Good LOOKIN. MY GOD.look at these stupid black friday prices brehs![]()
set up your learning collection before the 25th
Programming Languages Online Courses: From Java to Ruby
Damn. What city. I just got my A+ and they offered me 45,000 a year for an entry level positionCerts can
Only one cert. A+, I make $14/hour. I'll get a raise in two months, paid vacation up front, unlimited overtime, full health benefits and paid holidays. Off the jump
Studying for my Network +, then Security +. I plan on doubling my hourly wage by the end of next year.
Damn. What city. I just got my A+ and they offered me 45,000 a year for an entry level position
which is easier , IT Certs or programming languages?
cuz shyt all I need is a $15 hr + job and Im gucci
cant certs get me that?
15+ is all you looking for...breh if that's the case then just become a waiter. Hourly wage + Tips will avg out to around that.
Don't know if posted yet, but:
developer/programming information and careers thread
I'm learning Haskell right now, around next month I'm going to be implementing some Deep Learning/Machine Learning with it for my app.
I say once you get your feet wet a little and feel the burnout and get discouraged, my advice would be to try and find a language that you love. Don't take that as an excuse to keep jumping around when it gets hard though. At the same time, when you feel burnout, remember that there's no rule that says you have to stick with that language.
Coding with Golang probably saved my life after severe Javascript confusion. No exaggeration. From there I went on to learn ReactJS, which lead me to using ImmutableJS with Redux, then Elixir/Phoenix and eventually to where I am now with Haskell, a language I consider in my stable with Golang and Javascript.
Moral of the story, stick with it and don't give up without at least trying other languages. In fact, what you learn in other languages can translate into insights about topics you were stuck on. But there's a craft to it because you do not want to spread yourself too thin, the goal should be depth.
Na. In Boston. We have one of the best job markets for tech in the country but cost of living is a high thoughThis is outside of Philly. Are you down south? I hear they pay more down there for entry level. Up here, there aren't a lot of entry level positions at all. Call center jobs are mainly in the city of Philly. Most of them are part time and temp positions.
Damn. What city. I just got my A+ and they offered me 45,000 a year for an entry level position
its because coding is the most straight forward way to build yourself in a lucrative field
other areas you needa have other things like work experience/degrees/connections etc
but coding, if you learn it, its easy to enter the field and the field is growing rapidly
no idea but I also want this.I got the complete web development course on udemy.
https://www.udemy.com/how-to-become-a-web-developer-from-scratch/learn/v4/overview
But I don't wanna do web development, I'm not the type to build websites and create stuff, I just wanna be told what to do and make 60k or more a year.
What can I order? I wanna do something like website maintenance or something like that, clean up code.