Computer Science isn't programming! // How to become a Master Programmer // Featuring Dr Chuck

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David Bombal

David Bombal

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 741
@davidbombal
@davidbombal 2 жыл бұрын
FREE course links below :) // MENU // 00:00 ▶ Introduction 01:30 ▶ Cisco Certs as the Standard and Why Programming Doesn't Have an Equivalent 04:33 ▶ Computer Science As the Way to Get Into Programming 09:37 ▶ Computer Science Doesn't Make You a Master Programmer 11:25 ▶ Why The System is Broken 14:20 ▶ The Role of Universities in the Future of Education 22:08 ▶ The First Half of the Path to Master Programmer 24:00 ▶ The Second Half of the Path to Master Programmer 26:26 ▶ What Is a Master Programmer? 31:36 ▶ David and Dr Chuck's Experiences with Programming Courses at University 36:32 ▶ Brief Overview of the Origin of Computer Science and What Went Wrong 44:02 ▶ When Dr Chuck Teaches Recursion 44:56 ▶ But Doesn't the System Actually Work? Just look at Google and Facebook 45:38 ▶ The Idea for Google Wasn't Good Enough for a PhD 48:47 ▶ How to Fix the System 50:43 ▶ The Last Nut to Crack 54:22 ▶ Open Source's Role 56:44 ▶ You Can't Apply Until You Have Run the Gauntlet 1:00:34 ▶ You Can Start Now 1:01:08 ▶ The Value of Mentors 1:04:15 ▶ The Problem with Online Platforms 1:05:37 ▶ Why Cisco is the Standard in Networking 1:08:15 ▶ Every Course Dr Chuck Teaches Requires Him to Write Code 1:09:29 ▶ Quick Summary for the Plan for the Master Programmer 1:11:53 ▶ What's the Cost Going to Be? 1:15:09 ▶ Education Is For Everybody, Not Just the Rich 1:16:36 ▶ Final Thoughts 1:18:33 ▶ Thanks, Dr Chuck! // MY STUFF // www.amazon.com/shop/davidbombal // SOCIAL // Discord: discord.com/invite/usKSyzb Twitter: twitter.com/davidbombal Instagram: instagram.com/davidbombal LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal Facebook: facebook.com/davidbombal.co TikTok: tiktok.com/@davidbombal KZbin: kzbin.info // Dr Chuck social // Website: www.dr-chuck.com/ Twitter: twitter.com/drchuck/ KZbin: kzbin.info Coursera: www.coursera.org/instructor/drchuck // Python for Everybody // Free Python course on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/python KZbin: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bnXZqqqljNtpnKs Python for Everybody: www.py4e.com/ Free Python Book: do1.dr-chuck.com/pythonlearn/EN_us/pythonlearn.pdf Dr Chuck's Website: www.dr-chuck.com/ Free Python Book options: www.py4e.com/book // Django for Everybody // Website: www.dj4e.com/ Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/django KZbin: kzbin.info/www/bejne/pWG7k3usgN2qbbs // Web Applications for Everybody // KZbin: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rqOZpo16h7mhl5I Website: www.wa4e.com/ Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/web-applications // Internet History // Coursera: www.coursera.org/learn/internet-history KZbin: kzbin.info/www/bejne/amixg5R4i92ajK8 // SPONSORS // Interested in sponsoring my videos? Reach out to my team here: sponsors@davidbombal.com
@breveganlyfe
@breveganlyfe 2 жыл бұрын
Next guest on the channel should be "Gummo", the hacker from Soft White Underbelly channel. That would be very interesting since we all know that David is the one who ask all the right and valuable questions.
@Muhammad-sx7wr
@Muhammad-sx7wr 2 жыл бұрын
*It's interesting that two of great mentors do not agree on this subject. Uncle Bob for instance says that you need to be a mathematician to be a good programmer.*
@castlerock7423
@castlerock7423 2 жыл бұрын
Python course is only free for a 7 day trial.
@alarmsquadnj
@alarmsquadnj 2 жыл бұрын
F
@newmanjohnwell1105
@newmanjohnwell1105 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you David for your wonderful videos very helpful
@freecodecamp
@freecodecamp 2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Chuck is a legend!
@todorowael
@todorowael 2 жыл бұрын
Second that! He inspired me to start learning Python and I will always be grateful to him for that.
@sparksays7247
@sparksays7247 2 жыл бұрын
Facts!
@StevenDelong
@StevenDelong 2 жыл бұрын
He's a guru!
@corbuvlad
@corbuvlad 2 жыл бұрын
@itsshowtime3762
@itsshowtime3762 2 жыл бұрын
u too
@NikicaVaradi
@NikicaVaradi 2 жыл бұрын
David was my motivation not to give up ever. Not that long ago I was working on a farm and listening his ccna courses. Today I'm managing 6 production servers and complete industrial network infrastructure, and got involved in the software development as c# dev. Only by folowing one rule, that tomorows myself shall be proud of today's myself. Thank you David.
@neanda
@neanda 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, that's well cool
@scottspa74
@scottspa74 2 жыл бұрын
I hope @davidbombal sees your comment. That story would make everything he puts out seem justified (to him). 👍
@musazwane6049
@musazwane6049 2 жыл бұрын
What's the first programming language did you learn first?
@musazwane6049
@musazwane6049 2 жыл бұрын
@@drbindfish thank you @nixonrulez. I assume you're a software engineer yourself?
