Things Are Looking TERRIBLE For Coding Bootcamps in 2024 😬

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • I've been seeing a lot of bad things about coding bootcamps and learning code on the internet lately and I just wanted to share that with you guys.
    Check out topmate.io/dor... if you're interesting in chatting with me about anything!
    My Resume & Cover Letter Bundle (sowl.co/s/Rfqsd)
    Join my Discord ( / discord )
    My Amazon store: www.amazon.com...

Комментарии • 654

  • @DorianDevelops
    @DorianDevelops  8 месяцев назад +51

    What are your thoughts about coding bootcamps in 2024?

    • @christineml1476
      @christineml1476 8 месяцев назад +20

      Avoid like the plague.

    • @kani-licious
      @kani-licious 8 месяцев назад +17

      a waste of time and money in this job market lol, better just self learn it

    • @swojnowski453
      @swojnowski453 8 месяцев назад +6

      Here is the thing, have you asked yourself why you learnt to write? Did you want to it to write a book? Did you have an idea for a book before learning to code? Probably not. They taught you writing at school. Many people do not know what to do with that skill now, beyond writing a shopping list or an e-mail. Coding is the same, first you need to know what you want to write with it. If you want to be an author of books or at least articles, go learn your writing properly, if you want it for occasional letters for friends, do not waste your time for anything beyond basics. Bootcamps teach you to write, but they won't tell you what book you should write. You are an author, you should know. Programming is an investment in yourself and your future, but only if you think about yourself as an author and not as a journalist working for some local daily tabloid or an agency. So, learn to code, write your system which automates what you hate doing and move on to working with people. You can't stay long under the water first because you will go short of breath, second because there are monsters there, shark? In the digital world it is the same, the pressure on breathing is the precision you have to put in to get your result out, the monsters are the googles, the amazons, etc, you won't escape them. They have armies of people working for them, they will catch up with you. Your only choice is, focus on something small and do it really well, write you own beautiful book and sell it to people ... this is what you need your coding for. If you can't write go to school, if you can't code, it is better to learn from the beginning rather than bounce from website to website.Bootcamps are like other courses ,learn what you need, write what you want, then move on to working with people, coz there will always be place for people around other people. Digital world is not our natural world, as the sea is not. It is better to leave it to digital creatures ... and monster that have just started emerging from the chasms we have opened while chasing gold deep in the unknown ...

    • @kamikazeeOG
      @kamikazeeOG 8 месяцев назад

      I might be biased but I learned a TON from FreeCodeCamp. They also don't promise the world though. I haven't checked it in a while but that site was responsible for me learning the lions share of python.

    • @kani-licious
      @kani-licious 8 месяцев назад

      @@swojnowski453 tl;dr, at least writing courses dont lie to you with the promise of getting a job

  • @armyoftwo13
    @armyoftwo13 8 месяцев назад +40

    I’m going into tech, going back to community college to get a certificate. I know the odds are stack against me, I will get a tech job no matter what. Good luck to everyone!

    • @SandraWantsCoke
      @SandraWantsCoke 8 месяцев назад

      Just keep on grinding, making a portfolio and you'll get there. I recommend Java+SQL as it's the most used stack everywhere with the highest amount of job postings.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад +4

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

    • @jennifersilves4195
      @jennifersilves4195 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@Karuska22ps Not really.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 7 месяцев назад

      @@jennifersilves4195 there's over 100k new CS grads every year now and growing. So you tell me

    • @leroytillmanjr.5526
      @leroytillmanjr.5526 3 месяца назад

      Now that's the way to go in swinging

  • @christineml1476
    @christineml1476 8 месяцев назад +50

    Love your content, you cut through the BS and give us the info we need.

    • @SSGoatanks
      @SSGoatanks 3 месяца назад

      These Bootcamps are just scams because most places require a 4 year degree.

    • @AngelGiurov
      @AngelGiurov 12 дней назад

      @@SSGoatanks Funny and extremely inaccurate.
      90% of my interviews were for backend positions that didn't even have the BS degree in the job requirements.
      And the ones that did have them, didn't even bother asking me about it.
      Only once out of 50~ interviews did my lack of degree was brought into question.
      And it was brought by a HR officer that had 10 YOE. Basically a boomer that had no clue about anything modern day related.
      She straight up told me to send her my CV to review it MID INTERVIEW and wanted me to explain my 3 month fcking gap between school and my first job.
      Sorry but anyone that questions your lack of degree especially in IT is a complete moron.
      Collage/University is far worse than bootcamps.

  • @amb55555
    @amb55555 8 месяцев назад +16

    I'm currently in a bootcamp for full stack development. Now that I'm near graduating, I know that the company conflates their placement rates as well as places students in any job just to continue government and stakeholder funding. Some grads from the cohort of early last year still looking for jobs. It's just another cash cow dressed up like they are doing something for the underemployed community in my city.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

    • @ingenieroriquelmecagardomo4067
      @ingenieroriquelmecagardomo4067 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@Karuska22ps lmao, imagine if cs is "oversaturated" now imagine these bootcamp dudes trying to get a job vs institutionally accredited candidates

    • @DJVibeDubstep
      @DJVibeDubstep 7 месяцев назад

      FSA?

    • @amb55555
      @amb55555 7 месяцев назад

      local government (dept of ed) funding@@DJVibeDubstep

  • @bjni
    @bjni 8 месяцев назад +31

    Holy shit, people in NA are so brainwashed by silicon valley/cushy rich programmer stereotypes that they shoot themselves in the foot. if you take a more grounded approach there are PLENTY of jobs, No, you dont have to be paid 160-250k out of a bootcamp or a freshgrad at some fancy silicon valley startup or FAANG. for example over here in Japan there are tons of jobs that hire people with 0 experience and train them from the ground up, a 30k a year job is just a normal job, work that for a few years as a python coder optimizing the backend or dataflows for some energy company or some factory and keep learning and adding skills and when the job market picks up you will have actual years of work experience to apply to bigger companies if you wanted to.

    • @AnotherDayattheDock
      @AnotherDayattheDock 8 месяцев назад +8

      unfortunately they outsource those jobs to India here, most dev job listings are above mid level and are senior positions to manage the outsourced india teams

    • @Uchutanjyo
      @Uchutanjyo 8 месяцев назад +1

      Hey bjni, are you a programmer in Japan and do you have N2 certification? I lived there for a bit and am currently N3 level, starting on N2/N1 materials. Was wondering if you were aware of companies like the ones you mentioned who do not require fluent business Japanese - as I know this is basically the norm. Thx 😊

    • @ThePetit1989
      @ThePetit1989 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yup been in tech since 2015. First job was 40k, and it was a slow climb to where I am now. It takes time, and you have to prove yourself at the job to level up. Also took almost 2 years to get my first job. It takes time and dedication. Work other jobs while you’re learning and applying for the job you want.

  • @alexh2665
    @alexh2665 8 месяцев назад +76

    As bad as bootcamps are, I think the problem is more so people wanting to learn coding with the objective of getting job within less than one year of learning to code. it takes Time and you really have to have a passion for it and understand that the money part comes later if you want to be a successful programmer and get a job. It needs to be a long term goal and you should want to learn to code solely for the sake of wanting to learn to code if that makes sense.

