Why Great Developers DON'T Create Content (and a lesson to learn)

  Рет қаралды 48,640

Travis Media

Travis Media

Күн бұрын

To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/TravisMedia . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
When I first learned to code I wanted to share everything I was learning. So I created a blog, and a KZbin channel, and went full speed ahead with content.
And I received a lot of pushback for it. "He's a newbie, he's not a real developer, he doesn't have any experience!"
And I always responded, "Well the great, experienced developers aren't creating content! I'm just trying to fill in the gaps by giving back what I'm learning along the way."
However, over the years I've come to learn why many great developers DON'T create content.
In this video, I'll explain why, and why the answer is also important for us all.
Join the Imposter Devs Community - imposterdevs.com
Timestamps
00:00 - Introduction
01:07 - Sponsor
02:13 - Why they don't create content
05:07 - Takeaway 1
05:28 - Takeaway 2
06:14 - Takeaway 3
Udemy Deals (regularly updated) - travis.media/udemy
** Career Path Coding Tracks **
Web Developer - geni.us/jBigBd
Software Engineer - geni.us/AbMxjrX
Machine Learning - geni.us/GporLlT
Python Developer - geni.us/tv2FJBU
DevOps Engineer - geni.us/MgHtJ
** My Coding Blueprints **
Learn to Code Web Developer Blueprint - geni.us/HoswN2
AWS/Python Blueprint - geni.us/yGlFaRe - FREE
Both FREE in the Travis Media Community - imposterdevs.com
My microphone - amzn.to/3sAwyrH
** I write regularly **
travis.media
** FREE EBOOKS **
📘 travis.media/ebooks
LET'S CONNECT!
📰 LinkedIn ➔ / travisdotmedia
🐦 Twitter ➔ / travisdotmedia
🙋🏼‍♂️ Website ➔ travis.media
#selftaughtdeveloper #contentcreator #codingtutorials
** Some of the links in this description may be affiliate links that I may get a little cut of. Thank you.

Пікірлер: 178
@TravisMedia
@TravisMedia 20 күн бұрын
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/TravisMedia . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
@Diginegi
@Diginegi 20 күн бұрын
There is another reason, not everyone has a need to share everything about themselves all the time. I would even put it that way, people who are great at what they do usually don't feel the need to talk about it because the work gives them what they crave so they can focus on getting better instead on being seen.
@user-yq8qw9yg6e
@user-yq8qw9yg6e 4 күн бұрын
I am removing myself from social media. It’s so weird that people have to broadcast their life without understanding that there are a real life outside their fabricated one via camera
@shiijei2638
@shiijei2638 4 күн бұрын
Why do you need to tell me everything about yourself in order to teach me how a for loop works?
@AnimeZone247
@AnimeZone247 18 сағат бұрын
@@shiijei2638I’m saying, what is this dude talking about 😂
@dev-dev-dev
@dev-dev-dev 3 сағат бұрын
This. This is the _actual_ reason.
@OneAndOnlyMe
@OneAndOnlyMe 9 күн бұрын
Senior solutions architect and developer here (30+ years experience). There is also another reason, we spend a lot of time mentoring and coaching the juniors who work for us or with us at work, and so we don't want to spend our own time producing content. I love architecting and coding, but I also enjoy teaching and mentoring my juniors on personal finance and investing.
@Mark-D-Inman
@Mark-D-Inman 20 күн бұрын
At 45 and 20+ years as a coder, I've spent a great deal of my career teaching people face to face. 6 months ago I started a KZbin channel about coding. I'm loving it so far, but the reason most long term coders don't teach more via blogs or videos is the time investment. There's already such a massive time investment to keep up with new technologies in the industry it's extremely difficult to learn the multitude of skills required to move to a wider teaching platform.
@TravisMedia
@TravisMedia 20 күн бұрын
Good point
@milanradovanovic3693
@milanradovanovic3693 11 күн бұрын
Excellent point
@JustIsTime890
@JustIsTime890 9 күн бұрын
Why not a platform with a group of sr developpers instead of one? Today you need to do it all in a team. You can do it only yourself anymore because what you've said.
