Learning To Code Over 50
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Жыл бұрын
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@aberba
@aberba 2 сағат бұрын
So many people claiming to be gull stack yet seriously lack in both. You're going to be better at one... you don't have that much energy to advance both same
@nickmillerable
@nickmillerable 3 күн бұрын
This is a great idea for a sample app, great job.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Күн бұрын
Glad you think so!
@Aaron00093
@Aaron00093 4 күн бұрын
where cn i see how u build up that blazor program or how can i share a blazor server with database indiduals account on netlify?
@TheMrgrafixable
@TheMrgrafixable 5 күн бұрын
I just dont want to be homeless man i need to know you're not just giving me hope because you have a bootcamp to sell
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 4 күн бұрын
If you don't feel like you can do it, then don't do it. If you risk being homeless by taking our program, I'm not sure how we would cause that. Don't take the program. However, the job market for developers is strong, and the pay is great. But not everyone can do it. We will tell you if you are a fit for our program if you reach out to us. We only accept people that we feel can pass and be successful.
@user-fb9yd8wo8j
@user-fb9yd8wo8j 6 күн бұрын
Can I uses C# to create instrumentation for sensor data acquisition? and visualize sensor data for analysis purposes? Which C# or .NET books do you recommend to study?
@danielmanigos5575
@danielmanigos5575 7 күн бұрын
Creative cannot replace ai
@804E
@804E 8 күн бұрын
Here because… of Neo sitting in the bathtub with a duck on his head.
@theghastlygamer5326
@theghastlygamer5326 13 күн бұрын
You should offer a no pay til either finish or job hire. If your program works you should be willing to take that risk. Especially if you already have a strict admittance policy
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 11 күн бұрын
Our isa does that you do not pay till you make over 40k. So we do take the risk for students. All the other ways you learn to code you pay no matter your outcome. College and self learning have no such options or student protections. If anyone calls us, we are very transparent with your opportunity and costs.
@jimlopez4303
@jimlopez4303 13 күн бұрын
@CoderFoundry . Appreciat 12:58 e your channel.. I've been watching your blazor content quite a bit the past couple years. Great stuff!! I'm curious if you've run across challenges with state management with the latest blazor web app template.. I've mostly been leaning into server side blazor the past year or so, but i learned web dev using react, and I'm excited about the flexibility that integrating wasm on a per page and component level.. this may be a bit more advanced if a topic you typically post about, but it's a fun blazor challenge . I'm curious if you've ran into problems with state management between server side rendering and client side while passing data back and forth . (props for fellow react fans)... The server and browser clients don't seem to cooperate out of the box . I'm exploring the latest functionality while participating in a brand new micro service test environment. Im wondering if it's worth making a state management service (which sounds like a ton of work i don't really want to tackle) , or if you've found a reliable way to handle state between the blazor render modes without leveraging an external library or hand rolled solution.. Thanks for what you're doing, very helpful for those exploring new dotnet stuff!!
@caseyspaulding
@caseyspaulding 14 күн бұрын
Clean!!!!🧼 🧽
@caseyspaulding
@caseyspaulding 14 күн бұрын
Golds mine! Still learning from you. I listened to advice from you guys and got a full stack .NET dev job! Thanks again!
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 11 күн бұрын
That is awesome!
@zmilkmon
@zmilkmon 15 күн бұрын
I was part of the 7k in December
@-Engineering01-
@-Engineering01- 16 күн бұрын
Embedded and infrastructure fields are still good and alive, why are you only talking about webdev ?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 16 күн бұрын
My experience is web dev. But other areas are great as well.
@ertugrulghazi334
@ertugrulghazi334 17 күн бұрын
Backend: Node.js, Python, Go, C#, ... it's up to you. You could go for the language based on some factors: - Ecosystem - Community - Number of Jobs - Ease of Use - Platforms - Use Case ... The list goes on.
@chewelanthani432
@chewelanthani432 18 күн бұрын
I love you so much😭... I almost gave up my webdev dreams coz of the negative talk on social media. And not only did you help me get back on track but you confirmed that I was on the right path. Thankyou so much
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for the kind words. I'm glad we could help.