@musazwane6049
@musazwane6049 2 жыл бұрын
@@drbindfish that's great. Computer Science student here. Biggest mistake of my life so far, there's literally no programming just a bunch of ancient math and theory of computers. My parents refuse for me to drop out. Now I'm just trying to find inspiration anywhere I can( especially YT comment sections). Enough about me( please excuse my typical pessimistic and narcissistic young man rant). Anyways, congratulations on getting a foot into tech and all the best with your career.❤
@garrettwitzenburg2873
@garrettwitzenburg2873 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a computer scientist meaning I have my CS degree but hes spot on. I was so disappointed after my degree I felt inadequate and unprepared. It wasn't until I decided for myself to really struggle through brute force solving problems online that I finally started to learn programming itself. Universities are full of egos and pretenders no offense, the real learning comes when its just you vs you
@Khan-fi9gx
@Khan-fi9gx Жыл бұрын
Hiii
@relly793
@relly793 Жыл бұрын
Where did you learn this brute force learning
@nicosoftnt
@nicosoftnt Жыл бұрын
@@chrisjin1112 Unless you are talking about Harvard, or MIT where they pay the best teachers in a year what most programmers won't earn in 10, everything is in the internet now, especially with AI making it easier.
@nicosoftnt
@nicosoftnt Жыл бұрын
@dekart I agree, but programmers are not scientists, far from it. I like mathematics though, studying math can greatly increase your problem solving abilities and bring you more to an engineer, maths you can learn alone.
@nicosoftnt
@nicosoftnt Жыл бұрын
@dekart It's hard to get to that level, even degrees that combine math and cs don't go deep enough to develop your expertise in rocket science. Most universities offer average knowledge taught by average teachers for average students. So, with these tools, what do you recommend? We can only do so much, just work with what you have. If you lack the money, if you were born in a small city with poor education, I think learning by yourself as much as you can is the best and only solution, only then can you contribute to society in a meaningful manner. If you have the money or opportunity, the skill and the interest, then avoiding a degree that can prepare you in such a way, is a crime.
@mytechnotalent
@mytechnotalent 2 жыл бұрын
As a Professional Engineer I really appreciate your direct tech channel no BS David. It is good to hear Dr. Chuck as I stand firm with him as I also teach tech in my free time while I work in tech full-time. I hope entry-level folks see this.
@el.tacolgando
@el.tacolgando 2 жыл бұрын
I wanna break into tech but have no college education
@DZ4295DBW
@DZ4295DBW 2 жыл бұрын
Im not even in tech and I'm watching it. I'm on a proces to learning it but I personally want to get into PenTesting eventually.
@codergirl-ms
@codergirl-ms Жыл бұрын
I am a self-taught programmer who is still learning how to figure out how to learn coding effectively also I am building up a team
@mytechnotalent
@mytechnotalent Жыл бұрын
@@codergirl-ms that is exciting to hear! Keep pushing forward and we can all support and learn from one another. David's series are very targeted and beneficial.
@erikgiggey4783
@erikgiggey4783 2 жыл бұрын
i have been programming 40+ years and the main thing i emphasize to new programmers is to never stop, never stop learning and never stop being curious. i did the 2 year degree and spent more time correcting instructors than learning anything. and i did it when i was 25. unfortunately im one of the humans good with technology horrible with humans. best compliment i have ever gotten was a new dev that was brought in to work with me, unfortunately the company downsized after he had been there 6 months he said, "i learned more from you in 6 months than i did in 6 years at(large university in the us that will remain nameless) i enjoy helping people learn and progress to me its more fun now than actual development.
@Feedback406
@Feedback406 Жыл бұрын
Guys like you are the real mvp🫡 👑 I don’t even know you but thank you🫂
@toul100
@toul100 2 жыл бұрын
This is so powerful coming from a Doctor... been studying cyber sec for 2 year and now I am in school to get the B.S. in Cyber Sec, I have built multiple programs with GUI and my own module that writes its own code now... I have really been doubting my work since my college told me I cannot qualify for computer science because of my highschool transcripts. I do feel after watching this I am more than worthy of what I wanted in computer science: now I feel as if it would not get me further than my own curiosities after watching this... keep Self Study Alive!
@ithinkthereforeitalk935
@ithinkthereforeitalk935 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, what a guest! I was listening to this guy's lectures on Python last year. He has a knack for explaining complex things in a very simple way.
@davidbombal
@davidbombal 2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video!
@ChristopherMartinez-su8ps
@ChristopherMartinez-su8ps 2 жыл бұрын
What a guest indeed!!
@lethil
@lethil 2 жыл бұрын
Its a saying that if you can't explain a complex thing in simple terms to someone, you don't truly understand it. This isn't exactly true, in reality it's a gift some teachers/experts have but these people are so valuable not only for explaining things. But when someone receives that information the light bulbs flicks on and they want to know more, they are inspired and begin their learning journey. And after watching this I felt that. Obviously no where near on this level but teaching my friends the rough basics of how a computer works, or cyber security concepts, or hacking concepts with analogies they understand and can relate the concept to is rewarding and I love seeing the light bulb flick on even though my own understanding of some of these things is only medicore level. But it is so rewarding and I love that there are people willing to share their knowledge to flick on those light bulbs for the rest of us! And I love that there are so many people trying to help others learn as well.
@kengonzo1640
@kengonzo1640 Жыл бұрын
Wow! What an absolutely outstanding showcase of long format conversation-oriented video podcasts. This is what KZbin is all about for me! Years of doubt had kept me content with difficult labor jobs, especially as the sole provider for my family. Started studying again in between 11-hour days, six days a week over the past two years. Was beggining to doubt my judgement because I took a decent pay cut to switch careers and my savings are growing smaller every day. This video hit home and motivates me to keep pushing. I wish I had a sliver of the life lesson and mentorship provided by only 1 piece of content than most of my adult life. Thank you for the effort you put into generating content on your channel! You really knocked it out of the park with this one, as always. I am incredibly appreciative of your content.
@patientson
@patientson 2 жыл бұрын
I am very glad to see you introduce this conscious, bright, kind and patient being who takes his time to teach.
@Zed0086
@Zed0086 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, David! This gives me so much hope as a 36-year-old man; that’s trying to make his way into the DevOps/IT world! Thank you!
