science. I’m 3 weeks into my coding journey as far as learning goes. I’m excited but I know this will be hard with no college experience. I do have dev friends in the industry that are helping me everyday. Currently doing about 3-5 hours a night of hard core studying. My dev friends swear I can land a job in under a year but I think it will take longer
I'm in a similar situation, I'm 27 and been working in residential construction for almost 2 years, and I've really grown to loathe the work-yourself-to-death culture that permeates the industry. I'm on week 2 of learning Python, but after seeing this video I think I'll enjoy front end development much more. Hope all goes well
please code as soon as possible after waking up not before going to bed. do not realise this late
@@abdulmuqtadir8898 I second this
You will do it before a year is up. Trust me.
@@paulomtts I hope your right! Lol I would love to get out of this back breaking labor
I’ve been a trucker for 10 years and really excited to get into coding. Also got back into music recently and want to be able to work from home. Taking my first baby step.
Best of luck!
That's awesome you got a job at Adobe. Each time I drive by their building in Salt Lake City I think it would be dope to work there.
My story is kind of similar to yours, I graduated from Civil Engineer, I was hopping to work with my dad in his construction company but he lost the company a year before I graduate, during quarentine I was trying to find some jobs but most of them were for a very low salary and my thought was that any other person without a degree could do the same job so talking with a friend he told me about programming and last year I started learning to code now I know Java, made an JavaFx app, and currently learning Javascript to build a portfolio I'm exited to work in this industry because I'm very passionate to code sometimes I lost my sense of time while coding, i start coding in the morning and suddenly it's night time, sorry if my English is bad I'm a native Spanish speaker but love your story and tips
I'm also a Civil Engineer in pretty much the same situation than yours! Hahaha, I wish you the best (also a Spanich speaker here, from Colombia).
I am an architect and now I am looking forward to see that transition which went through. I just completed my masters in Estonia. fingers crossed. Thanks for this.
Best of luck!
Just starting on this path. I used to code when I was young, hack the highschool network etc... haha Went on to start my own tile business but at 34 my body is already starting to feel it. Hard to take a cut in pay, so I've continued doing it... Then I discovered you could get hired as a self taught dev and the pay is generally comparable. So excited. I love the grind - both mental and physical - but my body will be happy to rest. Thanks for the vid.
I have been a handyman & landscaper for the past 14 years. I am 40 years old and I am looking at making a career change due to the physical nature of my work. I am sick and tired of my line of work as it has given me a few injuries over the years. Is it still possible for me to study this course and consider a career change? I have always been interested in Information Technology specifically cybersecurity and networking. Have you already started the transition over to working in IT ? What are you currently studying? I don't know where to start yet. I was thinking of going to community college but I feel I am too old now.
I have seen the terms front end developer 1000 times and had no idea I had those exact skills. I know how to work an HTML and CSS I'm not as great in Java but I'm learning but it is so exciting to me to see a beautiful webpage come to life. Thank you for this video.
I totally agree with your experience. I started work-life as a commercial photographer, quit and jumped into trucking (needed more money), quit, and attended computer tech school where I was taught JCL, COBOL, ALC, RPG (mainframe stuff, a really long time ago). My first job was at a company that built industrial radios and communications equipment. I had to learn CP/M, FORTRAN and Z80 assembly language to work on the project. On my first day they dropped off a desktop computer, and a few books on my desk and told me I had four weeks to learn how to use it. In short, what you learn, may not be the knowledge to help you earn. Now that I’m retired, I’m hoping to freelance as a front-end dev and copywriter. My research over the last month shows that the two dovetail. Some folks aren’t just looking for dazzling content, they want you to add the style and animation too. I guess I could do that with Figma prototypes, but I would love to simply package the HTML, CSS, and JS into a zip file as a deliverable.
thanks for sharing your experience!
O
Ol
Great video, subscribed! In my case I started developing just html, css and jQuery 13 years ago. I always preferred building everything from scratch including the PHP backend and SAAS like projects, and recently started using NextJS with React and I am sold big time to the new NextJS framework. NextJS is amazing together with ChatGPT now a days life hasn't been better like this in a long time!
nextjs is cool
I'm listening. X construction worker, due to my back , now I'm listening to you , I'm a single father and I have to do this . I'm not scared.
I am in a similar position to you. Desperate to get out of my back breaking job. What are you thinking of studying in IT? Networking or Coding?