@JoyJoy-vh5kz
@JoyJoy-vh5kz 6 күн бұрын
You are not alone here. I, too, have felt the urge to give up many times, especially in the face of layoffs and the rapid evolution of AI
@noahyannis2465
@noahyannis2465 23 күн бұрын
Danke!
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry 21 күн бұрын
Thanks for the Super Thanks! Much appreciated ❤
@sifatsakib2742
@sifatsakib2742 25 күн бұрын
don't I need to do anything with the database?
@captainkirk9700
@captainkirk9700 Ай бұрын
Software development will be replaced by outsourcing and Artificial Intelligence. I was laid off recently, and I only get calls for short term contract jobs (six months or more). That's it. There will be fewer developers in 2024. The market is completely overly saturated. Yes, if you look at the countries hiring developers for cheaper, they are hiring more. But for every development position that is outsourced, that is one person who is out of a job.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Outsourcing has been around for 25 years. AI is not replacing devs. Dev salaries have not dropped. If you live and work in the US, you have a major advantage over anyone outside trying work in US either remote or trying to get a visa.
@captainkirk9700
@captainkirk9700 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry This field is unstable. My friend was unemployed for six months. Please don't say I have an advantage, I don't.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Skillset is the major advantage. Keep your skills relevant, and being a us citizen is advantage.
@captainkirk9700
@captainkirk9700 Ай бұрын
I am a U.S. citizen. Although I am going to go for an Angular certification, I don't think it is going to help me. I have recent experience in older technologies (since 2021). Even after having my resume recently professionally done. I want to get a job and hit the ground running. It's just hard. When I watch recent graduates unemployed for a long time on different channels it is depressing to me. They usually have a more trained skill set than I do. If it's happening to them, than it will definitely happen to me. I am going to try freelancing at this point.
@captainkirk9700
@captainkirk9700 29 күн бұрын
@@CoderFoundry You are right. It's hard to have all the skills up to date, unfortunately in this day and age it's impossible to have all the latest skills, when some employers ask for ten in demand skills. I don't think anybody has experience in all of them. When I lost my job in 2021 I took anything in the tech industry that would pay me. Unfortunately it was for outdated software skills (which I didn't even know, although I could do them, it was for a programming language used in the late 90s). I am trying my best to learn everything new, but it is hard. I personally don't want to work a remote job.
@consciencetranquille7868
@consciencetranquille7868 Ай бұрын
Hello sir Bobby do I need to learn . Net core or MVC?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Mvc is in .net core. Mvc is a design pattern. .net core is the version of .net.
@consciencetranquille7868
@consciencetranquille7868 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry I should learn it with C#.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Yes
@philmingo
@philmingo Ай бұрын
Now this is how you explain stuff !! Thanks much!!
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Glad to help!
@mihailodukic601
@mihailodukic601 Ай бұрын
I was fortunate enough to land a front end role about 2 years ago. Dont see myself leaving anytime soon. Use every opportunity to grow and learn new things !
@homeostasis360
@homeostasis360 Ай бұрын
hey bro. I'm 24 and I'm jobless... how hard is it to start learning front end web development? please guide me.
@RogueCoder7505
@RogueCoder7505 Ай бұрын
this works like a charm, even for a .net web api. Thank you
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Glad to hear that
@heypaisan9384
@heypaisan9384 Ай бұрын
With all of these people "trying to break into tech" and are saturating the market, they are forgetting the basic law of supply and demand. High supply = lower salaries. If you don't accept the low offer, someone else will.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Define low offer. I am seeing offers in the mid 60's for first time web devs.
@heypaisan9384
@heypaisan9384 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry I think maybe you missed the point of my comment. Many of these people trying to "break into tech" are expecting starting salaries around $100k, which is why most of them want to do it in the first place. The more the market gets saturated, the lower the starting salary (offer) will be. Again, the law of supply and demand. BTW, I think $60k is very reasonable and realistic as a junior starting salary.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
That's what we tell everyone that in most cases 60k is what you should expect.
@user-ql5jk2bt9c
@user-ql5jk2bt9c 23 күн бұрын
Absolutely true, and I see more and more "junior" roles (with lower salaries) that actually require the skills and experience of a more senior role.
