@@gs-e2d piyush might make a course anyway regardless of @tanmayghosh8311. But his advice is 100%, when I joined a startup the first thing they taught me was how to read docs and learn on your own better, made me a much better dev and I still wonder how I would have worked at all without AI. My point is even after lot of efforts it takes time and is hard to become a really good coder, so if you keep relying on people to make courses it will take a lot longer to improve. I have seen this type of comment on a lot of videos and maybe so has he, and decided to give advice
15:22 My startup uses a jaint turborepo and I had given task to move to next15 and hydration errors are not showing up where they are occurring now it's my nightmare
I used to like it till they released app directory. It's a mess right now because of their opinionated caching decisions which they change very single versions that it's hard to keep up with it.
I hate it because sometimes it feels like magic going on. And it's hard to keep up with there documentation. Docs messed up with everyday updates. I know opinionated framework django, osm documentation. But this doesn't happen with next.js. I think vercel is the problem they are designing framework to only deploy on vercel. And they call it opinionated framework sometimes unopinionated.
Hey everyone! I graduated in 2023 and secured an off-campus job as a software engineer, agreeing to a 3.2 LPA salary. After 1.6 years, I decided to leave due to a toxic work environment and health issues. During those 18 months, my experience was mostly in testing, with a brief period (around 1.5 months) working on backend development for a project. The main issue now is that, with this limited experience, I don’t feel confident enough to take on another job, as I still don’t feel fully prepared. So, I’ve decided to take a break to learn new skills, work on personal projects, and build a strong portfolio. I know leaving may not have been the best decision, but at the time, it felt right. I would love some guidance on how to move forward. I’m interested in frontend development and UI/UX, but I’d be open to a full-stack role as well. Could you advise on what skills to learn and which projects I should focus on to prepare myself for my next job?
start with vanilla js, then react and then node. Try project based learning and doing dsa with either js or any other language parallel to development. Once you're confident enough, host some of your projects using free tools which should help with devops on your cv. Sign up on the freelancing platforms to practice and never stop dsa practice.
No bro...Angular is the worst framework I have ever used. Only making website colorful doesn't mean it is good framework 😂😂 They have just written some definitions in their documentation.. nothing more 😂😂
Make a playlist of next.js basic to advance...
Aur apki max playlist incomplete hai jinko aap pura nhi krte
if you are good with react and also good with back end and typescript then you don't need a course
@@tanmayghosh8311 arrey bhai tujhe kya problem hai, agar woh playlist banate hain toh acha hi hai na.
@@gs-e2d mujhe koi problem nai hai suggestion Dena kya Galat hota hai?
@@tanmayghosh8311 thik hai bhai tum action prevent kar rahe the, action kam hi lete hain log, isliye bola, naraaz mat ho, aur discourage mat ho.
@@gs-e2d piyush might make a course anyway regardless of @tanmayghosh8311. But his advice is 100%, when I joined a startup the first thing they taught me was how to read docs and learn on your own better, made me a much better dev and I still wonder how I would have worked at all without AI. My point is even after lot of efforts it takes time and is hard to become a really good coder, so if you keep relying on people to make courses it will take a lot longer to improve. I have seen this type of comment on a lot of videos and maybe so has he, and decided to give advice
apky btany ka andaz buhut acha tha. kafi achy clear hogya or Nextjs ka lastest version adapt krna kiu important hy ye bhi easily samajh agya
This video was really helpful to quickly understand what all has been changed
It's React 19 Release Candidate not React Component @12:38*
By the way this video is very informative.
Thanks for creating it.
Corrected at 13:31
Thanks :)
15:22 My startup uses a jaint turborepo and I had given task to move to next15 and hydration errors are not showing up where they are occurring now it's my nightmare
The word startup itself is a nightmare dude
Hate it or love it
Its one of the best to ship fast saas products
Ky ap open source contribution par 1 or video bana sakte ho ,jisme tum 1 randomly 1 issue select karke use live solve Karo for beginners ❤❤
but why do you still hate it?
I also hate next js.
Watch to know
I used to like it till they released app directory. It's a mess right now because of their opinionated caching decisions which they change very single versions that it's hard to keep up with it.
@@sakilakhtarwhy?
Clickbait
Sir please make a series on Next Js
Can you make an overview video about Deno 2.0?
12:07, that's exactly what happened with me first time 😐
Going to watch server side components vs client side components...
Bhai aap please python ke libraries ke upar bhi course banao na, aapki teaching style se padna hi achha lagta
I hate it because sometimes it feels like magic going on. And it's hard to keep up with there documentation. Docs messed up with everyday updates. I know opinionated framework django, osm documentation. But this doesn't happen with next.js. I think vercel is the problem they are designing framework to only deploy on vercel. And they call it opinionated framework sometimes unopinionated.
Can you make a video on remix
Bro Kindly give your reviews to Angular 18
What's the reason to hate Next js?
Hey everyone! I graduated in 2023 and secured an off-campus job as a software engineer, agreeing to a 3.2 LPA salary. After 1.6 years, I decided to leave due to a toxic work environment and health issues. During those 18 months, my experience was mostly in testing, with a brief period (around 1.5 months) working on backend development for a project.
The main issue now is that, with this limited experience, I don’t feel confident enough to take on another job, as I still don’t feel fully prepared. So, I’ve decided to take a break to learn new skills, work on personal projects, and build a strong portfolio. I know leaving may not have been the best decision, but at the time, it felt right.
I would love some guidance on how to move forward. I’m interested in frontend development and UI/UX, but I’d be open to a full-stack role as well. Could you advise on what skills to learn and which projects I should focus on to prepare myself for my next job?
start with vanilla js, then react and then node. Try project based learning and doing dsa with either js or any other language parallel to development.
Once you're confident enough, host some of your projects using free tools which should help with devops on your cv. Sign up on the freelancing platforms to practice and never stop dsa practice.
@@divinesh thanks for advice mate ❤️
I am not qualified to advise anything on it.
But I would like to say, take care of your health and All the best for the wonderful journey my man .
@@wahikedeewane2682 thanks ❤️
@@wahikedeewane2682 thanks ❤️
sir sponsorship kab se start kar dii😂
Please continue Rust series.
Plz continue rust series ❤
Good explanation 👍
Bro i want to work
Bro plzz Rust ❤
nextjs course please sir
plz make a playlist on next js 15 ... learners vote here for next js 15 playlist
Angular ❤
No bro...Angular is the worst framework I have ever used.
Only making website colorful doesn't mean it is good framework 😂😂
They have just written some definitions in their documentation.. nothing more 😂😂
Hate nextjs, it keeps changing, too opinionated
Best video on Next15❤
sir please ye batye abi 2024 me angular learn karni chayea ya Next js.plz tell me
Sir telegram bot making full course lao na please😢😢😢
I hate **.js 😂
Make a playlist of next.js basic to advance...
Aur apki max playlist incomplete hai jinko aap pura nhi krtee