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 8 месяцев назад +32

      That would be a great model if people didn't have this pesky addiction to food and shelter.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад +3

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

    • @mogbp7775
      @mogbp7775 8 месяцев назад +14

      What?!? You mean to tell me that people are wanting to learn to code to get a job to pay the bills?? And all within a year!?!? OMG how dare they.

    • @Cjust15
      @Cjust15 8 месяцев назад +5

      Agreed brother. Another issue is that tech RUclipsrs “sell” dreams to people that want to transition in the tech industry. It’s problematic because they make it sound like it’s easy and the amount of money you can make (which is true you eventually make a lot of money) but they completely hide the fact it’s a journey process that won’t happen instantly more times than not. I’ve been learning Ux/ui design for almost 3 years now and I’m still without my first job. I’ve had a total of 2 interviews and one ghosted me but I’m not going to quit because of that. I genuinely want to grow myself in that field and I won’t allow rejection to keep me from pursuing what will happen. I’ve had plans that I’d have this job after 6 months or that job after a year and neither happened but that’s okay. Time takes time. I will become a professional ux/ui designer and those rejections will only make me have more of an MJ moment of “okay fine” heheh don’t give up boys/girls

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 8 месяцев назад +4

      so, let's learn code to NOT HAVE A JOB AND JUST FOR FUN... 🤡

  • @bobbyj731
    @bobbyj731 8 месяцев назад +11

    Employers will always go for what they perceive to be a better investment. In this case a degree/experience over bootcamped individuals since the market is much tighter now. Like any market I have no idea the direction of it. It could come back or we may find that devs are going to be on the decline. I don't find this to be especially pessimistic, its just reality of less demand and too much supply. It's better than lying to people saying all is perfect in the market.

    • @angelg3642
      @angelg3642 7 месяцев назад

      @guymontag5084 Bro 💀💀💀💀💀 that's a damn good deal. Wdym

  • @wetsand7379
    @wetsand7379 8 месяцев назад +9

    I did a UX design bootcamp a few years ago. Luckily, I was able to get a job but it was a shitty, low-paying agency gig. I havent been able to find another job since I quit 6 months ago. I owe $36k because I signed a stupid ISA + living stipend.

  • @trentonharrisphotos
    @trentonharrisphotos 8 месяцев назад +6

    I went through 2 boot camps back to back . The reason I went through both because I wanted to use up the rest of my VA GI Bill benifits before they ran out. I agree with some of your concerns but I feel differently because of my experience. The school I went to had a track record of placing student in jobs.The reason I chose the school is because one of my former employees that I managed went through the same school and land a job a few months after attending. Also many of the local tech companies heavily recruited from the school. I truly believe that there was a shift after the FAANG layoffs in the beginning of 2023. After my demo day I had a few companies interested in me. It seems that it was like overnight that the companies just stop communicating. Since then I stayed in my original field and have been flooding resume's and one out of a hundred reply.

    • @CodingPhase
      @CodingPhase 8 месяцев назад +1

      DAMN FAM.... You did a drake back 2 back lol sorry just had drake in my mind when you said back to back... wow that's crazy... hope you find a job soon try learning things outside of what the bootcamp taught you I bet you they focused on the MERN stack...

    • @trentonharrisphotos
      @trentonharrisphotos 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CodingPhase Did a Java and Javascript back to back. The only reason is because my GI benifits was running out so no time to get a Masters so I went to a local bootcamp. They were pretty legit and the instructors were former students that had development jobs prior to teaching. Local tech companies, former students, and even google recruiters were some of the type of connection the school had. When I graduated Nov 2022 there was definatily a shift on the job market. Luckily I had someone needing me in my prior field (video production) .Called me about a job a week before I graduated. I took it to tide me over tilll I find somethign in Tech. After the tech bubble burst there were alot of people with experience in the market.

    • @Its_Only_UP
      @Its_Only_UP 3 месяца назад

      What bootcamps do you suggest?

    • @trentonharrisphotos
      @trentonharrisphotos 3 месяца назад

      @@Its_Only_UP I went to a local one but we did have a few people that came to the school from out of town. I went to Claim Academy in Saint Louis, MO. I did both the online course and in-person and both were pretty good.

  • @ddmozz
    @ddmozz 8 месяцев назад +3

    Lol no, don't get a degree either. Just avoid coding altogether unless it's for entrepreneurship, to create your own product or ecommerce, or as a hobby. DO NOT become a tech employee. The good times for tech employees are OVER.

  • @domenicocolandrea
    @domenicocolandrea 8 месяцев назад +2

    It’s the market. I know several senior swe that can’t find a job. 2023 has been brutal with tech layoffs. Bootcamps teach you how to code. You can learn for free or pay. Just like everything else. Are some of them shady? Probably. Are some of the legit. Probably. Be smart.

  • @hliasfasilakhs6765
    @hliasfasilakhs6765 8 месяцев назад +1

    I respect your opinion but i have a total different one! I joined at 38 y old a coding bootcamp for 6 months (12 hours/day). Before that i practiced a little bit html css and javascript and have created some one page websites. When i finished and 1.5 month later i had 3 offers and accepted the best wich is the largest Technology company in my country. Of course i gave my best during the bootcamp, almost burned. And imagine im 38!!!! Im so happy now. You need guidance ,if you do it alone it may take you 2-3-4 years to land a job.

  • @CrispPapa
    @CrispPapa 8 месяцев назад +7

    Within the first 50 seconds you were able to describe my experience with Joy of Coding bootcamp. I was a comp sci major at my university for a while and they told us that in the summer of our second year we would get a paid internship minimum $20 an hour with knowing basic coding. I didn't do great in my intro coding class (c lang) and so I looked at joining a coding boot camp. That's when I learned it was like not a real service as we would just be working for her startup company as "students"

  • @DaehanKim
    @DaehanKim 8 месяцев назад +1

    bootcamps everywhere are popping up for instance im in the gaming industry and there are tons of 3d/gamedev bootcamps

  • @seenso
    @seenso 8 месяцев назад

    Left my job in Sept 2021 and finished my bootcamp in Feb 2022 and got interviewed/hired in Sept/Oct 2022. During the year the layoffs started 🥲 such a stressful time for junior developers but I’m sure my MIS degree helped in some sense as it’s a compsci adjacent degree.
    Make sure you guys are filing for unemployment!

  • @keithgalway3414
    @keithgalway3414 8 месяцев назад

    The skill of Web Development is developed from your passion for it, a boot camp or any paid studying is really a jump off point… to get good at it (and considered employable), not mentioning soft skills, the effort required is no different for any other trade… and exactly the same goes for the job search effort.. I don’t understand why web development has gained a reputation of being easy to get into, or some golden opportunity to escape your mundane depression inducing, soul crushing or low paying job.. it kind of isn’t.. for those whom web dev has been a successful transition, there’s something deep (such has having a passion for it and wanting to follow it) driving them, fear of being stuck in a boring 9-5 is not enough
    Thank you Dorian for keeping it real in your videos… I’m self taught, following your footsteps, with your videos as a source of motivation, joined a frontend online boot camp to give me a guidance - found it so fascinating that it naturally led me to learning backend and now I’m pursuing a full stack career - wouldn’t have been able to develop these skills without you RUclipsrs and the encouragement you give 🙏🙏

  • @gertfourie3283
    @gertfourie3283 6 месяцев назад

    If you can code you can code. Bootcamp, degree, self taught, MSc your good phd even better

  • @impostercoding
    @impostercoding 8 месяцев назад

    I attended a boot camp, long story short, it was fun I mad a lot of contacts and expanded my network quickly. It also came with a career manager who I can still work with. The content we cover you can quickly and easily find online for free, but free content won't come with the on demand support that you get in a boot camp. Many people I attended with did find work, but I was the only one with a very limited education background. Conversely, I excelled and lead every class, scoring perfect grades on every exam. Despite the exceeding the expectations of the camp, I still am unable to find a job.
    Conclusion, there are a lot of benefits to a camp vs self-taught, but if you don't already have a favorable background, neither will get you a job. When I took the class, to get a C.S. would cost a minimum 4 times of a camp and not possible for an already established adult. Now you can get a masters C.S. degree online for as little as 10K. So, Ultimately I wish I never signed up.

