Thank you to RUclips for showing me this video on my recommended page & thank you for motivating me once more to keep pushing, at the end of the day this career won’t be possible without lots of hard work… which yeah I’m struggling with as of now 😖
@@KlimYadrintsev I’m trying to stick to it… because I do want change, and without action no change can happen. the spb lifestyle dreams can’t sponsor themselves 😂😂
To the people that are interested in programming and that are new to the field, dont be discouraged! This video shows a lot of the negatives, but if you enjoy it you should pursue it! There are many positives to the industry and job itself to look forward to.
As someone with ADHD who's partway into a Computer Science degree, it's pretty rough. However, I think the way it challenges your brain will help train me to manage my adhd symptoms better.
I can imagine how challenging it must be, but it's great that you see the positive side of it! Keep pushing forward and you'll come out stronger in the end.
If it is any encouragement, I have a junior engineer who suffers from ADHD and he is doing great. Don't believe the school feedback that tells you that you are no good. You probably will do just fine as an engineer. What you probably will want to focus on is work that has a lot of moving parts instead of traditional straight application coding. Maybe something like writing code for test equipment or some other task that requires a lot of hands on the actual hardware. That is more fun anyway.
learning languages, algorythms or solving problems doesn't get you anywhere. you need to stick with something and actively follow that topic to stay relevant. or a random 20 y.o. with lots of time and will of work is going to replace your place. also the point of that guy in tedx is "you can upgrade your job with coding" and you very well can. cto with 17 team members here
This video was sad and boring. Anyone can learn to program, but to be good takes passion, so if you rely on AI you probably don't have the drive or patience to become a true code master.
I'm not bad at problem solving, know how to fast research and always find solutions. But I distance myself from coding right now, because I just dont generally dont like it over time. I like writing and I'm a creative person, that's why coding was so cool at first. Always thought of myself as the "computer guy" since a kid, my family knows me as the "computer guy" and friends. My interests have drastically changed since the last months, and technology isn't really what I adore that much anymore. Rather its the naturalistic environment of our planet, which I love. I'm 18, maybe it's just puberty kickin in for the last time..
I have the idea that certain people have an innate talent to write code. Songwriting for example, you do not need to read or write music, this is a gift youy have, Richard carpenter of the Carpenters didn't go to school to learn music and in fact surpassed the people who sent to school in songwriting! None of the Beatles studied music, they had a genius for it. Steve Jobs didn't study how to become a CEO, he was a born CEO.
Well duh! Linus Torvalds wrote git by himself in two weeks. It then proceeded to kill CM Synergy which hundreds of engineers spent years writing. The best are far better than average.
Some disagreements I have, you need to learn quite a lot of skills but you're not expected to know them all at the start, also you're not expected to know react and vue and angular to start (you need one frontend framework) even though it's good to know more. Things like owasp you don't need to start your job but you'll pick it up as people talk about vulnerabilities you're introducing in code reviews. Also I don't think the study made the point you said it did exactly. ```"According to the results, there is an increase in the non-verbal cognitive abilities of children in the experiment group with.... no statistically significant difference in their problem-solving skills.``` although it's a nit pick as it does increase non-verbal cognitive abilities. I do think the overall point you're getting across is probably good, people should not assume it'll be easy money as if you've not got the mindset for it it'll be extremely difficult. Ok, just got further along and I very much disagree with the bootcamp idea, a large number of places will even treat it as a negative if you've gone to one. Also using chat-gpt to learn to code, you really need to qualify this. If you mean using it to write code I completely disagree with you, in that context you should write code yourself to make sure you understand it. The lazy chat-gpt will lead to weaker programmers overall who's code I need to debug and is almost like the 'copy and paste from stack overflow' approach. If you mean for asking questions, "Explain what a tree is" type of thing then sure, although I think new devs should get used to finding/reading documentation as that's a large part of the process. I think it's safer to just recommend they don't use AI.
Thank you to RUclips for showing me this video on my recommended page & thank you for motivating me once more to keep pushing, at the end of the day this career won’t be possible without lots of hard work… which yeah I’m struggling with as of now 😖
Thanks for watching, coding can be life changing if you stick to it
@@KlimYadrintsev I’m trying to stick to it… because I do want change, and without action no change can happen.
the spb lifestyle dreams can’t sponsor themselves 😂😂
@rantlyy go get it! I am sure you can stick to it! Maybe you would like me to make a video about something that you are struggling with?