@lardosian
@lardosian 2 жыл бұрын
Personally I think 36 or around that is a good age to learn programming, worked out fine for me.
@sylvainbodji1124
@sylvainbodji1124 2 жыл бұрын
I'm 37 and learning programming
@josephl2027
@josephl2027 2 жыл бұрын
Im 38 and started about a year ago... you got this!
@003kashif
@003kashif 2 жыл бұрын
I'm 34 , and learning programming.....
@fadious_padious2711
@fadious_padious2711 2 жыл бұрын
I got my 1st job as a software dev at 38 after doing a software engineering degree at WGU and am still going strong a few years later.
@dr.strangelove5622
@dr.strangelove5622 2 жыл бұрын
I prefer not to comment on KZbin videos, but this time I would because I want to tell you that this was a wonderful interview that you did. I learned Python from Dr. Chuck via his Python for Everybody specialization and it re-ignited my interest in computers and programming. His passion for practical stuff is infectious! As a noob learning about x86 assembly and making a toy OS for it, I am looking forward to his course on assembly language and C. Once again, amazing interview. You have earned a subscriber today!!
@SaravanaKumar-bs2lf
@SaravanaKumar-bs2lf Жыл бұрын
Me too 😅
@iankanyi
@iankanyi 2 жыл бұрын
The world definitely doesn't deserve the brilliance that's David and Dr Chuck! Thank you so much for the sacrifices you guys make to empower everyone 🙌🏽!
@michellapointe9145
@michellapointe9145 2 жыл бұрын
Every minute of this is tremendously interesting - I am 62 working in network for the past 5 years and can relate to absolutely every concept dr Chuck put out. particularly the mentoring issue. Great conversation, David - Thabk you so much.
@1anre
@1anre 2 жыл бұрын
Listened to this talk while driving to work this morning & I realized as a Tech Professional you forever remain a student - there’s always something new for you to learn & that hunger should be what drives you to ruthlessly go for more knowledge. The curriculum path for Dr. Chuck’s journey to become a Master Programmer seems neat - 1. Python, 2. Django(OOP), 3. PHP, 4. PostgreSQL, 5. Java(OOP), 6. C, 7. Assembly, 8. Hardware(Machine Language), 9. Practical Internship.
@michaelkalmus9141
@michaelkalmus9141 2 жыл бұрын
Legend! I just finished my degree at UMSI and had Dr. Chuck for one of my courses. Truly insightful man.
@ColourOfTheGods
@ColourOfTheGods 2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Chuck's Python course is *literally* how I got started with my career in tech and software engineering/DevOps engineering. It's the same course that I always recommend to people who are looking to get into programming and building a career in tech. Great interview man, really cool to hear you guys sharing your experiences
@saboo480
@saboo480 2 жыл бұрын
I’m just getting to the end of his py4e specialization. Would you have any advice on what to learn next?
@ColourOfTheGods
@ColourOfTheGods 2 жыл бұрын
@@saboo480 I think if you can get all the way through the course, get his free book that comes with it (or purchase a print copy, I still have mine handy years later. Ensure you do the capstone right at the end and the geolocation/crawler app projects, all the DB (SQLite) work too. As a next step, I would highly recommend you look at cloud computing, basic networking, and maybe a bit around Agile/Scrum framework. Even if it's just having familiarity with those concepts it would help a great deal. Then get yourself on a placement/internship and work your butt off - the rest will take care of itself
@saboo480
@saboo480 2 жыл бұрын
@@ColourOfTheGods thank you so much for taking the time to respond! I’m working through the capstone right now but when I’m done I’ll be sure to look into cloud computing/networking/etc. A physical copy of the book also sounds like a great idea for quick reference. Doing this alone I’m always wondering what my next step should be and getting my foot in the door will probably be the most challenging part but again, thank you for your help!
@user-qy6tu9ip9v
@user-qy6tu9ip9v 2 жыл бұрын
@@saboo480 HI buddy. I'm doing this on my own and it's tough. It's so intimidating.
@saboo480
@saboo480 2 жыл бұрын
@@user-qy6tu9ip9v Hey K! I felt the same way but I got through it somehow :) I think the things to remember are that the computer is always right and that there's no need to rush. You've got this!
@skinnytimmy1
@skinnytimmy1 2 жыл бұрын
Really needed this, I have an interview with Amazon coming up. I have intermediate knowledge of Python, can solve problems on leetcode, but i have yet to build a project. I can use his courses as a curriculum to prepare.
@tigreonice2339
@tigreonice2339 2 жыл бұрын
I took his courses and he is an amazing teacher Nice interview
@davidbombal
@davidbombal 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the interview :)
@emkoravo
@emkoravo Жыл бұрын
38:00 what teaching ought to be. Curiosity and excitement served on a platter with humble pie with everyone partaking--beautiful.
@marketalpha5426
@marketalpha5426 2 жыл бұрын
I have two assignments left in Django for Everybody. Looking to finish by this weekend. Dr. Chuck is very inspirational. Thank you.
@shishsquared
@shishsquared 2 жыл бұрын
28:59 THIS! My CCNA instructor (Shout out Professor Mann) would teach us in as few words as possible. He drilled simple sentences into us that would solve complex problems. One specifically I've gone back and used so many times that I have it memorized. That is: "The multiplier is the place value of the least significant subnet bit". Almost any subnetting question can be answered by this simple sentence, once it's truly understood. And he did slow the sentence down for us and kept repeating it until we understood. That was 4 years ago and that sentence isn't any less clear in my mind. Anyone studying for the CCNA, I highly recommend memorizing and understanding that sentence
@Yalbou
@Yalbou 2 жыл бұрын
Im doing a python programming course at university and its a nightmare. The teachers dont even teach you anything or provide answers. Im going to sign up to this drs course and hope to learn that way. University is not a place to learn, just to get a piece of paper
@scottspa74
@scottspa74 2 жыл бұрын
How have I never heard of this guy? I just finished a 2 year degree in cybersecurity and networking, and have used TONS of online supplementals, and somehow never seen this guy. ☹️ Definitely signing up for his courses NOW. Thanks, David.