@Cognitoman
@Cognitoman 9 күн бұрын
@@CoderFoundryI’d be happy with 40k starting out
@MohammadKomaei
@MohammadKomaei Ай бұрын
How to prevent sending a request to the server when the EditForm is not valid and validation occur on browser too.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
There is an event on valid submit. You can submit the form only if it is valid
@MohammadKomaei
@MohammadKomaei Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry If you use OnValidSubmit the form submits and validations executes on the server you can see this on network tab of browser inspect. I want to execute validation on browser like unobtrusive javascript in mvc template.
@Glenningway
@Glenningway Ай бұрын
If there really is a VR/AR revolution coming, C# might benefit with Unity 3D knowledge. Right now it's not looking hot due to layoffs and downsizing. I've half given up on web dev because I'm more of a visual guy and I think there's a bit of ageism for middle aged guys who only did IT and not actual web dev. I can work with AWS and GitHub though they atrophied a bit, my "portfolio" is still on AWS. I miss game dev and putting a product together, there's just not a market for people like myself it seems so I settled for IT and it's been rough.
@kencodes
@kencodes Ай бұрын
TLDR: Boot camps, and pretty much everything else, are successful when you put in the effort. There is no magic pill to learn programming (whether that's because you want a $100k+/year job, or because you really love programming, etc). I learned enough to talk like a programmer from the boot camp, but in the year working since I've learned enough to make the boot camp feel like it was the simple part of my career. :) I celebrated my one year anniversary as a programmer last month after working through the entire self paced boot camp over 9 months while working full+ time and can say it was the reason I got my job. There is a lot of assistance and hand holding in any boot camp while making projects, but it opened the door to days where I wouldn't watch any videos at all and would open up one of the projects they directed us to build and then I'd choose something to add to it. Even back in the JavaScript portion of the camp I'd say "Ok, I want to add the option for users to make additional principal payments, and an option to pay the interest every month on top of the payment (So they are making a full principal payment each month). It taught me problem solving and research while I was actively coding every day thanks to the structured course. I thought I knew how to code when I finished the boot camp and I was confident in it. I did know how to code, and I could walk anyone through how to code up a section of the Bug Tracker, and why it was coded in that way. The second interview I had was an open conversation and they allowed me to pull up my project and walk them through it, and my willingness to do that and carry on in an interview like it was a normal water cooler conversation about coding is what placed me over others. If I thought I knew how to code back then because I'd finished a boot camp I've never been proved more wrong in my life. I've learned more in this last year than in any other industry I've worked in and now I look back at the bug tracker like it's basic compared to what I work in each day. I don't say this because the bug tracker is basic, because it's extraordinary, but because this industry allows you to learn and evolve constantly and I'll never be able to master every aspect of every language out there, but I can try! The bottom line though, a boot camp is your foundation. My degree is in architecture and arguably the most important part of a building is its foundation. Build your foundation in a way that allows you to continue growing.
@jamesarceri5540
@jamesarceri5540 Ай бұрын
Smoke and mirrors foks. This is "Not" doing "Client Side" validation or unobtrusive validation. For that you still need to use JS. Unless you are going to load your form via AJAX from a controller you won't even see your data annotaions like data-val* in your generated response / markup. This validation is done over a websocket. Trying using the onchange with oninput. You cant. @bind-Value messes that up for you. Lame :) Love Blazor but this should have been thought about. JSInterop time....
@jjjj5452
@jjjj5452 Ай бұрын
people are going to indeed and linkedin and seeing zero job listings for juniors. Data may say it will double, but reality is different.
@user-ql5jk2bt9c
@user-ql5jk2bt9c 23 күн бұрын
A lot of these jobs are remote, and you'll be in competition with hundreds of applicants, many of them with degrees and prior experience. So any inexperienced self taught programmer (or boot camp graduate) has zero chance.