I've been in the fitness industry for the past 6 years. I love it, but can't do it forever as a coach. I've been learning for the past 10 months, going to work on my resume and portfolio soon. My hope is to work in tech health/fitness, I think the bridge between them can still use a lot of work.
that's a great idea to leverage your existing experience
I'm a mom of 3 teaching myself how to code so I can make my vision of creating a video game started. First step is to create a fully functional and fun virtual pet site game where those who are waiting for the game I want to build in Unreal Engine 5 can have something to pass plenty of time each day. I literally just started to teach myself how to code on Friday, and already have a nearly functional welcome page for the site made.
Very good overview. I learned HTML, CSS and Javascript years ago, but I couldn't figure out how to turn it into a career. I wish I had seen a video like this back then.
man this incredible. I am in the process of looking for jobs after i finished a 6 month frontend bootcamp and i can relate so much to what you offered here. thank you for that amazing overview, you managed to press so much value and information into such a short amount of time !
thanks. best wishes on your new journey!
Really glad I found this video. I just started Udemy's Zero to Mastery: Web Development, and I have to say, i already love what I'm learning. I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I do but it's really become a joy to learn. I'm trying to dedicate at least 3 hours a day learning but I'm going to up it to at least 4 hours now after watching your video. I'm currently an Arabic interpreter, which is cool but it's not challenging and there isn't much room to increase your pay. Wish me luck!!
best wishes!
I am currently starting on Odin Projectl like you mentioned in the other video. Been watching your vids since early last year, and finally gain the confidence to give it a try without feeling I am all over the place. Your insight has been amazing and really appreicate you my dude.
Very cool!
Did you finish Odin project? I’m looking at starting that one
Coming from no real career at 28 to coding. Got a job in IT in the meantime.
Started JS and am picking it up pretty quick but shifting into CSS and HTML.
That's cool. what's your IT job? Do you have software engineers at your company that you can ask questions and maybe get them to let you contribute a little to start getting experience?
@@jamescross I start the IT job in December. In the interview I was open about my plans to work towards a dev job and they told me I'd have access to developers and encouraged me to reach out. It's for DXC Technologies so a massive company, whether or not they help me I'll be self teaching.
that's awesome! congrats! sounds like a great chance to break in.
Thank you so much for all the information you have shared if this sort of content was shared by someone else he/she could link a hundred companies link and sponsor their useless courses to make money but you did it without covering or including a third party to your success or others. great job! I'm software developer with 12 yr of experience and agree with all you shaed
thank you!
Ill be 24 in just about 3 months. Ive tried going to college about 4 times now and it just never works for me. I feel stuck and like im not doing anythign with my life, so I decided to go the self-taught route of coding. I hope to eventually land a (hooefully) well paying job, so that i can care for my family, hopefully give back to my grandparents
Currently looking for my first internship. Great stuff to know to put me on the right path. Thank you.
On a journey to learn front end development. Enjoying the JavaScript language, but still a bit to go before becoming 'comfortable' with the language. React is definitely on radar to tackle and learn. Thank you for the video and advice!!
@James cross±𝟭𝟰𝟳𝟵𝟯𝟭𝟳𝟰𝟬𝟲𝟭 Man, from what i hear from my dev friends front end is absolutely dying and is being all automated. It's a bummer since i just started learning all of this like a month ago. Not even sure where to go from here at this point....
10 years in the infantry. 2 years in armed security.
I've been programming for about 9 months. I've learned a lot, and I'm pretty great at solving problems. But the job hunt is grueling.
It's also difficult trying to balance familiarizing myself with the variety of technologies in use with mastering a couple things. Ha, I constantly feel like I'm being jerked around.
I am in my 5th month of learning to code! As I go through the course, I always have questions in the back of my mind, such as how will I get a job and what will the interview be like. Sometimes I feel like I don't even know what I'm doing, and there are moments when I want to give up. However, my current job is motivating me to continue, and I'm excited to pursue a career as a software developer.😊
best wishes!
Can you recommend best free course for self learning? Am looking for free resources to learn from.