@tegathemenace
@tegathemenace Күн бұрын
No, they aren't interested in sitting down to create a solid course that makes money. It's really a handful tbh. So teaching would end up being for free and they would rather not
@oluseyisonaiya
@oluseyisonaiya 20 күн бұрын
Technology must serve human ends. My problem with most “coding content” is that it focuses on nothing more than… coding. The examples are dull, the context is dull, the problems are so small and atomic as to be useless. The thing about being a multi-decade developer is that you learn that progression in solving the human problems moves you from tightly optimizing some inner loop or using a clever dispatch method to defining the contracts and interface between systems and the organizations that produce them. The most challenging and fun stuff exists at a level that most “coders” don’t, so the perpetual cycle of entry-level content repeats itself.
@TravisMedia
@TravisMedia 19 күн бұрын
Good points. Thanks for sharing it
@trap7369
@trap7369 18 күн бұрын
that's true, a lot of developers don't interesting into deeply, harder or advanced concepts of programming, are happy to stay into their confort zone and it is what it is, no problem with it but if want to be really good, thats what you need
@JustIsTime890
@JustIsTime890 9 күн бұрын
I think the problem is that if you are interested in deeply, hardest and advance content, you can't find that content because you need to navigate hours to find that type of content, and sometimes you find it but is not updated. Is like in anything else. The internet is now full of an incredible amount of trash information that make very difficult to find whay you really want, and pair a content creator with the potencial consumer of that content.
@Keilnoth
@Keilnoth 9 күн бұрын
So true. The culture of instant gratification make a lot of young folks learn how to code and the next day teach it on YT. But they barely scratched the surface. I'm happy that today there are more older programmers publishing content and showing that coding is just the beginning.
@AlexAnie-uz2nr
@AlexAnie-uz2nr 4 күн бұрын
this is well said
@colinmaharaj
@colinmaharaj 20 күн бұрын
So from 1991 to 2007 I was a pabx tech, and we all knew our jobs, but never spoke about it. We spoke about social events and hanging out, and in those days everyone was family.
@steven11101010
@steven11101010 20 күн бұрын
This is more simply put as: "They just aren't interested in it." It doesn't have to be a lack of time or competing interests. Not everyone *wants* to teach or produce content.
@Leon-bt7gw
@Leon-bt7gw 6 күн бұрын
this.
@nicholasbicholas
@nicholasbicholas 20 күн бұрын
This is really great advice. I disconnected with so many hobbies in my college days to focus on development, only to find myself completely burnt out a few years into my career. Only more recently am I recovering, embracing old and new hobbies.
@rawallon
@rawallon 20 күн бұрын
Embrace the burnt, do it like me, make burnout your hobby!
@programmer4life
@programmer4life 16 күн бұрын
@@rawallon XDD
@maguilecutty
@maguilecutty 17 күн бұрын
What most people don’t realise is that 80% of devs are terrible (at coding), 15% are mid and that leaves the last 5% for the legends and wizards and that the 15% of devs that make it past intermediate get swallowed up in the buerocracy
@OneAndOnlyMe
@OneAndOnlyMe 9 күн бұрын
It's more to do with not letting coding be our identity.
@edmilson1178
@edmilson1178 2 күн бұрын
Font Times New Roman.
@TerrenceLP
@TerrenceLP 20 күн бұрын
At 47 and 20+ years as a coder, I code as least as possible and think as much as possible when doing all the things I love. That is the thing with coding, if you take a break, someone else most likely will solve your problem, and that is how it all moves on.
@wiserdivisor
@wiserdivisor 18 күн бұрын
If enough people do this, no one will solve any problem.
@devingoble8987
@devingoble8987 20 күн бұрын
I definitely used to be the type that would code all day and all night. After 20+ years of programming, I've found that my favorite way to teach is one-on-one, or in small groups. I also have no need to teach language features or algorithms. Instead, I find myself teaching the odd nuances of the craft that are highly contextual and impossible to convey in a simple video. As far as just living life, I've found that writing code is just one aspect of my love for building things. Wood, metal, plastic, and code are just different mediums to express myself.
@user-de3ty4sq8o
@user-de3ty4sq8o 18 күн бұрын
Please I'll need your tutor even if it's 5 minutes
@CipherNL
@CipherNL 20 күн бұрын
Most great software engineers I know don't consider themselves great and worthy of teaching others. They think what they do is normal. Apart from most of them being social awkward introverts.
@developerdeveloper67
@developerdeveloper67 20 күн бұрын
The Real reason is this: They don't have time for it, if you love programming and you are very good at it, you will certainly always have multiple projects you like to be developing that you are not, because you just don't have the time for all of them. Writing, recording and editing KZbin videos takes time, that is a time investment that will rarely be worth if you have 20 programs you like to develop that you consider more interesting than making KZbin videos.
