I'm in NYC.What city you in? Sounds a lot like the bootcamp I recently finished.
I'm in NYC.What city you in? Sounds a lot like the bootcamp I recently finished.
Oh. Almost thought you was talking bout the same one I attended in Cleveland. lolI'm in NYC.
Real talk. lol. And it's already affecting the market b/c starting salaries have dropped by 10-20k out here. Mine was subsidized, so I literally had nothing to lose (but time). They're still a great look for people that are looking to break into IT fast, tho. For now, they're still a smart investment if you plan to stay in that industry. Two years from now gon' be a completely different scene, tho.Bootcamps are the new juug lol
Real talk. lol. And it's already affecting the market b/c starting salaries have dropped by 10-20k out here. Mine was subsidized, so I literally had nothing to lose (but time). They're still a great look for people that are looking to break into IT fast, tho. For now, they're still a smart investment if you plan to stay in that industry. Two years from now gon' be a completely different scene, tho.
Agreed. I mean, there are a plethora of bootcamp grads that have done very well for themselves. But percentage-wise, things have not gone well in the long-term. It also depends on the strength of the bootcamp, as they are not all created equal. I did well, but it had more to do with my IQ and ability to acquire new languages than anything else. I have always fared better with accelerated learning than I have in a more traditional capacity. But even with all that being said, there is still a clear difference between myself and the other dev's who did not crash course their way into their positions. I have an advantage when it comes to the specific language covered by my bootcamp, but overall understanding of project structure and flow has been more of a challenge. It also doesn't help that I have been on 3 different teams in the past 6 months. lol. Each time I become familiar with a project, the exec's wanna change some ish up.Yup these were all created to drive wages down thats why big companies get behind them but they are seeing that you simply cant make someone a good developer in a few weeks
@Silkk Is that still the case that career academy doesn't have interactive labs? So you wouldn't recommend them for the CompTIA classes?
I don't think so, I haven't used them in a while though.
I just use VMs and make my own labs for the most part now.
Fusion & WorkstationWhich VM software do you use?
Which VM software do you use?
Before this Security Job, were all your previous IT jobs Helpdesk/Desktop support?Definitely leaving my full time gig if they offer me 40 hours here
Sounds par for the courseI graduate in December and I probably have applied for like 100 entry level college grad IT jobs/programs since September. I still haven't even heard back from like a half of the companies I applied to and my applications are still in the "received" status. The other half I was rejected without any contact or for like 10 jobs rejected after doing a hirevue interview. I had an in person interview last Tuesday in person, but I'm still waiting on the results. Is finding a job supposed to be this hard, or am I just probably bad at kissing ass?
. Same shyt I'm going through.