  • @emerson-sheaapril8555
    @emerson-sheaapril8555 3 месяца назад

    Ive been teaching myself to code but i want to build stuff for myself, thats very different then i want a job as motivation.

  • @metalfreekz13
    @metalfreekz13 8 месяцев назад

    I just want to point out for your argument against CS degrees, that schools like WGU, SNHU, and others like that are "competency-based," meaning you can test out of subjects you are proficient in, and you can get a whole Bach degree in under a year if you really put in the work. I did it at WGU and got my Bach in CompSci within 6 months studying 20 hours a week in 3-4 hours a day, 6 days a week on top of working full time. So basically, in the same timeframe you can complete a bootcamp, you can get a Bach in CompSci.

  • @christiankey5243
    @christiankey5243 8 месяцев назад

    I attempted the MITxPro full stack developer bootcamp way back. It was described as "friendly for beginners." Absolute scam. Basically video after video with few (if any) actual coding exercises. The few that were there were done in a buggy tool that didn't work half the time. Basically zero guidance and half of the class involved "here, read these 20 articles." Some of these people should absolutely be taken to court. If you're thinking about joining this course (if it still exists), don't.

  • @cskelton
    @cskelton 8 месяцев назад

    My local college's introductory programming course only had a pass rate of 30% (taught by the program director themself), and they were perfectly fine with that. They'd rather students take it and figure out programming wasn't for them, because it does take a mindset shift to think logically like how a computer would process.

  • @Bobxchen333
    @Bobxchen333 4 месяца назад

    85k for a coding boot camp? I feel sorry for this guy.

  • @JonathanVarela-or3yb
    @JonathanVarela-or3yb 8 месяцев назад +1

    From the core group of guys I studied with in University, out of us 6 only 2 of us got jobs.

  • @debasishraychawdhuri
    @debasishraychawdhuri 8 месяцев назад

    The reason you get a degree is that there is more to programming than just learning some JavaScript frameworks. Even if you manage to get a job with a bootcamp, you will eventually get stuck if you don't understand basic CS concepts.

  • @kingdan-x
    @kingdan-x 8 месяцев назад

    I don't know how anyone fresh out of a boot camp expects to find a job quickly. There's thousands of talented engineers who have been laid off by major tech companies competing for those same jobs.

  • @BrayanRuiz-m3w
    @BrayanRuiz-m3w 8 месяцев назад +1

    hey man, hope you are doing well, what do you think on learning UI design and front end using JS,TS react and some data base, Im 25 looking to get into tech but Im scare if its too late and for me and also about the market

    • @sarthakbhatt5661
      @sarthakbhatt5661 8 месяцев назад +1

      Got laid off on Friday I worked as a frontend dev I am 23 btw and have a total of 6 mnths experience so you are not too late go for it. I am though switching from frontend to backend will never work as a frontend again.

    • @BrayanRuiz-m3w
      @BrayanRuiz-m3w 8 месяцев назад

      thanks!!@@sarthakbhatt5661

  • @istvanpraha
    @istvanpraha 7 месяцев назад

    The reddit rant doesn't prove much. So many people want the job just for the salary. I also want a high salary, but you have to want to do the job! Like, really want it, really be curious, find yourself sitting there on Friday night figuring out stuff and doing self-training on the weekend level of interest.

  • @blackmantravel6954
    @blackmantravel6954 8 месяцев назад

    Boot camps are only there to give you a taste. It’s up to you to you continue learning. Also bootcamps shouldn’t be less than 9 months. Anything less than 3 months is not enough.

  • @ThomasTomiczek
    @ThomasTomiczek 8 месяцев назад +3

    This is interesting, but besides the bootcamp side there are 2 additional structural factors. One, we hit a recession - the market is crap anyway. Second, by the time that is going to be over - and do not expect that to be fast - junior coders will have a fun time competing with MORE experiences coders that use AI to be more productive and the company thus eliminated the junior position. Ups. Not that more experience people will not be on the chopping line after some more time (possibly 1-3 years).
    This is a structural change that will be brutal. And there are those that see the economy in a larger view - from China (unemployment 25% and rising, 45% for unexperienced people) to the US also falling. This COULD be a 1929 style recession which took years and will TAKE years. And gain, AI is coming - right now it makes people 50% to 100% more efficient - but the next models are coming and if the recession takes 2-3 years, and another 2-3 years to hire all the people that did not get jobs (unemployed overhang) you are SERIOUSLY into the territory where AI has ALREADY gone through the job market and people are fired all over the place. And those jobs will never come back - we are on the verge of increasing the development speed of AI, by having AI train itself. A year or so and that is reality, latest. 5 years from now - Programming jobs will have gone the role of accountants. If you think "oh, but we still have accountants" - sure. In the old times, companies had FLOORS of accountants, every piece of paper was handled by multiple of them writing and summarizing it all into different books. Today it all is done in the computers. Consolidation of different accounts is a matter of zero time as the computer just does it. Smaller Companies do not have an accountant - they share one at a service provider. Know the little Christmas story about the 3 ghosts and Stooge? The main protagonist is accountant for Stooge. A job that takes a full-time person for what is a SMALL business - that was once. Programmers may well go the same way. Small specialized teams operating with large groups of AI agents. Which means that there will be a TON of competition and - cough - beginners may not apply while more experienced people are competing for the jobs.
    Welcome to the beginning of the singularity - enjoy the years 2023 to 2033, the time of change. You live in interesting times - which, essentially, is a Chinese curse. Those jobs will NEVER come back.

  • @GodbreadGilfredBiago
    @GodbreadGilfredBiago 8 месяцев назад

    They tell you to get a degree and then you get a degree and then they tell you that nobody gives a shit about your degree, they care about experience. Fuck all of that. Get good at coding and build projects. It will ALWAYS be more valuable to have skills and experience.

  • @ReelinRodgers2
    @ReelinRodgers2 5 месяцев назад

    I think this topic is a bigger problem in inequality. Boot camps shouldn’t be a fast track for people with lots of money.
    Universities in Europe with free education put lots of governmental fundings into new IT programs with mentors and extra resources to get people into employment
    Only rich spoiled kids are like “yeah But I don’t wanna do more than 3 months of education and then land a £6000 monthly salary job allowing me to work remotely from Dubai or Maldives”

  • @CasualXCars
    @CasualXCars 7 месяцев назад

    I think the bootcamps are not the culprit why the jobs are hard to find in the tech industry... I would rather "blame" big tech companies that laid off so many good coders, for simply lowering wages for the new hires... saving money never hurts the company, only people that get laid off ... fired I meant to say...
    So, the big tech software coding is always challenging field to stand out and be better than most of the competition because there are kids who are growin up with coding in their mind, and sure enought they do snag those jobs without an issue.
    Visited Meta campus couple of years back, and to be honest, I believe on the floor were average 25-30 year olds... very rarely was I able to see anyone of older age...