@Casperr123
@Casperr123 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic ! Love the end quote from David to Chuck " You're here not to make millions, but to help millions "
@rinpocheminds2479
@rinpocheminds2479 2 жыл бұрын
Very grateful, thank you. Just a fabulous teacher. I'm doing the course without entering payment details for the free 7 day trial, saving my work files, and will copy and paste them into the autograde when I'm finished, - within the 7 day free trail. This course is filling in many important gaps my lecturer didn't cover, that caused me SO much frustration and wasted time and effort. Big, humungous, heartfelt thanks.
@antran4465
@antran4465 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. Very useful! Note: I thought Coursera is not free at first. Turned out you have to click on Audit instead of Enroll to have the free material. Thanks Doctor Chuck and David
@TinkerTech
@TinkerTech 2 жыл бұрын
What he said around 1:08 is a life lesson I always remind my kids. "Learning what not to do is still learning." Also, as a master peanut butter and jelly builder, I can also attest that computer science is not important in becoming a master peanut butter and jelly builder.
@godswillabhulimhen-okosun9714
@godswillabhulimhen-okosun9714 2 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed and learned much from this video. Thank you David. I am changing career and a beginner in programming who is in my 30's from Africa. I am going to start learning Python because I want to go into Cybersecurity. I want to say your videos are impactful. Thanks a lot
@innocentmasedze6300
@innocentmasedze6300 2 жыл бұрын
me and you we are the same
@SlugSage
@SlugSage 2 жыл бұрын
This was one of the best interviews I have experienced on this channel. Thanks David.
@_Garm_
@_Garm_ 2 жыл бұрын
Was a great intervju dr Chuck, had exactly the same experience, i thought taking computer science, i would learn more and deeper programming but ended up taking one bazillion math classes and and other useless classes like religion, history, some political, poetry classes.. etc.. and few classes regarding programming. later on when i was looking for jobs, it was super hard did take some additional courses in the mean while looking for jobs, when i got a job through my friend, then i realized that every thing i learned in Uni, was not how companies operated or how they where writing their code.. :D
@justinmecham3748
@justinmecham3748 2 жыл бұрын
I took the Python for everyone Coursera course back in 2017. It was the first programming course I took. And it still is one of the best intro to computer science courses I’ve taken. Glad to see Dr Chuck is still going strong!
@soldierofpeace
@soldierofpeace 2 жыл бұрын
I believe "coding/programming" is getting towards trades. A similar situation was with an electrician, a mechanic coz back in the days, you needed to go to Uni to get these "prestigious" jobs; however, when information is easily accessible to the public that means now a regular Joe can obtain it without Uni and that fancy "subject" like "coding" looses its "prestige" from now on we can call it a trade. Practically, nowadays everyone can learn not just coding but almost everything either for free or at a low cost; therefore it makes sense to pay for a mentor in order not to get lost in the realm of information. Kinda irony too.
@JackofTradeApps
@JackofTradeApps 2 жыл бұрын
Super insightful David! Huge fan of your channel. This was indeed the validation that I needed to see. I often describe the discussions I see as; Talking about the root structure of a tree by discussing each and everything leave first. And not the foundation first like hearty soils, rich nutrients, solid seeds, consistent watering... etc!!! Thank you both! Dr. Chuck is the man..
@edwardsaal
@edwardsaal 7 ай бұрын
Dr Chuck, great work you are sent. 1984 I owned my first PC an 'XT'. Gone through hundreds of programming materials and have not found what you are sharing, but your Python course I am going to do and complete. Thanks. God bless you.
@Maleko48
@Maleko48 2 жыл бұрын
talks like this give me motivation and confidence I can find a job now that I am fresh out of school with a degree, yet feeling like I know nothing. what I do know is I am good at mastering systems from scratch that I am thrown into, given real world problems and contexts along with enough time
@stevensmith6376
@stevensmith6376 2 жыл бұрын
This discussion is spot on. I've always been fascinated with computers and programming and the traditional education system does everything possible to make learning how to leverage computers next to impossible. Dr. Chuck is spot on with his assessment of how narrow traditional education is as it relates to learning in general. Computers? Let's see...what traditional tower do they relate closest to.......ummmmm let's say Math.....Great! Ok so if someone is interested in computers....let's put them through a gauntlet of curriculum as far away as possible from an actual computer and let's see who can survive it. If they do...in their fourth year....let's give them one or two classes that are almost applicable to computers. Then we'll graduate them and when they get hired they'll get paid $30,000 more than the "experienced" people who actually know how computers work. Hope Dr. Chuck is successful with his Sakai project. At least someone from the Ivory Tower actually gets how screwed up our current higher education system is.
@KameraShy
@KameraShy 2 жыл бұрын
Back in the Day - like mid 70's - large companies were hiring people off the streets to be programmers and train them. I was one of them. They had no background or experience in computers at all. They came from everywhere: new grads in non-related disciplines, music teachers, school teachers, accountants, just anything. They did not need a degree in math or physics to write COBOL programs to run payroll or track inventory. A few may have had CS degrees, but were never taught how to code and develop applications in a business environment. But the idea that anyone and everyone could learn to program - without a CS track - was not new. I remember that back in 1967 when online timesharing systems were just becoming available,. Dartmouth began teaching BASIC to its students, that programming knowledge and skills could be useful in all disciplines. There is KZbin video about the history of that program with interviews of those who were students in the program back then.
@leavemealone535
@leavemealone535 2 жыл бұрын
Great talk! I very much agree with the points he is making. Taking programming courses in college almost made me hate it. It's hyper competitive, you are graded very critically on sometimes inane metrics. It did damage to my confidence and delayed my intellectual growth. I didn't really start learning and loving programming until I just started building stuff on my own.