@superherow7605
@superherow7605 20 күн бұрын
Coding is one skill, teaching is another one. You are a gem, who was able to pursue both. I am glad we have you here! Love ur channel. 🎉
@7th_CAV_Trooper
@7th_CAV_Trooper 20 күн бұрын
Us older great developers expect noobs to read books like we did in the 1970s. I don't need to teach you what you can read for yourself. Pick up a copy of K&R C. You'll be fine.
@Meritumas
@Meritumas 10 күн бұрын
EXACTLY! I was stunned when I heard from a few devs in my team that they do not read books!!!
@7th_CAV_Trooper
@7th_CAV_Trooper 10 күн бұрын
@@Meritumas now I have all my juniors digging into Code Complete, TDD, and more, but they read so slowly. I think they never got a good foundation in CS.
@EduardKaresli
@EduardKaresli Күн бұрын
I wouldn’t dare to say that I’m a great developer, but I’ve been programming since 1990. While I’ve made some attempts to create content, I must confess that it’s challenging to do so consistently. Having a daytime programming job tends to sap any desire to code after work. When I return home, I’m often exhausted. I prioritize my health by working out, and then I tackle household chores. Additionally, I have various hobbies-I produce electronic music from time to time, dabble in 3D modeling, and read books. Unfortunately, after all these activities, it becomes very difficult to produce valuable programming tutorials.
@EcomCarl
@EcomCarl 17 күн бұрын
Love how you emphasized that there's more to life than coding! Striving for balance between tech passion and other hobbies can spark creativity and keep burnout at bay. 🌟
@erwinditer450
@erwinditer450 18 күн бұрын
this is so true about me, I'm a self taught as well, got my first job at 24, spent the last decade not creating content per se but basically studying for most of the time, now I'm 35 I'm still passionate avout work and learning, but now I'm doing 3 different martial arts classes and going to the gym, way more happier and productive everywhere in my life
@catwhisperer911
@catwhisperer911 15 күн бұрын
I think your premise is totally bogus. I've been a software engineer since the mid 70s and there has never been a lack of great content. The difference is that back then, obviously prior to the internet, content wasn't free. It came in the form of great books. With the rise of the internet the flood gates were opened and the waters were muddied by way too many people posting just learned skills and often incorrect but there was and still are great channels of valuable and accurate content out there. You just have to be smart enough to know who's bsing you and who isn't.
@TravisMedia
@TravisMedia 15 күн бұрын
👍
@algonix11
@algonix11 5 күн бұрын
I love programming, I have 40+ years of daily programming. I've written code in practically every language and architecture, from kernel to websites, I've done it all, and I'm literally the best programmer I know. I wrote a lot of content, until the wave of toxicity began to dominate the internet, then I stopped, because it's too tiring to bear people's hate. I think "react" was the end of the line, after "scrum", "agile" and "react", programming became a very unpleasant thing.
@-Engineering01-
@-Engineering01- Күн бұрын
ok
@ExtremeTeddy
@ExtremeTeddy Күн бұрын
Haven’t read through all comments .. another reason in my opinion (15 years in backend dev) is the lack of investment by the audience. Many expect to be good after a short investment and fail at bigger glance. It takes time, failure and commitment to be a good programmer. Things I don’t see in current gen z … I rather help/teach someone in person who really is interested in learn to program rather than create yet another video, blog post or magazine article for what not basic stuff that can be found multiple times over in the web. And always with the possibility that they don’t grasp it and blame the creator for their lack. There is tons of stuff I don’t and never will understand, so I can try or move on 🤷‍♂️
@PeterWitham
@PeterWitham 18 күн бұрын
Yep, I am so glad I watched this video to help me put everything in place. As a coder and sharer, it is refreshing to find someone saying that sometimes coding is just a job. And for others, it's something we do and share with folks. But balance is also a good thing for mental health as a coder and a content creator. Just my two cents and to say thanks putting this out there. I also love to cover the basics because so many people ask me about them, not everything needs to be an earth shattering new super complicated way to do something that requires years of experience.
@darkwoodmovies
@darkwoodmovies 20 күн бұрын
The older I get the less "fun" work is. When I was a new college grad, all my friends were from work. Now I avoid those people like the plague and just hang out with my own people (none of them are engineers).