  • @nicolelove6230
    @nicolelove6230 7 месяцев назад

    So now AI is going to take over all computing platforms and take control over people’s jobs now… So instead of people working it’s going to be a Ai alone….? 👀

  • @supanji12
    @supanji12 7 месяцев назад

    85k tuition?? 😂 unless its an MIT degree, it just not worth

  • @coolworx
    @coolworx 8 месяцев назад

    It's better to be an auto-didactic when it comes to programming, because you learn two skills at once... programming, and how to self-learn.
    And as a programmer, you're going to have to self-learn for the rest of your professional life. It isn't a 'rest on your laurels' kinda occupation.

  • @philippebarillecavalier9275
    @philippebarillecavalier9275 8 месяцев назад

    Bootcamps are the new "teach yourself xyz in 24 hours".

  • @wedneymoyses
    @wedneymoyses 7 месяцев назад

    I'm currently in "transition", I'm a biologist, whom by chance got a job in IT consulting (SAP partner company), so I decided to get a degree in IT recently. I didn't want to take another 4 years for a Bachelor's degree, so I decided to get an Associate's degree, which for the specific one I chose (Computer Systems Analysis or "Systems Analysis and Development" as it's called in portuguese): it's 2.5 years to get the degree and they offer both hardware and software courses, which appeals to me.
    It's a great, because the course is in a hybrid model, so I go to class once a week at night and during the other days I can do the work online and watch some live classes. Hopefully I can land a decent job or promotion when I finish this.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 7 месяцев назад

      Can you explain "meiosis" to us? If not, then you are not even a biologist. And, yeah, bro, don't try to copy the explanation from the internet. I have a Google. Use your own words. ;-)

    • @wedneymoyses
      @wedneymoyses 7 месяцев назад

      @@lepidoptera9337 are you ok?

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 7 месяцев назад

      @@wedneymoyses Yes, I am happy. I just caught a troll. ;-)

    • @wedneymoyses
      @wedneymoyses 7 месяцев назад

      @@lepidoptera9337 that's great bud! I'm glad you're happy. Stay safe!

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 7 месяцев назад

      @@wedneymoyses Now, how about that "meiosis" thing? :-)

  • @toanmolsharma
    @toanmolsharma 7 месяцев назад

    you look like Johnny Sins so that's why I clicked your video and subscribed. :)

  • @adrianosousamendes2948
    @adrianosousamendes2948 8 месяцев назад

    The Coding Bootcamps are ok. The problem is that is not enough. To be a real programmer, you need a lot more...

  • @thepwnerbeast
    @thepwnerbeast 8 месяцев назад

    Could you make a video on your thoughts on Holberton School?
    They have made partnerships with educational institutions like ALX in africa so it would be very interesting to know what they do

  • @kzelmer
    @kzelmer 8 месяцев назад

    Which is good. Bootcamps should have never happened. They are the best way big greedy companies have to create an army of future underpaid devs and at the same time, raise the bar and lower salaries for grad devs

  • @Velociraptor74
    @Velociraptor74 8 месяцев назад +2

    It's worth it to learn how to code in 2024? Someone got a TLDR on this one?

    • @silverblade43
      @silverblade43 8 месяцев назад +2

      we are in a downturn. It will turn around. More so you need to be able to answer the question can you dedicate a lot of consistent time for at least a year (probably more) to learning how to code .Get some structure to follow and commit to it and I think it's still worth it

    • @tyrantula767
      @tyrantula767 8 месяцев назад

      Senior devs in the US make from 100k - 150k, and sometimes event more. The way I see it is every year you put off is a year more that it’ll take for you to become a senior level dev. That also means that every year you delay is a year that you’re not making 150k and will have 150k minus taxes etc. less in your bank account.

  • @adama9032
    @adama9032 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the valued info brother

  • @Jdinrbfidndifofkdndjoflfndjdk
    @Jdinrbfidndifofkdndjoflfndjdk 7 месяцев назад

    NO GOING BACK TO THE OFFICE FOR ME! IT DOESNT MAKE SENSE!

  • @AllenGraetz
    @AllenGraetz 8 месяцев назад

    There's a lot of employers that have loosened up their degree requirements, often dropping them. The boomers are retiring. There's a need for bodies.

  • @TheFrazzyo
    @TheFrazzyo 8 месяцев назад

    Hi, i work in accessbilty as a assistive tech adviser (recommending software/hardware for disabled tech users)
    To further my career, I need to branch into digital accessibility and looking at websites to recommend improved accessbility coding. I have zero web design experience but understand some guidelines... where can I learn basic coding for a newb? Where do you recommend?
    Then after that, I would love to start some projects and get experience as I know that's what people look for, where can I start this?
    Any advice would be great.

  • @julioo534
    @julioo534 4 месяца назад

    Coding bootcamp don't work

  • @uriahgardner5977
    @uriahgardner5977 25 дней назад

    What say you about Zero to Mastery?

  • @lostconciousness4255
    @lostconciousness4255 7 месяцев назад

    and how does this help me get a job?

  • @dekumutant
    @dekumutant 7 месяцев назад

    I can not believe the level of copium people are huffing in the comments here.

  • @FrankHouston-v5e
    @FrankHouston-v5e 8 месяцев назад

    “Just say NO” ,to coding boot camps.

  • @ryanthompson3446
    @ryanthompson3446 8 месяцев назад

    What about an online cs degree while i work on self taught, degree just for the doors it can open?.

  • @JordanDunne-d5l
    @JordanDunne-d5l 8 месяцев назад +188

    I started a bootcamp in August and got a junior dev role in December. It's true, you really DON'T learn enough on a bootcamp to be job-ready, you have to prove yourself with projects and be able to confidently demonstrate your technical ability and emphasise your willingness to learn to get your foot in the door. Don't lie and oversell yourself, employers are not stupid and can see straight through that.

    • @sburton84
      @sburton84 8 месяцев назад +19

      A CS degree is not really any different in that respect though, all my CS degree achieved is getting my foot in the door, and 99% of what I know about coding I learnt on the job since then.

    • @JordanDunne-d5l
      @JordanDunne-d5l 8 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@sburton84 The CS degree carries some weight though and would put you in a favourable position. My bootcamp certificate is no accreditation just a PDF with a name swapout. In any case, companies are just looking for competent workers who can prove they're capable of learning on the job. I count myself extremely lucky though I've not seen any success from my bootcamp peers.

    • @sburton84
      @sburton84 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@JordanDunne-d5l Yeah, the big difference is the fact that universities are accredited so you know what you're getting, and companies hiring you know you'll meet at least some minimum standard, whereas with a bootcamp you have no idea what you're getting, and as such neither will anyone looking to hire you.

    • @ZiosNeon
      @ZiosNeon 8 месяцев назад

      may i ask, how you got the job?

    • @JordanDunne-d5l
      @JordanDunne-d5l 8 месяцев назад

      Networking with recruiters on Linkedin.