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 Жыл бұрын
You'll also find most of the "best" programmers built stuff on their own before they went to college and then went to college after that.
@avidian888
@avidian888 2 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful teacher and mastermind of education! He summed up everything I hated about school and university and why I loved working in real world. Thanks for the great interview! 👏🏽☺️🎉
@kenjo3045
@kenjo3045 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent discussion. I am also a programming instructor although my background is in Electrical Engineering. I share the same passion and goals as Dr. Chuck.
@Mark-po7qd
@Mark-po7qd 2 жыл бұрын
LOVE both of you guys. I have learned a ton from Dr.Chuck on Coursera. Thanks David for your awesome content, and Dr.Chuck for starting from the very basics and working your way up in your Python courses unlike most courses/tutorials that try to drop you straight into doing things without understanding why.
@mech2itcourse146
@mech2itcourse146 2 жыл бұрын
I'm mechanical engineering Passout in may 2022. I want to switch in IT industry which course is better for me. Devops vs data science vs data analytics vs cyber security. Vs software testing vs SAP BASIS .etc ?
@prashkd7684
@prashkd7684 Жыл бұрын
I've done packet tracer back in my CCNA course.. the ability to visualize the packets and the entire network is just amazing.
@jonathanmoore5619
@jonathanmoore5619 2 жыл бұрын
I worked at Cisco 1998 - 2005. Loved every minute.
@LearningandTechnology
@LearningandTechnology 2 жыл бұрын
Wonderful interview. As an applied skills educator myself, Dr. Chuck's viewpoints on education resonate. Building hands-on learning with an applied practicum has been very successful for our students - it's a perfect way to work with industry and provide a win-win-win scenario. A key os to have dedicated resources on campus that work with your local employers - and then deliver quality students to them for their practicums.
@MohamedAdelMetallized
@MohamedAdelMetallized 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you David for what you deliver on your channel and helping everyone to explore different IT branches!
@mahmoodulhassan6607
@mahmoodulhassan6607 2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Chuck, it doesn't surprise me when you talked about your brother in law. I'm one of those guys and now I'm registered in a college for get masters in IT. Thanks for all your support and efforts to the IT, community. Also I'm getting some certs on the way. Thanks for the great video gentlemen.
@lodragan
@lodragan 2 жыл бұрын
I started programming in High School in 1981 - learning Basic, and Fortran. I never stopped learning before and after going to University for a Computer Science degree (I served in the military before going to college, and had my own computer that I made noddy little programs on, and continued RTFM on various topics and languages). After university I was employed to a telecom company, and the longest lasting program I created was thousands of lines of code, had a useful lifespan of 20 years when the systems it was on were retired from the network. I introduced basic software engineering and management for my teams, such as version control systems, test based development, and migrated from perl to python for our production tools to gain advantages of (mostly) one way to do something over perl's a million different ways to do one thing. There was so much resistance to those changes from the teams, but I was successful being a mentor to my team. I'm semi-retired, starting my own contractor business, and I'm going to make time to go through Dr Chuck's course. You have to be willing to learn, no matter how old you are. Funny you mentioned object oriented courses - my university taught that via a C++, Java, and Lisp course (python & jango didn't exist) - this of course included recursion via Lisp - and this was in my 3rd year (around 1991) - so clearly some universities were still not following CS1 that late in the game. The early first year "filter" course was the Unix shell programming course that included learning the unix shell CLI, and basic system programming using sh, sed, awk, and perl. Following that was a Unix systems programming course that added C programming to the mix. I remember at the beginning of the course, there were 60 people or more in the hall. At the end, there were about 15 of us left. I think there is a fundamental problem in terms of IT culture at my telecom company that allocates programmers to new code, and then quickly rotates them out after a release - to do another project. Meanwhile, some lowly newbie coder is put on maintenance --- and similarly by the time he becomes good, he is then snatched up into a development team for new projects. No one lives with the code long enough to be really knowledgeable. I was lucky to avoid a lot of that myself for my internal systems, but as a client owner of some hosted systems later in my career, I was a victim of this lack of ownership from the programming side of the business in terms of fixing bugs quickly, and slowness of change for existing code bases. Changes required new projects, with a whole team of new programmers who had to spend months getting up to speed on the existing code base. In short, it was a disaster. I hope your course changes the culture and face of programming that have entrenched "Math" based Computer Science that doesn't really serve its adherents or the world in general. Great interview! 😃
@theena
@theena 2 жыл бұрын
That 'anything educational, I don't monetize' is why I love this man. I can't wait for the C Programming for Everybody series.
@cballester1
@cballester1 10 күн бұрын
Thanks David for this interview. Thanks, Professor Severance, I have been waiting for almost 30 years for you to decide to do this 🙂 x4e matter. Really, Thanks!
@tjoleary8738
@tjoleary8738 2 жыл бұрын
Loving this video David...you guys are, most definitely, going to change the world in a very positive way! Thanks for ALL you do!
@mckeanethomas3830
@mckeanethomas3830 2 жыл бұрын
Went through the python 4 everybody course with Dr. Chuck. Man, he went through everything from the basics.
@ShootingUtah
@ShootingUtah 2 жыл бұрын
I'm currently in my last year for a B.S. in computer science at a school that claims to be more geared towards industry and apparently gets rated highly by industry in achieving that goal. Yet I have been quite frustrated in the lack of teaching around topics like debugging for example. I've had to teach myself to become more efficient and effective at debugging and consider it a skill in and of itself. Decoding a C/C++ error message and then actually finding what the real problem is can be extremely difficult and esoteric. Another problem is every time I start to get comfortable with a given language I'm forced to start a new one. I've now had to use SQL, MySQL, Several flavors of Assembly, C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript, Typescript, Node, SML, OCAML, Rust, Racket, Python 2, Python 3, Bash and bash scripts, even Turing Machines, and deterministic and nondeterministic finite automata! And of course some amount of actual binary. So for 4 years of school this is so much exposure to so many languages, concepts, protocols, paradigms, etc that doesn't even include the mathematics and you never get to master any of them. Like another comment stated, maybe this is done to repeatedly force you to solve problems outside of your comfort zone to make you a master at using any tool to solve a problem. But it's still frustrating watching some code boot camp kid making awesome things that I don't know how to do but I can tell they don't know how anything they're doing is actually working or happening or why it's done that way. Haha anyways just my rant.