@4restmorrison
@4restmorrison Ай бұрын
Another very helpful thing is to find a Coding MeetUp in your area, even if it's not 100% inline with your stack. I go to a MeetUp every saturday and do Leetcode's, most people there are using Python and Im a Javascript dev but it is still really helpful to be spending time with other devs and prscticing fundamental data structures and algorithms
@elsten123
@elsten123 Ай бұрын
Just got hired as a .net dev at an amazing company. Have started programming about a year ago but was until september finishing uni. I think a boot camp is a good start but it's just that nowdays, a start. And I think people should treat it as such instead of a magic couple of months program. I agree that some people benefit greatly from having someone as their guide and respect you for it. The standard has risen drastically. Design patterns, cloud knowledge, actually being able to do projects that are more complex by yourself(not following a program someone laid out for you), optimisation techniques, unit and integration testing, docker, caching and so much more are expected of people. Knowing how to study is a very valuable skill and that's why I also think good university degrees are so important to recruiters. If you do not have that ,it's especially important to stand out with going above and beyond. I did make my own portfolio, having something to show is crucial if you have no experience but people will see right through someone that did not struggle and find the solutions to their problems themselves
@ionutb123
@ionutb123 Ай бұрын
when will you update the self-paced bootcamp? to teach Blazor instead of JS. Thanks
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
We are recording it now.
@tanoryjakaperdana1419
@tanoryjakaperdana1419 Ай бұрын
they asking me to add a payment method
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Heroku is different pricing these days. How to get it on the host is still relevant
@tanoryjakaperdana1419
@tanoryjakaperdana1419 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry is there any free aspnet hosting instead heroku?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Not that I know of we like railway. They have a low cost tier but not free.
@clarinet800149
@clarinet800149 Ай бұрын
As someone who couldn’t do the Bootcamp the Self-Paced gave me exactly what I needed to land a role and advance my career within my first year as a developer. Is .Net harder, yes, does it open the door to more opportunities, yes, especially if you pick up a frontend framework like React or Angular along the way. Do you have to finish the entire course. No, pick what is important to you especially if you subscribe monthly. That being said, if you take the course try to do at least 2 or 3 of the bigger .Net projects. They expand your toolkit so much for when you beginning working in a C# environment solo or with a company.
@user-we1ux1yl6b
@user-we1ux1yl6b Ай бұрын
The video beautifully showcases Blazor's simplicity, especially highlighting its incorporation of input tags, which are crucial for interactive applications. The ability for the code to run on the server and directly access databases and services is indeed a powerful feature. Reflecting on the prediction made eight months ago regarding Blazor's potential domination of the market, it's worth assessing its current standing. As someone who has been deeply rooted in Microsoft technologies since the early 80s, I resonate with the anticipation surrounding Blazor. However, history has shown that Microsoft's strength in language, such as C#, and tools like Visual Studio, hasn't always translated into market domination. Previous frameworks like XML, WPF, WCF, WebForms, MVC, and Razor, despite their merits, haven't achieved the anticipated widespread adoption. One critical aspect where Blazor could improve is in striking the right balance between automation and flexibility. For instance, maintaining the original input tags and onclick event would offer developers more control and familiarity. My suggestion would be to adopt a hybrid approach, where developers can seamlessly integrate traditional HTML elements with server-side functionality. For instance, instead of introducing new syntax like <InputNumber>, retaining <input type="number" server.name="LoanRate" /> with the "server." prefix could signify that certain attributes are solely for server-side use. This approach mitigates the learning curve associated with new binding mechanisms, akin to what was encountered with WPF. Similarly, replacing @onclick="HandleSubmit" with onclick="codeBehind.MethodName();" allows for greater flexibility and compatibility with existing JavaScript frameworks. This approach not only simplifies integration with client-side logic but also promotes reusability of HTML components, a limitation often cited with Blazor. Introducing server events like server.onvalidation and server.onupdate could further enhance Blazor's capabilities, enabling developers to handle server-side interactions more intuitively. Lastly, granting the code-behind the ability to manipulate HTML components directly, akin to DOM manipulation in other UI frameworks, would streamline synchronization with the client and simplify development workflows. In conclusion, while Blazor shows immense promise, there's room for refinement to ensure it meets the diverse needs of developers and achieves the market penetration predicted in the video.
@TheJuanivitale
@TheJuanivitale Ай бұрын
The growth of the developer population is ACTUALLY the problem here. More devs means oversaturated market, which means more devs that no one hires...