  • @ninjask8ter
    @ninjask8ter 8 месяцев назад +153

    I attended The Chubb Institute which professed "the full immersion" coding school in 1999 and it didn't cost me anything. It was a rigorous COBOL camp. Their deal was that they would place you with one of their clients, and then take a portion of your salary for the first 8 months. Usually then the company would hire you directly. All 30 of us students were placed to work with one of their companies, before we even finished the bootcamp program. I worked for the company that they placed me with, for about 2 years programming w/ COBOL for the NYC FMS System, and then I transitioned to Web Development. I think The Chubb Institute was probably one of the first bootcamps even though they didn't call themselves a bootcamp.

    • @NeonPixels81
      @NeonPixels81 8 месяцев назад +12

      The “salary share” model seems to be a bit more rigorous and more beneficial because they have a vested interest in you getting a job and getting paid quickly after graduation.

    • @ninjask8ter
      @ninjask8ter 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@donaldjohnson-hq2su Was this in DC perchance? They had a Java program also in Jersey City that I attended.

  • @kairoswave
    @kairoswave 8 месяцев назад +24

    I taught at edx, for cybersecurity and coding bootcamp, many people think a bootcamp will get them jobs but thats not true, we see the numbers and we see about 3-4 students get jobs after the bootcamp, 3-4 students out of a class 50 will get a job...most of the time the job they get isn't even coding related or cyber related, its help desk lol.
    To be fair the same thing can be said about a degree, many people think a degree will promise them a cyber or software role but it wont. so what is the best way to get in tech? hands on experience. build a portfolio, build projects, show you have skills, forget the certs, those are trash too, but hands on experience is valuable. this is why self taught engineers get jobs because most of the time they show they know the skills through hands on skills, projects, etc.

  • @petekrumb4936
    @petekrumb4936 7 месяцев назад +29

    a doctor, an astronaut, a gardener and now a tech RUclipsr, so inspirational

    • @billybobthornton8122
      @billybobthornton8122 7 месяцев назад +3

      I see what you did there…

    • @SesterSinmon
      @SesterSinmon 3 месяца назад

      JOHNNY THE PROGRAMMER SINS

    • @armoface
      @armoface 2 месяца назад +1

      I came to the comments to find this. I was not disappointed

    • @mrhogei
      @mrhogei Месяц назад

      @@SesterSinmonLMAOOOOOO

    • @mikelawre6190
      @mikelawre6190 17 дней назад

      You are genius 😂😂😂

  • @chrisnortonjr
    @chrisnortonjr 8 месяцев назад +102

    Bootcamps generally give you a crash course in development but not enough for employment, especially with this market. My buddy's wife just got out of one and they paid 20k for her to not find a job. They didn't tell her that she needed to have a portfolio with projects and I'm sure they didn't tell her what types of projects she needs. So now I'm coaching her on stuff that her bootcamp should have taught her.

    • @natescode
      @natescode 8 месяцев назад +19

      Yup and university is $40k over 4 years to learn theory and still not get a job. It is rough for all new devs now

    • @chrisnortonjr
      @chrisnortonjr 8 месяцев назад +14

      @@natescode yikes! That explains why, I keep hearing from employers that colleges aren’t preparing the youth for the real world and they’re starting to dread hiring young people.

    • @audibleman7750
      @audibleman7750 8 месяцев назад +14

      @@chrisnortonjr At the uni I'm at its all remote and the teachers hardly want to teach which is infuriating to me. Most students in comp sci classes at my uni right now who are passing already are in the field and have some experience while the one's who are fresh get thrown into the wilderness and to fend for themselves. Like if I'm gonna self study my way through the courses what was the point of paying for my comp sci degree. I honestly could have saved my money and time learning it at my pace and actually learning rather than rushing to the next deadline. Honestly I still want to get a job related in the comp sci field but with all these shenanigans it really is making me second guess my choices.

    • @chrisnortonjr
      @chrisnortonjr 8 месяцев назад +9

      @@audibleman7750 I can totally understand, I was one of those guys already working because I knew the teachers taught for exams and not practical use. I still say a degree is worth having because some companies still use it as a gatekeeping mechanism despite it only serving as an expensive wall decoration.

    • @ajalanbrown2200
      @ajalanbrown2200 8 месяцев назад +1

      Damn 20k is a bit steep

  • @justsid
    @justsid 8 месяцев назад +25

    One of the renowned and venerable coding bootcamps here in San Antonio, Texas known as CodeUp recently shut down. They had the advertising down to a T and drew many, many, many a student. I almost fell for it but backed out last minute. Best 10k, I've never gambled away.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад +5

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

  • @GKustom
    @GKustom 8 месяцев назад +24

    Even with a degree I've heard it's more difficult.If that's the case all non traditional software paths are going to be under distress

  • @Kerwell
    @Kerwell 8 месяцев назад +45

    im a self taught dev, to the point where im just trying to hone my skills and doing more projects. I thought about getting a loan for a bootcamp, but was leaning against it. I can't really afford to get the degree, so the besti can do is work on it. I'll just keep grinding and hope it works out

    • @cowl6867
      @cowl6867 8 месяцев назад +19

      Best course of action is not to just do projects. But create your own business, aka solve other people's problems until someone notices. This is and will always be the optimal way to get you hired or get attention

    • @AFollowerOfCanti
      @AFollowerOfCanti 8 месяцев назад +9

      wouldnt recommend getting a degree. Thats the negative infinite money glitch. I got my comp sci degree, and there are just no jobs out there for us and now i have debt.

    • @ehhhhh491
      @ehhhhh491 8 месяцев назад +1

      are you in united states?

    • @jakob6123
      @jakob6123 8 месяцев назад

      Try looking at WGU Computer science, $4,000 bucks and six month terms. That's is what I am going to do to reduce the amounts of loans and time.

    • @luisv8887
      @luisv8887 8 месяцев назад

      Leon says that all bootcamps should be about networking and then coding so if you already know coding then watch his videos for the softskills tips and skip the programming.

  • @TheBusinessDiscussion
    @TheBusinessDiscussion 6 месяцев назад +12

    silent prayer for people doing bootcamps now. Thanks for being open and honest about it man

  • @Stck_verflws
    @Stck_verflws 8 месяцев назад +32

    I graduated from a top university with a computer science degree almost 10 years ago & I have over 10 years of professional experience as a software engineer. 95% of the people I started with switched out of the program or dropped out. The crazy job market of 2021 and 2022 is not realistic! Only a very few people will last in this industry because it is competitive and it is hard work. The ability to write good clean code and to succeed in this profession has nothing to do with desire. You should be able to have a comprehensive understanding of coding to really apply yourself! I want people to know that the industry is NOT easy to get into. It never was! Stop wasting your money on bootcamps and education if you are not willing to struggle for success! Often, people have to be willing to take those lower level analyst jobs and do the dirty work before getting the chance to become a full stack developer.

    • @lawrencemotions8720
      @lawrencemotions8720 8 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you I agree with this most people don't have the aptitude to become an expert in programming I'm a novice myself but tbf I am bright most people have no idea what there talking about so can't hold a conversation about code they don't understand how the Internet works or how the script is being run I've met people I've caught up with in 1 year to there 4 years of uni I'm not great I just I actually have I high aptitude this really isn't for everyone you need to be able to articulate what you know also

    • @ReelinRodgers2
      @ReelinRodgers2 5 месяцев назад

      It’s people who don’t want to work and who don’t know what hard work is that do these boot camps and then think they can make $4000 just by typing their username and password and then live in Dubai

  • @jansleyreal
    @jansleyreal 8 месяцев назад +91

    Not coding, but I’ve done a UX bootcamp, and it helped me stay accountable and was useful to learn the foundations of the UX process. HOWEVER, it was not enough to land a job, and requires a lot of work after the bootcamp to be reasonably competitive.