I recently got out the army last year I took a course for wordpress development and ended up landing a software developer apprenticeship with less than 6 months of coding knowledge I have the basics of Javascript but I need more practice by next year i plan to be extremely more proficient than i am now
I've been a full-stack engineer for the last 16 months with my first job out of college. It really hit home for me when you talked about the leaky bucket of "best practices" because I am in that situation right now. I was just throw into the fire with no professional experience, which I enjoyed at first to learn. Now, being on a larger scale project with no mentor or previous mentor, I sometimes find myself being extremely lost and feeling like an imposter. WHAT DO I DO?
You pray
Google it
You hit me up and tell them to hire me so we can tackle the issues together 😂
It took me about 5 months total - I took the free 100 days of SwiftUI course from Paul hudson, finished it in just over 3 months. I began working on my own native iOS applications and applying to jobs, 2 months and 180 applications later I got my first interview. Got the second interview, and then offered a position at about $55/hour in the Pittsburgh, PA area.
I was lucky, but even then it wasn't easy. Single dad, I'd wake up at 4:30am to code and learn until 7:30 when I had to get ready for work and get my kid ready for pre-school. After dropping her off, I'd get to work by 8:30am and work until 4:30pm, pick her up by 5:30pm thanks to traffic, make it to the gym by 6. Leave the gym, get home by 7:15 and make dinner, eat, play until 8:30pm when my kid and I both would have the same bed time.
Repeated this for the full 5 months, swapping out learning from the course to making my own apps and applied for jobs during the down time of my day job.
Congrats! Thanks for sharing your story.
I've been a back-end developer for 12 years now (C++/Java/PL-SQL) and I can tell you I'm jealous of our front-end guys and gals! They do all the cool and pretty stuff and all the clients love them, while nobody even knows I exist here! I mean they know my job matters but they never want to talk to me about what I do at all... At any level... :(
I’m just getting into this but I understand where you’re coming from which is why I’m learning the front end first
@@Chubbyfactory good luck ;)
😂😂😂
Man, when you talk about code problems and such in interviews, it's what really gets me. I can't remember that stuff on the spot. As an ADHD programmer, my memory is bad. I have great logic skills and I can read and understand and plan, but the idea of writing something unaided on the spot? Nah. It takes me 5 seconds to refresh my memory with google though. My weakness is definitely raw knowledge and my strength is in problem solving, which includes finding answers to things I can't pull out from memory.
I completed a Diploma in Web dev, I've been self learning for 6 months extra, I don't think I'll ever feel ready.
I know several engineers with ADHD so hang in there. Best wishes.
Med school Grad. Havent secured residency so degree pretty much not that useful. So Ive been looking for other oppertunties and tech seems to be it. Enjoying the journey. Thanks for all the informational videos.
Best of luck!
I love front-end development. I've been doing it since 1996, but mostly on my own projects/websites, and not professionally. But, I'm addicted to extreme minimalism, and hate javascript and animations. I just love a text only websites. The front page of craigslist is the best thing ever made online - fight me! I'm not a dev, but I've done a lot of front end, and understand DOM, HTML, CSS, and a bit of Javascript. I'm really quite tempted to learn more and become a legit front-end dev. This video was great, thanks!
Love this long-form video format. I'm a noob and was expecting a tutorial, but got something so much better!! Great work organizing and articulating your wisdom and experience. Will definitely be a video I come back to again and again. Subscribed!
Awesome, thank you!
I am a former back-end programmer analyst (university of Montreal grad in computer science). Interviews, in my days, contained a technical part (1994-2003). The interviewers themselves were technical. Sometimes, there were 2 or 3 interviews. In those cases, 1 enterview was entirely technical.
I would not go back in that field. I switched to telecom technician. It pays less, but it's more fun. I travel. I see a lot of different people.
I've started coding in Aug '22. Halfway through JavaScript and it's been rough, but I'm persistent. I went to a trade school and been a nail artist/nail therapist for 15 years, self-employed, independent contractor, paying out of pocket for benefits. I want to apply my nail art skills in front end development so we'll see how it goes! I appreciate what the beauty industry has taught me, but I'm ready for new challenges!
best wishes on your new journey!
How it’s going so far?
such genuine content. especially the mid last part was so valuable. deserves more subs
Hey man I've watched a view of your videos and they really helped to motivate me. I watched this video before my first interview a couple weeks ago. I just got a call back today and was offered the position. I started learning a year ago exactly this month. It was a long hard road but I made it. I appreciate all the help!
Congrats! Gotta feel good after all the hard work you did!