@fernando_dominguez
@fernando_dominguez Жыл бұрын
This was awesome! Thank you so much for arranging this interview, I recently started Dr. Chuck's "Python for everybody..." Course and I'm very happy to know where I am heading 🙂
@robertcrier3551
@robertcrier3551 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you David for all the work put into your video's, I really love watching your video's. As a computer enthusiast I really am so grateful that people like you exist and hope to give back to the community one day. Keep doing what makes you happy because you are making everyone around the youtube community happy.
@sadCatOwner
@sadCatOwner 2 жыл бұрын
I learned PHP from him. He explains complex things very nicely, and doesn't have much longer explanations either. also l loved when he went on a short rant on what languages he would love to teach a class on, he sounded very passionate.
@husseindhooma5816
@husseindhooma5816 2 жыл бұрын
Once again David you nailed another fantastic interview with Dr Chuck, I browsed Dr Chuck's KZbin videos a while back, but to see this interview and his passion for us as his students is amazing. Once again you have done the incredible David and Opened up so many KZbinr's like myself's eyes to another world, my first for me was your interview with Neal Bridges and now Dr Chuck. I just want to say thank you for being an inspiration and guiding us on these paths. Oh and not to forget congrats on reacking 900K. I see 1 million on the horizon good sir. Well done.
@vyasG
@vyasG 2 жыл бұрын
Very Powerful interview. Thank you both for this interview. David Bombal is amazing in finding and interviewing great people. I am so glad that I'm following you - which is the reason I get to know about all these passionate and top notch people.
@1Eagler
@1Eagler 2 жыл бұрын
In 1995, i was given 2.000+ code of PL/I with 100s of goto to find a bug. I figured out that the previous programmer only used if and goto but didn't use if-then-else, while, for, etc and he coded like coding RPG! One of the hardest work in my life - lost more hair that the number of lines.
@ziaullah4107
@ziaullah4107 2 жыл бұрын
David Bombal and Dr. Chuck. You are great legends, helping people like us to stay motivated and giving us a direction.
@randexco
@randexco 2 жыл бұрын
This man truly is a saint. Computers have been my passion sense I was in middle school in the 90s but the roller coaster of life has had me driving a truck for the last 8 years and even tho I make good money, I'm truly save deeply unhappy. We need more people life this gentleman
@ganeshvenepally4028
@ganeshvenepally4028 2 жыл бұрын
I did my Python training with Dr. Chuck Course on Coursera. He is an Excellent Teacher!. Thanks David for interviewing him.
@akbntc
@akbntc 2 жыл бұрын
I agree, it's the best Python course. I was Dr. Chuck's student in 2017 for his Python course at Coursera!
@shannonthomas3585
@shannonthomas3585 2 жыл бұрын
I came across this video while looking through some AZ-900 material as I'm trying to prepare for certification in DevOps and I gotta say, this guy is really interesting in the way he presents his topics, materials, and understanding of core concepts even regular people who are trying to get into programing or writing code can learn irrespective of where you currently are, where you are going, and where you'd eventually like to end up in your tech career. I'm 30 now and I wish I learned some of these concepts sooner back when I was in college and high school but I eventually carved the path out for where I am now and I'm continuing pursuing this path so I can impart the same wisdom and knowledge I gain to those younger then myself wanting to get into IT and tech. Hoping I get to start Python on freecodecamp soon as I have a lot of things I want to learn and programming is there alongside DevOps and networking. I will also check out Dr Chuck's Coursera courses as well as it sounds like a great place to start learning basic programming and developing your skills further from there
@lewessays
@lewessays 2 жыл бұрын
I remember being introduced to programing through Binaries(0&1s) and C++ imagine my reaction to programming... that destoryed my love for computers and programming. Glad, I am back at it. Thanks to my 4 month's volunteer time at a non-profit tech company(Break diving) and Dr. Chuck.
@jasonpitts8395
@jasonpitts8395 2 жыл бұрын
As always David you have THE BEST YT channel when it comes to cyber. Much appreciated sir. 🙏
@davidbombal
@davidbombal 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Jason!
@derekmahoi864
@derekmahoi864 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, what a guest dr chuck is my mentor this man is really good in what he does. he is the reason why I learn python easily
@فكر_معايا
@فكر_معايا Жыл бұрын
thank you man. i want you to know that, you are changing lives, and futures of families. so from the bottom of my heart THANK YOU.
@cristigdv
@cristigdv 2 жыл бұрын
Great video David. In my opinion this is the best video so far that I have seen on your channel. Your not only posting videos just for the sake of it but actually motivating people to change their lives, something that cannot be learned from a book. Keep up the great work and thank you for your time for creating such a great content
@ericbarlow6772
@ericbarlow6772 2 жыл бұрын
I agree my computer science degree has allowed me to learn a lot easier because I can see the connections and fit the puzzle pieces easier than someone who may only have a certification in an area. Hearing your conversation I'm not sure if my university had a more rigorous curriculum compared to others. Granted I graduated in 2002 so it's been 20 years now. I was taught in C, C++ and Java from my first semester. C provided the groundwork, C++ taught OOD/P and Java was a department decision b/c of its portability. My curriculum was definitely focused on programming but I did have to model an 8-bit CPU in my introduction to computer engineering course. (We used a tool called Powerview on UNIX.) I had to take computer architecture from a professor who helped develop the Manchester Encoding schema. I also had a senior project that was a group project and I couldn't graduate until it was done and worked. One thing I did notice is there were about 100 people in each class in my first year but by the third year we were lucky to get 10 people per class.
