After 3-4 year of coding I find coding kind of boring, I don't want to spend rest of my life infront of computer being isolated.I want to explore the world, talk with people, meet new people, have different experience.
Basically touch grass. I'm also thinking of studying robotics. Will still be writing code. I would rather see a machine move because of my code than screen changing. (Although AI is kindof cool)
That's the thing, you can get a remote coding job and with the money you make you can travel the world and have as many experiences as you want. Which other job allows you to travel and have these experiences?
After spending over a decade working with other people, I want to interact with as few people as possible, or at least a more intelligent, like-minded lot of people. There is tedium and shitty parts of every job. I might as well get paid well.
@@iMagUdspEllr Absolutely agree. Retired now after 50 years of working, a lot of it with the public and a lot in support, and I've had enough of it to last the rest of my life. I'm finally doing what I always wanted to as a freelancer and developer, and I look forward to getting up every day. If a person finds coding boring, that's a good sign they're not cut out for it. Not that it's fun and fascinating all the time (there can be tedium, depending on the problem or project), but if you're not the type that gets hooked on a problem and keeps at it till you find a solution, coding probably isn't for you. I can and do still get out and I can take a vacation whenever I want, but I also love the solitude, the learning, the coding, and building solutions. Plus, people are overrated. 😀
Good choices of analogies! And props for mentioning Naval - he's a well of knowledge 😉 As a side note to "software is never finished" (6:30), I think we've moved even more in that direction since SaaS is now by far the most common business model. As long as people are subscribed to their apps, they'll except maintenance and updates. Games are also moving in that direction (with micro-transactions rather than subscriptions), and many gamers are expecting games to continuously drop big content updates. It should be a good trend for jobs in programming!
Great content, as always! Could you help me with something unrelated: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
You speak English like maybe like a brit / American combo. You already had this skill. I think something else made you a genius. And, if you know C++ or other object oriented programming, you obviously learned that before you learned my engineering fortran. Fortran will set your brain permanently into sequential thinking - noun verb object! Sort of like Norwegian!
Thank you so much! 😊 The video is fantastic 🎬, and we are very excited 🎉. Personally, I am looking forward to the iPhone review 📱 from the perspective of someone living in Europe 🌍. Additionally, I am curious if all the features of Apple Intelligence 🧠 can be utilized by a programmer 💻. I also noticed you used to work with MS Windows 🪟 and have switched to Mac 🍎; I would love to see a video explaining the reasons and benefits behind this change 🤔.
I might be misunderstanding you. But, yeah, if I ask AI to do something that only takes 100 lines of code, it might get the logic right. But then the libraries or the struct names will be wrong. It can't create anything that resembles the scale of full-scale, professional apps. The context window is too small and even if it was larger you would have to spend a lot of time replacing the incorrect identifiers for the entire app. At best, it can hand you a piece of what you need to write or give a potential suggestion for debugging an error. If you already familiar with the technology you need to build the project, you would be several times faster coding it yourself. Maybe you might ask for a skeleton of the project and then go from there. But, it probably won't compile or work correctly.
"It's running. I did it in a few minutes with AI." "Where? I can't access it." "It's running. I'm looking at it right now." "What's the URL?" "localhost:3000"
After 3-4 year of coding I find coding kind of boring, I don't want to spend rest of my life infront of computer being isolated.I want to explore the world, talk with people, meet new people, have different experience.
Basically touch grass. I'm also thinking of studying robotics. Will still be writing code. I would rather see a machine move because of my code than screen changing. (Although AI is kindof cool)
That's the thing, you can get a remote coding job and with the money you make you can travel the world and have as many experiences as you want. Which other job allows you to travel and have these experiences?
After spending over a decade working with other people, I want to interact with as few people as possible, or at least a more intelligent, like-minded lot of people.
There is tedium and shitty parts of every job. I might as well get paid well.
@@iMagUdspEllr 😂😂😂
@@iMagUdspEllr Absolutely agree. Retired now after 50 years of working, a lot of it with the public and a lot in support, and I've had enough of it to last the rest of my life. I'm finally doing what I always wanted to as a freelancer and developer, and I look forward to getting up every day. If a person finds coding boring, that's a good sign they're not cut out for it. Not that it's fun and fascinating all the time (there can be tedium, depending on the problem or project), but if you're not the type that gets hooked on a problem and keeps at it till you find a solution, coding probably isn't for you. I can and do still get out and I can take a vacation whenever I want, but I also love the solitude, the learning, the coding, and building solutions. Plus, people are overrated. 😀
The creative part in programming is that you can solve your problem in almost infinite number of ways.
The flipside video for people who already code should be: _why you should learn to change a car tire._
I Always wait for a new video and i dont know why but i enjoy watchinh every video you upload to youtube. My favrt youtube coder of all time.❤
Great video
Good choices of analogies! And props for mentioning Naval - he's a well of knowledge 😉
As a side note to "software is never finished" (6:30), I think we've moved even more in that direction since SaaS is now by far the most common business model. As long as people are subscribed to their apps, they'll except maintenance and updates. Games are also moving in that direction (with micro-transactions rather than subscriptions), and many gamers are expecting games to continuously drop big content updates. It should be a good trend for jobs in programming!
What are you working on right now bro?
trying to sell his course.
I like coding. Does one have to be good in math ? I struggled with math in school. I'm not good with math
I's good if I start learn code at 17 years old
Hi 👋 Kalle.. I would like to learn and khow how to code..but I'm not good enough in math .also I don't have money 😊 so.. what do you think?
Great content, as always! Could you help me with something unrelated: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
You speak English like maybe like a brit / American combo. You already had this skill. I think something else made you a genius. And, if you know C++ or other object oriented programming, you obviously learned that before you learned my engineering fortran. Fortran will set your brain permanently into sequential thinking - noun verb object! Sort of like Norwegian!
🔥
Thank you so much! 😊 The video is fantastic 🎬, and we are very excited 🎉. Personally, I am looking forward to the iPhone review 📱 from the perspective of someone living in Europe 🌍. Additionally, I am curious if all the features of Apple Intelligence 🧠 can be utilized by a programmer 💻. I also noticed you used to work with MS Windows 🪟 and have switched to Mac 🍎; I would love to see a video explaining the reasons and benefits behind this change 🤔.
No fear mongering here, but AI can definitely do today what you said I might do in the future when it gets better 3:48
I might be misunderstanding you. But, yeah, if I ask AI to do something that only takes 100 lines of code, it might get the logic right. But then the libraries or the struct names will be wrong. It can't create anything that resembles the scale of full-scale, professional apps. The context window is too small and even if it was larger you would have to spend a lot of time replacing the incorrect identifiers for the entire app.
At best, it can hand you a piece of what you need to write or give a potential suggestion for debugging an error.
If you already familiar with the technology you need to build the project, you would be several times faster coding it yourself. Maybe you might ask for a skeleton of the project and then go from there. But, it probably won't compile or work correctly.
"It's running. I did it in a few minutes with AI."
"Where? I can't access it."
"It's running. I'm looking at it right now."
"What's the URL?"
"localhost:3000"
W hallden let me get a heart
11th!
fourth !
Second !
First one here today 😂😂 finally
I'm the 290th one, finally