@milanradovanovic3693
@milanradovanovic3693 11 күн бұрын
Same with me. Its not that those from work people are not interesting its just that job related topics pop up like everywhere and every time... Man I enjoy hanging out with like carpenters and talking about their work and stuff their branch is doing(just my thing probably everyone would have their own)
@taylorwilkinson9272
@taylorwilkinson9272 20 күн бұрын
Amazing video! Being a developer is hard, and it's important to have hobbies that get you away from the screen (both mentally and physically)
@laujimmy9282
@laujimmy9282 14 күн бұрын
I am sort of a beginner. I have worked for 9 months in a company using flutter and something happened... which stopped me from putting time in development or horning my skills for the past 3 years. As a result, I kinda forget most of the coding. I am pretty sure I've got a bad memory. But now I am picking up Android development by making apps. As I learned I tended to write blogs and use them as my notes for the future.
@burhanuddinrashid891
@burhanuddinrashid891 18 күн бұрын
Also, it's not necessary that a highly skilled programmer can also teach well, and the reverse is also true. Teaching is a different skill set compare to day to day programming.
@icns01
@icns01 20 күн бұрын
Extremely valuable and great advice from someone who obviously knows what he is talking about. Hopefully we will sit up and pay attention and save ourselves a lot of stress. Biking does it for me...makes me think clearer.
@user-qr4jf4tv2x
@user-qr4jf4tv2x 19 күн бұрын
there are great ones who do they are extremely small.. but creating content is also a skill and being good at both are difficult.
@Code_Cabin
@Code_Cabin 14 күн бұрын
I started programming 16 years ago. I never had this thought of creating programming content. Instead I have two other channels, one I sing in, other I make instrument tutorials. Not much sub though. But still happy, I pass my time. However, only a week back, thought of starting a channel to show off the world how I program. I don't know why I did and I don't have any expectations from it. It just is there.
@edsonphilippe58
@edsonphilippe58 Күн бұрын
I am a film maker outside of writing code. I only write code if I am being paid for it. I started a KZbin Channel just to create an online presence, but each time I try to talk about coding, I find it difficult. I just find it easier to get the job done then to explain what I did. Anyway, great insight
@AnonymousAccount514
@AnonymousAccount514 20 күн бұрын
I’m one of the greats….the reason I don’t teach on KZbin is…I teach my lower level developers at my job, using the projects we use at work
@autorandomvidz7280
@autorandomvidz7280 15 күн бұрын
Those who can’t code become influencers
@jakariablaine2858
@jakariablaine2858 20 күн бұрын
good point, Travis. I have thought about it before but you went deeper into the topic. Thanks for sharing your takeaways
@PlayTypeGaming
@PlayTypeGaming 7 күн бұрын
sometimes i take a break from coding, when i comeback i feel refreshed.
@brianmweu6460
@brianmweu6460 17 күн бұрын
It all comes to a balance. My take is creating content is good way to learn stuff. This is especially if you love teaching like me and then building projects. So, on the hobbies and other activities. It's good to allocate time for them as well as your family. So there's nothing wrong in creating content. Cheers! to those who do.
@carlynghrafnsson4221
@carlynghrafnsson4221 15 күн бұрын
People don't create content either due to time constraints, or another important professional concept.... dark arts. Some people think, why should I teach my future competition? Knowledge as a gatekeeper, because most learning materials, don't even remotely put it together for you, even in open-source circles. Just researching a TLS pipe, you hit brick walls. By '07, Android surpassed NT4 in tls cve which exposes the knowledge disparity. You could build a real CS degree just with a TLS project as a capstone course. It's that important, it could land you a job, yet thorough docs? To this day, education is a problem.
@MrHaggyy
@MrHaggyy 17 күн бұрын
Well, good devs usually build a highly specific toolkit around the problems they are facing. While this stuff is great in 1 on 1 or small-group teaching it's unlikely the general audience gets value for their effort. And while I can talk about all the stuff you can easily look up online if you are interested I'm neither allowed to talk about the technical details of our IP nor about the IP of vendor-specific tools we are using.
@fuchrr4519
@fuchrr4519 16 күн бұрын
Yep lik my game engine. Noone needs that but me and not many people need or want to learn how to build game engines
@rafaeldeleon3386
@rafaeldeleon3386 20 күн бұрын
I thought about creating content, but then I get in a rabbit hole of thoughts and overwhelm myself. When I am looking for a solution to a problem and I find a solution or lack of solution, I tend to give an answer that I found to work best. I seldomly do this, though.
@sealsharp
@sealsharp 20 күн бұрын
Me creating content about my programming work experience: "Okay everybody. Welcome. In order to follow todays lesson, you need a few pieces of hardware and software linked in the description which together cost at least 20.000$ and i will help you solve a practical problem you might have if you own a chemical production plant".