    • @wetsand7379
      @wetsand7379 8 месяцев назад +5

      Same :/ I was a designer for 2 years but it was a terrible agency job. I haven't been able to find another job since and I owe $36k because I did a stupid ISA + living stipend.

    • @ezbg
      @ezbg 8 месяцев назад +1

      Same The marketing certificates not enough to claim you have experience with the particular specialization or get a job

    • @destinyschild5768
      @destinyschild5768 8 месяцев назад +2

      I did a $5000 digital marketing certificate and it was good but would never do again or recommend. Employers don’t care about your certificate. They care about experience. I got my job by working for someone for free then got a full time offer 2 years later

  • @CodingPhase
    @CodingPhase 8 месяцев назад +2

    yeah Holberton School is a school in Connecticut I had a subscriber reach out to me in 2018 and tell me he was going to go there and then came back to me in 2020 and I helped get his first job but till this day he still paying for the loan it's actually 3x the price of the average bootcamp.

  • @reyreyalldayday5708
    @reyreyalldayday5708 8 месяцев назад +13

    I'm one of those students that got hired by a bootcamp. The market is quite rough. I haven't found a job in around 2 years. I've had some small contract stuff here and there. I can absolutely code, but hiring managers aren't really looking for that, they need that turn key employee that has has experience with the more nuanced stuff with coding jobs. Chicken egg forever.

    • @SandraWantsCoke
      @SandraWantsCoke 8 месяцев назад +1

      At this time you could've build your own website, an online shop or something like that, your own business? No? Thanks! And good luck!

    • @angelg3642
      @angelg3642 7 месяцев назад

      @@SandraWantsCoke You need money for that online shop. Where will you get that money 😂😂. You need time too but we pesky humans need food, sleep and shelter unfortunately and that requires money. Bro we have no money to buy that required time for such projects

  • @HuGiv5
    @HuGiv5 8 месяцев назад +89

    I remember some bootcamp asking me for 7000€ lol
    I bought some Udemy courses and study by myself.
    4 years later I'm an Advanced SQL Developer with loads of knowledge in other languages as well 😂👍

    • @QuantumLegal
      @QuantumLegal 8 месяцев назад +2

      I do the same. Books, the occasional Udemy, and RUclips are usually enough.

    • @kairoswave
      @kairoswave 8 месяцев назад +6

      yeah udemy made me a devops engineer and now a cybersecurity engineer.

    • @rennydaniel8859
      @rennydaniel8859 8 месяцев назад

      How much did the entire Udemy coursework cost you?

    • @woody-xm5ve
      @woody-xm5ve 8 месяцев назад

      I did the same to supplement some of my knowledge after college I was a tester before then became db/Linux sysadmin, iot developer now I worked as an ML engineer. I actually kind of regretted going to college but I think it helps a bit. Just look for other alternative to save other than getting into debt. Good luck all!

    • @XenogearsPS
      @XenogearsPS 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@woody-xm5ve Yeah, but when your applying recruiters want to see that degree. They automate your resume and if its not what they're looking for it gets deleted.

  • @mattmatt7998
    @mattmatt7998 8 месяцев назад +55

    To say the least, they're EXPENSIVE AF. Thanks for your content 🙏

    • @moodsurfer
      @moodsurfer 8 месяцев назад

      How much do they cost in your countries?

    • @angelg3642
      @angelg3642 7 месяцев назад

      Nah, they are cheap af 💀

  • @sawyer4981
    @sawyer4981 8 месяцев назад +9

    I finished Lambda School (rebranded to Bloom Tech). It did not prepare me at all. Applied to about 150 jobs before the pandemic and prob another 200 during/after before I gave up. Only got 3 interviews.
    To add insult to injury, they tried to say my role as a customer facing Tech Support role was "qualified income". I had to threaten to take them to arbitration before they even considered an exemption. I don't know about other companies, but stay far far away from Lambda/Bloom Tech.

    • @danielali9948
      @danielali9948 8 месяцев назад

      what program did you take?

  • @viniBR232
    @viniBR232 8 месяцев назад +11

    Thanks man..I can't spend any resources anyway on my learning path, because 1 USD is A LOT of money for me...but knowing who to trust and who not to in my path to changing my life is always very appreciated.
    At the moment I finally managed to get an used laptop and get Linux running in a SSD.
    All I have is Odin Project so I'm starting with it and the VSCode website database.
    Look man, you may not know that but people like you who are honest and motivating are very important. Coding could get me out of a very sad and painful reality, and help me bring the people I love with me, so it's not just an adventure or a career swap for everyone.
    Thank you very much.

    • @Seekingtruth-mx3ur
      @Seekingtruth-mx3ur 8 месяцев назад +2

      Best luck to you man. I'm also struggling and it's not easy. My heart goes out to anyone who's trying to make it in this cutthroat bullshit rat race.

    • @evan8168
      @evan8168 8 месяцев назад +1

      I hear Odin Project is a great place to start

    • @SandraWantsCoke
      @SandraWantsCoke 8 месяцев назад +2

      good luck, keep on grinding!

    • @alexdudemeister
      @alexdudemeister 5 месяцев назад +1

      I believe in your motive, I believe you will succeed

  • @richboii6597
    @richboii6597 8 месяцев назад +41

    Companies used to be desperate for developers but now the market is SUPER over saturated. There are 60k computer science grads every year and even those people are having a lot of trouble finding work. I think it’s like 90%+ of developers have at least a bachelors degree. If I’m a hiring manager and I get 200 applicants why would I even look at someone without a CS degree when there’s 100+ that have one? This is what happens when things get overhyped. It just is what it is.

    • @tyrantula767
      @tyrantula767 8 месяцев назад

      I think you’d might hire the other guy if he has medium level projects built in the stack that the company you’re hiring for uses. Say you’re looking for an entry level web dev that is proficient in React and .Net. Guy 1 has a degree and only know some C and Java, and has lot of knowledge about theoretical things like compilers, data structures, algorithms, and operating systems, but hasn’t built a single website. Guy 2 has no degree, but has built 2-3 websites using html, css, React, and .Net. Guy 2 code quality is decent and the apps are functional, but there can be some improvements in speed and visual quality. I’d argue that Guy 2 could probably contribute within a few weeks and be beneficial to your team relatively fast. Guy 1 would take several months before he could contribute, because he has to learn several languages and frameworks before he can make a contribution to your team. Yeah Guy 1 knows some theoretical things that probably would make his code in C and Java run faster than Guy 2’s code, but he has to learn the languages and frameworks that Guy 2 already knows and can use. If you wan t to be a developer, don’t give up.

    • @MrCK312
      @MrCK312 8 месяцев назад +4

      The reason they would hire someone without a CS degree is because of their programing ability, experience or the projects they built.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

    • @dekumutant
      @dekumutant 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@MrCK312building some projects doesn't prove your understanding of com sci fundamentals

    • @dexzero
      @dexzero 6 месяцев назад

      This is the main reason. Pivot and get an on demand engineering degree (civil, mechanical, electric, etc)

  • @sburton84
    @sburton84 8 месяцев назад +10

    Only a small portion of what I learnt in my CS degree was stuff that was actually useful for a coding job, so I've no doubt that it's possible to learn all the necessary information condensed into 2-3 months of intensive learning and exercises. The real difference is that universities are usually reputable and accredited whereas there no standards or auditing of bootcamps, so you have no idea what you're getting, and people hiring have no way to know what you learned or didn't learn either. So you will still need some personal projects or open-source contributions to demonstrate your skills, just as if you were self-taught.