@pyhead9916
@pyhead9916 Жыл бұрын
Smaller, personal classes are better and students can't cheat from each other. Everyone must pull their weight in small courses.
@educastellini
@educastellini 2 жыл бұрын
-I love the content Professors De. Chuck and David...!!! -You basically said what I always say: "The Academy is too slow to keep up with the IT market because it's much faster..." and the American and first world reality is much faster than the one in Brazil where I live . -You guys basically discussed a lot of what I tell my wife that I'm mentoring in IT and I created a path for her where she started learning Python, Django and Web nowadays I'll then put her to learn Linux Sys Admin. and starting a career in IT. -Well I work with IT for more than 20 years but I started as a technician in Electronics and Robotics in the 90's programming microprocessors and controllers in Assembly and I migrated to a professional in a military data center most of it and more than 10 years ago I entered the Bachelor of Systems Analysis and development here in Brazil and here basically there are only 3 major courses in Universities here: Systems Analysis, Computer Science and now they have Data Science. -I left Systems Analysis because their focus was Dev of software manufacturing based on Java language and I wanted Sys. Admim, Network and Infrastructure Engineering and yes Software at the time, the professors wanted me to finish the course and then do a master's degree and teach there in those areas that I like, and I said that as soon as there were courses in my area and I would come back , and more than 10 years later still does not exist. -Here in Brazil you are not looking for Network Engineers but "Network Analysts" (which are Systems Analysts who have Network certification). -See I love programming in Bash Script, C++ and Python, Ansible but in my area which is infrastructure. - That's why I sold everything I had and was going before the Pandemic and going to college in Canada in Sys. Adm. and Network Admin. and the pandemic came and I lost everything. -And basically during the Pandemic studying I did 5 certifications (CCNA, JNCIA, NSE 1, 2, Oracle Cloud Architect and now Linux Sys. Admin. LPIC-1) in a cabin in the middle of the forest with an old computer studying basically with com courses like yours on Udemy. -And this year I'm going to be LPIC-2 Linux Engineer and LPIC-3 Linux Security Engineer, apart from Cloud and Kubernets that I'm going to do this year. -What I see is that the college or university teaches the basis of a lot of things but not in terms of being able to work (at least all the ones I looked at) they give you a basis for everything and then the person can evolve and possibly learn more working as a Junior at the beginning and evolving by studying more and doing certifications, so yes the university is useful to teach this base but it does not create professionals, studying at the level of a professional certification I think it tests you in what the market wants and not what that the academy considers right. -Who should run the academies and courses should be what the job market needs (Linkedin), not what academics want (not the college). -But I want and will immigrate to the first world so that my wife can study Software Engineering and I myself can study a College in my area and maybe teach there in the first one. world. -Many thanks to professors Chuck and David for the very useful knowledge...!!!
@JRis44
@JRis44 2 жыл бұрын
better sustainability for opensource. This is something I could support. I look forward to someday being a useful asset myself within the space. Good luck with your ambitions brotha. See you on the otherside when im further into my journey.
@bobbyv3
@bobbyv3 2 жыл бұрын
Somehow I"ve just recently discovered your channel and I have to say, bravo. Loving the content. Thank you for the work you're doing and for sharing.
@ChristopherMartinez-su8ps
@ChristopherMartinez-su8ps 2 жыл бұрын
Needed to hear to hear this. Thank you David for having an interest or maybe a passion for helping others accomplish there goals and dreams in the great world of IT. You have been a very positive influence on my journey in the world of IT and I recently got on board in 2020. So everything is still basically new to me. Love all your positive posts on KZbin LinkedIn and IG. You speak to me everyday with those. You always bring in Great guest but this one really got to me. Gave me a better understanding of which direction I need to move forward on. Thank you sir.
@davidserrano134
@davidserrano134 2 жыл бұрын
I'm such a huge fan of Coursera. Going to check out these courses. Would have loved to hear about how to find mentors, but I think a course can act this way
@mawutorquarshie7953
@mawutorquarshie7953 2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Just finished watching the latest video drop: David's interview with Dr Chuck. So much to learn from. Thanks David for the dedication doing this. Will always be a fan of your channel
@agbosteve1
@agbosteve1 2 жыл бұрын
David thank you for this interview, Dr. Chuck had changed the narrative of learning especially in programming.
@bananaskin7527
@bananaskin7527 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Remember Laugh-In? I don't know about Python, not disrespectful, but I happen to have chosen Perl 5. Not formally trained. Too old. Recently had some interns, and I mentioned Open Source - Perl, 5 Apache Open Office, and Password Safe, and I added "And I donate". Good luck Dr. Chuck. Thank you David Bombal.
@Norman_Fleming
@Norman_Fleming 2 жыл бұрын
I love this mans ideas. Being able to function as a drop-in and learning the system, being able to apply broad knowledge. chefs-kiss
@olasupooshodi-glover169
@olasupooshodi-glover169 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so happy to have come across this video, this proves that I'm not crazy. i have an undergrad degree in computer science, an MSc in computer networks and cybersecurity and a CCNA and just landed my first network engineering role, however it has a been struggle for me and little or no help to learn on the job. i wish i had a mentor and or an internship to prepare me for the job. looking forward to checking out Dr. Chuck's python course and master programming course coming in the future.
@karimheras9462
@karimheras9462 2 жыл бұрын
Videos like these are great. I have been having a hard time looking at where to start this learning journey but this video has put a lot of things into perpective. Thank you for your time and for putting this info out there.
@antonygoedhals6272
@antonygoedhals6272 2 жыл бұрын
Great talk - thanks to Dr Chuck and David. I like the way you are "reinvesting your bounty", Dr Chuck. You are doing a great thing here to make others' lives better.