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
It's job growth. Jobs are expected to grow
@user-ql5jk2bt9c
@user-ql5jk2bt9c 23 күн бұрын
The overwhelming majority of employers are looking for experienced developers. People who can quickly learn the company specific policies and get going asap. People with no programming experience in "the real world" are lucky if they get called for an interview.
@zebduffey5698
@zebduffey5698 Ай бұрын
Nice slhill video.. reality is I've applied to over 1000 jobs.. not even an interview. Got a couple of calls and emails but they didn't amount to anything. For every job posting there's 50-500 appliicants... and if you are a junior then forget about it😊
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that. But send me a link to your portfolio and linkedin. To [email protected]
@jdizzle22396
@jdizzle22396 Ай бұрын
Do you have a degree?
@user-ql5jk2bt9c
@user-ql5jk2bt9c 23 күн бұрын
Yep, again if you don't have a CS degree and experience (at the very least a solid internship), you'd be extremely lucky to even get called in for an interview. Recruiters and managers have so many applicants, they're not going to spend time checking self taught applicants' GitHub links and portfolios when they don't see a CS degree and prior, relevant experience.
@zebduffey5698
@zebduffey5698 23 күн бұрын
@user-ql5jk2bt9c I'm not disagreeing with you, I'm currently going for bachelors and then masters.. however, when I started this journey in 2021 it was a different story. Companies were hiring bootcamp and self taught left and right. I just got in the game too late and by the time I knew enough to get a job the market shifted back to degree holders again. In addition to that, the market shrank as a whole, thousands of experienced developers who were laid off flooded the market and still do to this day. One more factor is AI has decreased the need for junior devs so even WITH a bachelors or masters with no experience it's still pretty hard to get interviews because of the above listed reasons. Unfortunately I was dragged into the promises of the gold rush of tech jobs in 2020-2021 and was just too late
@mhsn27mhsn10
@mhsn27mhsn10 Ай бұрын
thank you
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
You're welcome
@Glockodile
@Glockodile Ай бұрын
Hi, does this also work with blazor server?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
It most cases. You cannot modify the dom with js because it clashes with blazor.
@jamesmckee9017
@jamesmckee9017 Ай бұрын
AR is where AI will shine. Web apps will quickly be yesterday's news after the Apple Vision Pro drops enough in price. AR is where we are going, and that's where AI will be making the biggest difference.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Why do you think AI will shine in AR? Generally curious your thoughts. I believe AR apps have serious potential.
@jamesmckee9017
@jamesmckee9017 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry Well, if you have responsive AI coupled with an AR avatar you could provide companionship, education, entertainment, therapy, and other features in a one stop shop.
@jamesmckee9017
@jamesmckee9017 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry You come home and your AR girlfriend asks about your day, provides you with a movie/video game suggestion, tells you what happened in the news, etc... And she knows what's pertinent to you because your psychological profile, browsing history, buying habits, etc... are all piped into her 'database.'
@twismfamily
@twismfamily Ай бұрын
Madame Web was decent, lol. It could have been better tho.
@kencodes
@kencodes Ай бұрын
After your discussion on the number of databases, and database tables... I had to go look at how many databases and tables we access in our web applications at my job, and then how many tables were in there... So I've got access to maybe 1/20th of the company DBs and I counted 92, which the smallest amount of tables in the ones I went through was 45, and the big one we believe has too much usage has 721 currently (More being added still). If AI can just go ahead and handle all those connections for me I'd love it so I could just write my back end logic. <3
@tjf7101
@tjf7101 Ай бұрын
Use GTP on a regular basis. So far I find it as a valuable tool, but just that, a tool. Even as a junior dev I just don’t see it replacing developers.
@martinlutherkingjr.5582
@martinlutherkingjr.5582 18 күн бұрын
And nobody is saying it will. People are concerned about what AI can do in 5 years from now.
@jxndwl
@jxndwl Ай бұрын
What role would Semantic Kernel play in the game? is in Application Layer?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Semantic kernel is in the tooling layer. The things you build with it would be in the application layer.
@unskeptable
@unskeptable Ай бұрын
Can a .net 8 web mvc project with jquery be updated to also use blazor ?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
It's a rewrite. The architecture is different.