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps 8 месяцев назад +1

      CS is oversaturated to oblivion

    • @KKJO0904
      @KKJO0904 3 месяца назад

      They’ll be able to know what you’ve done based on your projects

    • @AngelGiurov
      @AngelGiurov 12 дней назад

      Universities "teach" you outdated knowledge and skills based on technologies that nobody in the mother is hiring anymore, taught by people who haven't worked a single day in the field you're trying to get a job in.
      And after minimum of 4 grueling years in uni, you get a minimum wage internship after 6-12 months of looking for a job and you're working additional 2 years so you can live NORMALLY.
      Around 6 years wasted.

  • @dweblinveltz5035
    @dweblinveltz5035 8 месяцев назад +10

    I could talk at length about bootcamps, what to look for when researching them, etc, but honestly this point in time may not be a good comparison. It's super hard for anyone to land that first job right now, whether you're self trained, college grad, or a bootcamp grad. When i finished my program (one that I would vouch for as one of the good ones), my colleagues were sometimes even landing jobs before the graduation date. It took a bit longer for me (3 months), but the program didn't abandon me during that time frame. There was support if I needed it all the way through.
    I still keep up with the activities of that program. While it used to be totally in person, covid forced it remote. The job market is so much tougher now, I know plenty of new grads that didn't land jobs within 6 months. Some of them are having so much trouble, they're trying to pivot into game development (also with the program's help).
    That isn't to say that some of them aren't still getting hired, but that is just to the credit of this particular program.

    • @DennyCLe
      @DennyCLe 4 месяца назад

      May I ask what bootcamp you went to?

  • @ExplorewithZac
    @ExplorewithZac 8 месяцев назад +1

    Don't be naive...
    There will ALWAYS be a cycle of positive to negative content trending.
    Don't let this ridiculous wave of pessimistic content trick you into thinking that you can't get a job as a developer... It's total BS.
    Next year the content will be all butterflies and rainbows again, just wait.
    It's just a never ending cycle to keep people watching videos.
    These RUclipsrs look for small changes at major companies and generalize the entire market based on it. Just because Facebook or Google does something or says something, doesn't mean the entire industry is going to sh*t.

  • @TheHipHopVlog
    @TheHipHopVlog 3 месяца назад +3

    I agree with everything you've said, and you are 100% correct about coding bootcamps hiring students to inflate their success rates. I know this because I was hired by the bootcamp after my program ended. However, do I regret my decision attending a bootcamp? Not at all; if anything, I ended up on the better side of things.
    Nevertheless, after working at a bootcamp, it's disheartening to see how many students gain little from the experience. There were instances where I believed we should have failed students, but management insisted on passing them along. Being carried through might sound nice, but what happens when you finish the bootcamp without acquiring any real skills? Good luck finding a job. I've seen many students who were pushed through despite lacking basic skills like how to write a variable.
    The bootcamp I worked for was dishonest about its numbers and job placement rates, which has left me feeling quite jaded. While I had a positive experience attending and working at the bootcamp, which significantly helped me land my first entry-level job, not many are that fortunate.

  • @rtothec1234
    @rtothec1234 7 месяцев назад +4

    The thumb made me think Johnny Sins is talking about coding bootcamps. I guess he has done every other occupation so why not computer programmer as well?

  • @exapsy
    @exapsy 8 месяцев назад +2

    CS degree is not even close to being an approximate of a "coding bootcamp".
    1. I dont like coding bootcamps
    2. I dont advocate for a degree either
    But CS/IT is NOT going to teach you how to code. Period. There's no question about it.
    Computer Science and Informatics are exactly what they say they are ... the science of information and how we make rocks to make boop boop noises. Like studying computer architecture, or outdated maths of AI. Or learning calculus which you will 99% not ever need in your job unless you're something like a graphics engine developer where you might need some linear algebra.
    Most of what you'll learn in CS/IT has almost absolutely nothing to do with what you'll be doing at your job.
    So, let's say you finish your CS degree. Then what? You don't know how to code and most employers search for people, even for junior devs, that already know how to code ...... and CS degree ain't teaching you that!
    Coding bootcamps came to fill exactly that gap. To teach you how to code.
    Bootcamps are not there to replace a CS degree, they're there to fill a gap.
    So, people comparing CS degree to bootcamps, have no idea what they're talking about.
    I've been to CS college. And yet I knew nothing afterwards about how to code, but I was teaching myself as I was in the college and did my projects till I got hired. Now that I have 7 years of experience as a Software Engineer, I still see people with CS degrees searching for a job. Why? Because They don't teach you ReactJS at college. They won't teach you how to write clean code. They won't teach you how to cooperate professionally in a team. Or what is CI/CD. Or what is Docker, Kubernetes, Kafka, RabbitMQ, MongoDB, Postgresql, MariaDB, Mosquito, Redis, Memcached yada yada. They teach you nothing about any of those tools at a CS college.
    The CS college to there to teach you the science of information and what is Big O, the maths around it and such. It is not there to teach you how to code. It's completely different from a coding bootcamp. Which again, I don't even advocate for. I think most of them are kind of scams and promise too much.

  • @nickvandijk5460
    @nickvandijk5460 7 месяцев назад +4

    It's funny how situations can differ between countries. In Europe ( the Netherlands ) it's still an employee's market, companies can't find anyone for any position especially in programming. I have noticed that companies rather keep a seat empty than hire a bad fit. We've had a couple of bad hires and they set us back for months rather then making a positive contribution. We had people that worked as a programmer on their CV for years that couldn't complete basic tasks :P.

  • @JohnMcclaned
    @JohnMcclaned 7 месяцев назад +2

    Coding bootcamps are basically like 'hammer mastery classes.' They teach you all there is to know about hammers and how to swing them. Real programming is not about swinging hammers though, it's about building houses. There is so much more involved in building a house than using a hammer. Companies don't need people who know how to swing hammers, they need people who know how to build houses and who would use a rock on the side over road as a hammer if they needed to.

  • @potatoid-0158
    @potatoid-0158 8 месяцев назад +25

    I feel really bad for my friend who graduated from Flatiron last year. He gave up his job search and is now in massive debt and returned to his job as an assistant manager at a gym making $18/hr.

    • @Noface678
      @Noface678 8 месяцев назад +10

      It be like that. Tell him not to give up!

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 8 месяцев назад +15

      So he found a job after the bootcamp? 100% job placement. 😎

    • @TM-kh7el
      @TM-kh7el 8 месяцев назад +4

      At least he took a chance on himself. He shouldn't give up on himself.

    • @stupidgameprizes
      @stupidgameprizes 8 месяцев назад +4

      Meet more girls working at the gym counter though.

    • @TDotRedemption
      @TDotRedemption 8 месяцев назад

      Your friend should continue to work hard on side projects and keep applying. I had friends who graduated from Flat Iron and went on to work at FAANG and LinkedIn, but this was a couple years ago when the economy was good.