@ladonwilliams1333
@ladonwilliams1333 2 жыл бұрын
So much appreciation and respect for “Uncle Chuck”😅. He was the one who got me over my anxiety about conquering Python. Can’t wait to check out his other courses.
@moneymaker7307
@moneymaker7307 2 жыл бұрын
Learning core CS fundamentals actually helps you become a great engineer. From someone who have worked and at FAANG with engineers that have solid CS skill and non tech companies that don’t test CS rigor of candidates. The main difference I noticed is that people from Non CS background get stuff done but they do it at a slower pace and people with CS degree tend to find solution and unblock their self very fast. I work at non tech companies now and I only put in about 10 hours of work a week and I am super star on my team. Without a CS degree, I won’t have my current work balances.
@knight2000-NC
@knight2000-NC Жыл бұрын
42:18 point here is well taken. I think it was by week 5 of my CSCI101 at university in the early 90s we were doing recursion.
@dersg1freak
@dersg1freak 2 жыл бұрын
My mentor showed me two things. Bare python basics in a 100 line script and the phrase rtfm. The best tips I got were 'patience', 'think'. And I really believe this is really all it takes, as all the information is out there and freely available. So how to get good? Don't stop learning and keep working with stuff. And don't be afraid. I taught a friend of mine programming in r, without prior knowledge. Easy. Difference just being syntax sugar and some scribbles on a cheatsheet. And the same goes for anything in general. Drawing connections between these things is what makes you resourceful in practice, and fortunately that's what our brain does when we feed it with information. After 6 intense blissfull and painful years I've come to the conclusions: that trying to understand how everything fits together is a waste of time in most cases, half of the work takes place on that second brain(Google) and questioning your assumptions actually really hard. The toughest aspect though is being economical. It's way too easy to get caught up trying to reinvent the wheel(just better) without noticing it.
@victoraguiar860
@victoraguiar860 2 жыл бұрын
I don't have words to describe how this interview connected with me. Thanks, Mr. David and Dr. Chuck for the 78 minutes of pure knowledge and food for thought. Hopefully one day I'll be one of Dr. Chuck's mentees. For now, I'll stick to learn the foundations of Python the best way I can.
@adivakhaledi
@adivakhaledi 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr for teaching in a way that makes it easy to learn, you’re a Godsend to so many 🙏
@2sourcerer
@2sourcerer 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Dr. Chuck, looking forward for assembly and hardware courses!
@rytsydup
@rytsydup 2 жыл бұрын
Love this guy. Thank you for having him as a guest, David.
@wesrurede
@wesrurede 2 жыл бұрын
The automotive tech school I went to had a paid internship as part of the program. Those who's grades were best went off to dealerships, and those with the lowest, to pep boys etc. There were headhunters from the dealerships that would be out searching for the best. It should work well here too.
@toddboothbee1361
@toddboothbee1361 2 жыл бұрын
I love the idea of becoming a master programmer when I go out to mix it up with the world, instead of finding a single skill (i.e. React) or stack (usually MERN) to find the right sized and shaped hole to fit myself into. A master programmer will greater flexibility, and more enjoyment, and more likely to be a successful freelance/consultant when striking out independently.
@brettmurphy7588
@brettmurphy7588 2 жыл бұрын
I dropped out of CS, feeling isolated and alone. I hated the way we did assignments with very little support. 6 years later I came back to programming through my own passion project. That catapulted me to the position I am in now. I am a developer and scrummaster for an integrated team with varied backgrounds and we have great foundation of trust built on psychological safety. I can think aloud without judgment and everyone gives mentorship and is open to mentorship. A world away from the competition of a cs class jockeying for the best GPA. Throw away your ego and embrace the wealth of knowledge in your colleagues. And then celebrate them. Pursue the things that engage you and be altruistic in your quest for knowledge. These are things they won't teach you, but are far more valuable than a CS degree.
@reecetrahan6169
@reecetrahan6169 2 жыл бұрын
What would you say is required to earn a higher salary as a programmer? Like what education is necessary?
@khalidelgazzar
@khalidelgazzar Жыл бұрын
Great interview. Lots of wisdom from Dr Chuck. Reached 11:25 so far
@Lunipu
@Lunipu 2 жыл бұрын
Super inspiring! I'm doing Chucks Python course currently and will scout out the others after 💗
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 Жыл бұрын
My university offered degrees in both computer science (subtype of science degree) and software engineering (subtype of engineering degree). Computer science is a flexible degree where you study some computer science (subset of mathematics) and whatever else you want (maths, logic, programming, computer design, electronics, ...). Software engineering has a lot more classes you must do in things like development methods and user interface design - although maybe I can't say all of them were the most useful. I went back today and I saw they added requirements like "fundamentals of cybersecurity" and "clouds and networking" which didn't exist when I took it, but sound like great ideas. They've also added optional sub-specializations: distributed systems, AI, or robotics. It's still leaning towards generalizable skills instead of specific tools, though. I bet it's still mostly in Java, except for embedded. And they teach recursion. So it's still "computer science with a real-world twist" and not "programming". I agree all the O(N^2) and recursion is great stuff, just not something to push on people who aren't ready to accept its greatness yet. I loved how much theory I learned at university, that I'd never heard of before by just writing programs. One example: I knew quicksort was a way to sort things, and I probably could've translated the code from Wikipedia into any language - but they taught how it actually worked.
@Codingzoe
@Codingzoe 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! Dr Chuck is a legend. Appreciate this discussion 😊
@mohabkhaled1391
@mohabkhaled1391 2 жыл бұрын
I can't describe how this impacted, absolute legend..
@TauLim
@TauLim Жыл бұрын
I am inspired by Dr Chuck's vision. Best wishes for the future.
@deltabytes
@deltabytes 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing souls. I am always learning my way to open source. Thanks a million Dr. Chuck and David Bombal.
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