@georgebeierberkeley
@georgebeierberkeley Ай бұрын
I've transitioned my applications from VB to WebForms to Razor over the years. I'm just not sold on Blazor. If I want to hide or show and element or perform a client-side calculation it seems, well, nuts to go up to the server, have the server compare the client DOM to its version of the DOM, determine the changes to be rendered and then send back the refreshed DOM. It seems like (problematic) UpdatePanels all over again. Every hammer sees a nail, I suppose, and MS wants to put C# to use everywhere. But..the language of the browser is JS. It's like when I run around my backhand in tennis. Just learn a backhand/JS! I'd be happy to be wrong. Does anyone know the Blazor adoption rates? [BTW -- I wish people would stop talking about the virtues of Hot Reload. It works great on demo, but on anything but a tiny project it crashes consistently.]
@donaldpoole1584
@donaldpoole1584 Ай бұрын
Okay.. but.. coding is a Language right? And AI is a translator. So the 3-5 year learning curve that has existed for years for coders, which has served as barrier to entry will become non existent. If I can type into a Coding App... what is in my brain... down to every detail.... that saves new coders from having to learn coding languages, proper Syntax etc etc. My point is low level coders will be a unnecessary. Designers are safer in the beginning.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
But you can not build apps with ai only prompts. Especially with zero knowledge about coding. My point is that AI apps are the true opportunity, but you will need to learn how to build them.
@donaldpoole1584
@donaldpoole1584 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry 100%... and good eye opening video. So there very well could exist a scenario in the next 365 days where someone could build an app without typing code. (Using lots and lots of very specific prompting of AI) ^^^ which I acknowledge is a very tough skill to learn and would take many months of experience to know how to build the framework for an app. (I dont know the lingo) Do you agree... there is potentially a new way to learn / teach people on the horizon as well 🤔
@spyth168
@spyth168 Ай бұрын
I miss the almost weekly videos - please keep up the great content!
@Cos3D
@Cos3D Ай бұрын
is it possible to interop blazor with three js to upload/import a 3d obj file from blender that has animations?
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
Maybe. I would have to try.
@sluisalfredor
@sluisalfredor Ай бұрын
Hi I have a quick question, I do have knowledge of c# but I want a beginners course to learn from 0, which one can recomienda recommend me?
@MikeyTJ98
@MikeyTJ98 Ай бұрын
Nice try, I just don't see it. Maybe programmers don't have it as bad but WebDevs are just not getting hired. And AI will not make it any better for WebDevs.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
There are lots of job openings currently for web dev. Ai is a tool it makes jobs easier in some cases, but it can not replace a web developer. Make your own decisions and pursue a career you want. But web dev is in demand and will continue to be.
@MikeyTJ98
@MikeyTJ98 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry I don't think so, but I understand that you have to say this, it's your thing.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
So i guess no will build websites anymore? The 14K openings for basic simple search on indeed with the keywords "web developer" They are all fake? Are looking for a web developer job?
@MikeyTJ98
@MikeyTJ98 Ай бұрын
@@CoderFoundry Building websites and many other things will be as easy to get and do for the avg Joe and Jane as it is doing a Google search nowadays. I know you have to keep your gig going and it's fine, I get it, but it's just a matter of time (sooner than later at this rate) and you know it. 14K openings is nothing in the grand scheme of things. I too have ties to the tech industry and I see how bad things are getting, more layoffs and dwindling hiring. It is what it is.
@CoderFoundry
@CoderFoundry Ай бұрын
We can agree to disagree. I think the youtube video is backed by lot of stats and resources. Its not based on my opinion but industry resources. I know the industry is growing because I'm watching it. If you don't believe the industry is growing no one is going to convince you otherwise. Which is fine. We all have do something for a living and this is not the only job. BTW, a average person with no experience cannot build web application or even a website with a google search. Building a modern full stack application requires knowledge and skill. Its not easy. Even that best generative ai platfoms (Open AI) ) can barely make a functional html landing page with css. Can AI like copilot help a knowledgeable developer? 100% for sure. Can it take a novice turn them into a web dev capable of building applications? No. Its not even close.