To the people that are interested in programming and that are new to the field, dont be discouraged! This video shows a lot of the negatives, but if you enjoy it you should pursue it! There are many positives to the industry and job itself to look forward to.
Coding can be a life changing field to persue, hopefully I shown that it is not only discipline that is required to learn to code
As someone with ADHD who's partway into a Computer Science degree, it's pretty rough. However, I think the way it challenges your brain will help train me to manage my adhd symptoms better.
I can imagine how challenging it must be, but it's great that you see the positive side of it! Keep pushing forward and you'll come out stronger in the end.
As someone with ADHD as well, programming is the one thing I can actually focus on. I think it's interesting how different our ADHD is.
If it is any encouragement, I have a junior engineer who suffers from ADHD and he is doing great. Don't believe the school feedback that tells you that you are no good. You probably will do just fine as an engineer. What you probably will want to focus on is work that has a lot of moving parts instead of traditional straight application coding. Maybe something like writing code for test equipment or some other task that requires a lot of hands on the actual hardware. That is more fun anyway.
learning languages, algorythms or solving problems doesn't get you anywhere. you need to stick with something and actively follow that topic to stay relevant. or a random 20 y.o. with lots of time and will of work is going to replace your place.
also the point of that guy in tedx is "you can upgrade your job with coding" and you very well can.
cto with 17 team members here
Super great for you to share! Hopefully people understand that it is not all fun and games to learn to code and it is a skill like any other
This video was sad and boring. Anyone can learn to program, but to be good takes passion, so if you rely on AI you probably don't have the drive or patience to become a true code master.
I'm not bad at problem solving, know how to fast research and always find solutions. But I distance myself from coding right now, because I just dont generally dont like it over time.
I like writing and I'm a creative person, that's why coding was so cool at first. Always thought of myself as the "computer guy" since a kid, my family knows me as the "computer guy" and friends. My interests have drastically changed since the last months, and technology isn't really what I adore that much anymore. Rather its the naturalistic environment of our planet, which I love. I'm 18, maybe it's just puberty kickin in for the last time..
great nuanced video
Thank you for watching!
Классное произношение, молодец.
Great video! Looking forward to the next one!
Thank you so much, glad you enjoyed the video!
Nice video, quite insightful!
Thank you so much, anything in particular you would like my next video to be about?
i saw all the qualification needed i just dont use react that much im more of a angular dude as long as i can do dektop/Web/Mobile im good
what a legend
I have the idea that certain people have an innate talent to write code. Songwriting for example, you do not need to read or write music, this is a gift youy have, Richard carpenter of the Carpenters didn't go to school to learn music and in fact surpassed the people who sent to school in songwriting!
None of the Beatles studied music, they had a genius for it.
Steve Jobs didn't study how to become a CEO, he was a born CEO.
Well duh! Linus Torvalds wrote git by himself in two weeks. It then proceeded to kill CM Synergy which hundreds of engineers spent years writing. The best are far better than average.
Some disagreements I have, you need to learn quite a lot of skills but you're not expected to know them all at the start, also you're not expected to know react and vue and angular to start (you need one frontend framework) even though it's good to know more.
Things like owasp you don't need to start your job but you'll pick it up as people talk about vulnerabilities you're introducing in code reviews.
Also I don't think the study made the point you said it did exactly.
```"According to the results, there is an increase in the non-verbal cognitive abilities of children in the experiment group with.... no statistically significant difference in their problem-solving skills.```
although it's a nit pick as it does increase non-verbal cognitive abilities.
I do think the overall point you're getting across is probably good, people should not assume it'll be easy money as if you've not got the mindset for it it'll be extremely difficult.
Ok, just got further along and I very much disagree with the bootcamp idea, a large number of places will even treat it as a negative if you've gone to one.
Also using chat-gpt to learn to code, you really need to qualify this. If you mean using it to write code I completely disagree with you, in that context you should write code yourself to make sure you understand it. The lazy chat-gpt will lead to weaker programmers overall who's code I need to debug and is almost like the 'copy and paste from stack overflow' approach.
If you mean for asking questions, "Explain what a tree is" type of thing then sure, although I think new devs should get used to finding/reading documentation as that's a large part of the process. I think it's safer to just recommend they don't use AI.