  • @artimus7525
    @artimus7525 8 месяцев назад +3

    Im shocked Coding bootcamps are still a thing especially since the release of ChatGPT.
    I turned down coding bootcamps for a software dev apprenticeship. Sadly they weren’t able to get me a job but at the very least I got 4 classes of college credit for free so it wasn’t a complete waste of time.
    And yes all the jobs I saw and I’ve applied for required a bachelors degree in cs or equivalent.

  • @topsykretts2264
    @topsykretts2264 7 месяцев назад +2

    Employers don’t care about what’s practical for your life situation. That’s not a reason for them to hire you over someone with a CS degree that took 4 years. Sucks but that’s how it is. Either get a CS degree and some internship experience while in school or don’t waste your time at all because it’s tough out there. You’re competing with thousands of skilled people for just one job.

  • @davieskamanda6622
    @davieskamanda6622 8 месяцев назад +248

    Here comes the guy who learned web development, made some money, and all over a sudden has come to the realization that CS was made only for him and others can't make it. The market is tough, and even senior engineers are being laid off. We know that. Stop repeating it in every video under different titles.

    • @masterDarts4188
      @masterDarts4188 8 месяцев назад +48

      Honestly I'm happy to learn this. Because some of this information can stop people from making costly mistakes.

    • @Seekingtruth-mx3ur
      @Seekingtruth-mx3ur 8 месяцев назад +38

      ​@@masterDarts4188Yeah at least he's keeping it real.

    • @emilyau8023
      @emilyau8023 8 месяцев назад

      I left tech because of people like you who are unnecessarily rude. Dafaq dude. He never even said all the stuff you claim. You don't have to watch if you're salty.

    • @Nostalgiaforinfi
      @Nostalgiaforinfi 8 месяцев назад

      Bootcamps are a scam. You can learn for free with the odinproject.

    • @raelindashoates975
      @raelindashoates975 8 месяцев назад +27

      I agree with you. I can’t watch his videos anymore. They’re not motivating at all and quite discouraging all of a sudden. I’m currently in a bootcamp that my job is paying for so no loss for me financially. I wish he’d just move on to other topics like actually showing us how to code or whatever else he wants to talk about instead of being on the “coding is a waste of time” train he’s been on lately. If it’s not something he wants to encourage anymore for whatever reason, cool but I don’t get it.
      Also how do we know he’s actually a web developer and not just some guy sitting behind a computer talking about it? Food for thought….

  • @Anthony-ku2bb
    @Anthony-ku2bb 8 месяцев назад +6

    Thanks for the blunt honest truth. Definitely very helpful.

  • @thecloudtechguy
    @thecloudtechguy 8 месяцев назад +3

    Funny, only 2 of 21 have found employment after bootcamp after 8 months. More like 1 maybe from a Simplilearn Bootcamp.

  • @mrmaster8884
    @mrmaster8884 8 месяцев назад +1

    coders are gunna be obsolete, We need ditch diggars, not coders. AI replaced you hahaha.

  • @jflores85
    @jflores85 8 месяцев назад +4

    Spent most of last year applying for jobs and updating my portfolio and went for salesforce cert. No one interview. Coding bootcamps are the new technical schools, time to go.

    • @ezbg
      @ezbg 8 месяцев назад +1

      Seems to me nobody cares about a degree or cert anymore. Indoor to get hired for a job the space you have to have already had a job doing the same thing. It’s demoralizing

  • @t.j.5574
    @t.j.5574 8 месяцев назад +2

    It’s interesting to hear this coming from a guy who graduated from Flat Iron School and then went off to get a job and is doing well. I wouldn’t be knocking off bootcamps if I were you. Worked in your case.

  • @vanysteves3735
    @vanysteves3735 8 месяцев назад +2

    The IT job market sucks for every tech vertical right now. Companies have their pick of many highly experienced candidates. Regardless of the training quality, a noob can't compete with guys that have 6, 8, or more, years of experience.

  • @LukeAvedon
    @LukeAvedon 8 месяцев назад +3

    I just got a boot cramp grad a solid interview. There is totally a path from crazy boot camp to job still. I was self taught and agree it is better.

  • @utubes720
    @utubes720 8 месяцев назад +2

    The MAJORITY of professional developers have NEVER touched “leetcode”. If your typical enterprise CRUD app dev making 120k was asking leetcode in an interview, it’s because the hiring team is trying to pretend they’re FAANG for their 100 internal users basic app.

    • @leonchen89
      @leonchen89 8 месяцев назад +1

      It’s fine if they are asking Easy level leetcode problems as a filter to see who is a real programmer and who is fake.
      But medium level and up is completely waste of people’s time.

  • @drchamp1902
    @drchamp1902 7 месяцев назад +1

    Can they really cover OS, networking, data structures, algorithms, distributed systems, security, databases, etc in 6 months?

  • @adolfohernandez5970
    @adolfohernandez5970 4 месяца назад +1

    CS degree is not for the weak of heart.

  • @DarkRaviForDeath
    @DarkRaviForDeath 8 месяцев назад +13

    oh man, I interviewed with the lewagon bootcamp over a year ago and was so turned off by a question they asked me at the end: why should we take you on as a student. Like I was still needing convincing that I should join so felt like saying "don't, I don't care" lol. Oh well, gave a bullshit answer and they still accepted me, but I ghosted them of course.

    • @angelg3642
      @angelg3642 7 месяцев назад +1

      Naaah. Some questions are straight up bs and disrespectful. You proved yourself good enough yet they require more convincing.
      The question "what were you doing during this gap ? " Where you were most likely wasting your time applying to hundreds of companies and having 3-4 interviews per company and even when they know that process they expect you to tell them why you're still not hired 🤦‍♂.
      Even though most of them expect senior level knowledge juniors with intern pay. HR's are ruining the IT sector

  • @RobertDunn310
    @RobertDunn310 8 месяцев назад +2

    I am currently doing a CS degree on WGU, but I have a friend who is employed in the software industry and he actually used to work at one of the coding bootcamps himself, and told me that essentially it was all about turnover. Getting people in and out as fast as possible and that the management did not really care about the students or their progress..just the bottom line.

  • @homeoffice3524
    @homeoffice3524 8 месяцев назад +1

    It's exactly how it is now 😂 Just use ai in your title and you are good. Now even text editors are Artificial Intelligent 😂 People even don't have a clue for what ai stands fore. Bots and virtual assistants are not intelligent 😂

  • @margaritashamrakov
    @margaritashamrakov 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hi I am in Nucamp now, I agree it is just a crash course into development, and the amount of people I see in each class, I realize not everyone will get a job. I already paid for the bootcamp so I have to finish. But I definitely think Mosh is the best for learning IT , and his courses are free or 19.99. Udemy is great as well. I agree with you about bootcamps. I think that boat has sailed...

  • @phillymontana
    @phillymontana 8 месяцев назад +9

    I have a CS degree from 20 years ago. Graduated not really knowing what to do career wise.
    Always loved tech. A few years ago I ended up trying a boot camp.
    Boot camps get you going quickly. You learn how to actually do something. A CS will not. Don't go find a web dev job after graduating. Start your own thing. Boot camps enable you to do this.

  • @Mel-mu8ox
    @Mel-mu8ox 3 месяца назад +1

    Is there an assembly bootcamp?

  • @BermudezZero
    @BermudezZero 8 месяцев назад +1

    So I need a degree for sure now? Can I still get a job with an associates instead of a bachelor’s???