@sim9955
@sim9955 20 күн бұрын
Great perspective! What if I have a non-tech job and like to talk/do coding on my free time and wait for the afternoons/weekends to do coding? 😅
@sirharis7462
@sirharis7462 14 күн бұрын
we’re just perfectionists and it’s hard enough keeping up coding skills - the thought of creating content around it and trying to translate the chaos of coding brain to a logical absorbable medium as a video or blog just seems overwhelming. that’s about it.
@HappyCheeryChap
@HappyCheeryChap 7 күн бұрын
"Other interests"... yeah... like including... actually programming itself. Which making content, isn't. Great musicians generally want to just keep making/playing music, not become teachers. Likewise for other things too. I'm not sure what you mean by "great" exactly, but of the top tier coders I have in mind (those I know IRL, or otherwise famous ppl I don't), their main reason not to make content isn't because they're going outside instead. It is because they're actually doing, instead of talking about. For the majority, your 1st explanation at 2:15 was closest I think... no interest... except: regardless of when they started. Not everyone wants to be a youtuber. Anyway, we all know that the greatest programmer who ever lived DID make content anyway. RIP Terry.
@PeterGordon1
@PeterGordon1 20 күн бұрын
Employers are not as interested in your mental health and personal character as they are your code output. let that sink in.
@EricKeinrath
@EricKeinrath 20 күн бұрын
Really interesting point. Dynamic balance.
@pelbertmyronman
@pelbertmyronman 15 күн бұрын
There is more to life than coding but I hate the tone of this that it should be shameful to do it on your spare time. I have been in the business for 25 years. I LOVE to code. I also sail, do Jiu Jitsu, climb mountains, and cook. I am planning a Kilimanjaro trip next year and a transatlantic solo crossing. In all those trips I have planned via Starlink or another way that I can have full internet access so I can continue to work. Don't shame people for loving to code because you only do it as a job.
@10ysf
@10ysf 14 күн бұрын
I think great developers DO create contents. But it is not tutorials. They often write blog posts (just google their personal sites), many of them they post on Twitter, they give keynote speeches, they publish papers (check google scholar).
@wombozombo
@wombozombo 20 күн бұрын
I'm in school and have kids. I have no time for hobbies 🤷‍♂️
@kernelpanick636
@kernelpanick636 20 күн бұрын
Thank you so much! This is so helpful
@subinaypanda9936
@subinaypanda9936 Күн бұрын
I love programming. I can do it forever. It's my passion, it's my hobby. And love what I do.
@edoardodepiccoli3004
@edoardodepiccoli3004 20 күн бұрын
I think I needed this video and didn't realize it until I saw it till the end, thank you man, fr
@churchilokech4778
@churchilokech4778 2 күн бұрын
Thank you for this...Shukran
@succelus
@succelus 5 күн бұрын
I am self proclaimed the greatest programmer who breathed air I can tell you the answer I don’t have time I don’t have time energy or inclination to discuss programming matters with wannabes. It’s programming not coding or development as in real estate or photography
@SerhiiChernikov
@SerhiiChernikov 2 күн бұрын
Nice video! Agree with all the points. In my opinion, it's a highly subjective question that depends on everyone's circumstances. Sometimes it just makes sense, especially in the initial steps, to dive deep into software engineering entirely and not to do any stuff other than that. However, after you build a solid professional foundation for yourself, it's important to take regular breaks from your main activity and just do whatever you like to do (other than coding) in order to support your mental and physical health, as well as the creativity of your brain.
@Divyv520
@Divyv520 20 күн бұрын
Hey Travis , really nice video ! I was wondering if I could help you with Viral Content ideas in your niche , Script , editing , thumbnail , SEO , Growth and analysis , Leads and appointments for your business , etc in all to you ! Pls let me know what do you think ?
@sarazohar4923
@sarazohar4923 9 күн бұрын
Why do I love this guy , and I just found him, doctor here changing field from surgeon to dermatology and I was uncomfortable and fear foul, this man is bright and intelligent and I feel him
@glueckssilben
@glueckssilben 20 күн бұрын
Let's talk about table tennis or music composition!
@highestsettings
@highestsettings 10 сағат бұрын
The real reason that the greats of any subject or skill rarely teach is that they don't need to. Their ability to do whatever it is they do (in this case, code) is far more valuable to themselves and to other people than their ability to teach or create videos and post them online. Teaching and creating media are their own skills, that means the person in question has to be interested and good at all of those things in order to effectively make online courses/tutorials. There's also the fact that people who are teaching as they learn tend to be making more opportunities out of doing one thing, which is why its so common for learners to teach. The thing with any skill is that its a slow burn getting to the point where people might be willing to pay you to do it. So if you can diversify the results of learning that skill by using it to build an online following or even just making things for yourself, then you not only improve your chances of actually learning the skill, but you also get more value out of it.
@vitalyl1327
@vitalyl1327 20 күн бұрын
The great developers ARE teaching. There are lectures by Abelson and Sussman available online, along with many others.
@m13v2
@m13v2 11 күн бұрын
and there are books and blogs by kent beck, robert martin, martin fowler, eric evans, ed yourdon, david thomas, emily bache, …
@vitalyl1327
@vitalyl1327 11 күн бұрын
@@m13v2 exactly gen-Zers think that if it is not on tiktok it does not count. Especially if it is a book.
@JustIsTime890
@JustIsTime890 8 күн бұрын
Thanks for the data. It is difficult to have a deep learning when you need to know a lot of languages and frameworks, and specific services that change every year, already in an entry level job. Things are not now like 10 or 20 years ago. 20 years ago the problem was not having enough information. Today the problem is we have so much information that you don't know were to begin and what info is good or trash.
@vitalyl1327
@vitalyl1327 8 күн бұрын
@@JustIsTime890 I deliberately stay away from anything "new" in this field (and every time anything new turns out to be a rehashed old), the timeless fundamentals are still the most valuable.thing to learn, everything else is transient and derivative.
@bc4198
@bc4198 20 күн бұрын
Is the lesson "people who've made good money longer have enough to spare for hobbies, and most people stop learning once they have a solid job"?
@AlexBall03
@AlexBall03 20 күн бұрын
Really interesting, thanks for sharing!
@WinstonCodesOn
@WinstonCodesOn 10 күн бұрын
Yeah, I don't put as much coding content on my channel as I would like because I'm just tired of doing that all day at work and don't feel like doing for KZbin as well.
@Sdirimohamedsalah
@Sdirimohamedsalah 14 күн бұрын
Because they thinking and leant, they do and learn, they optimize and learn. Also in general, they don’t like camera and maybe it’s really really hard for many of them to transfer the knowledge with a good pedagogical approach. Also, lake of time and their business model is different and they cannot focus on content creation and be updated with the new technology at the same time.
@cody_codes_youtube
@cody_codes_youtube 20 күн бұрын
Haha, I like this. My only goal has always been to try and help teach the lessons I would have LOVED as a younger engineer. I’ve had to learn many hard lessons
@TravisMedia
@TravisMedia 20 күн бұрын
Doing a great job at it too, Cody!
@ronaldjohnson4470
@ronaldjohnson4470 20 күн бұрын
Excellent advice.
@aungmyatmoemakescodework
@aungmyatmoemakescodework 20 күн бұрын
Same though, most of the dev in Myanmar ended up with alcohol or beer at the end of their weekend and they stuck with invocation 😂
@hitmusicworldwide
@hitmusicworldwide 19 күн бұрын
Id like to connect with Devs in Myanmar . I was in Yangon in 2017 and plan to return.
@codeloch
@codeloch 16 күн бұрын
giving it a go. I’ve maintained one “pet” project almost since the start. Webrtc etc makes it more fun today though
@Handlebrake2
@Handlebrake2 5 күн бұрын
Starting out I felt like making videos because I couldn't program very well.
@Graphicxtras1
@Graphicxtras1 3 күн бұрын
Most of the greatest developers I have worked with have been truly amazing and seeing them code is a joy but actually often understanding what they have coded or getting the slightest grip of the ideas and approaches was always beyond me. Not only that, most of the coders who were that good, really just didn't communicate well with anyone, it was eating pizza for 24 hours overnight sessions and zero info added to the code such as comments (hopefully that has changed) and often smashing up a keyboard if a single mistake was made. I suspect many of them would not do the best youtube videos. Again, perhaps that has changed. Also it takes time to create a great tutorial, I guess the best coders are still hard at work eating pizzas and coding. There are some great coding tutorial channels around that are easy to understand (hopefully my photoshop related one is anyway, though it is not particularly coding). I would have loved to done youtube coding videos but I doubt if anyone would be interested in my bad attempts at visual basic or cobol or fortran.
@siddharthsingh5829
@siddharthsingh5829 19 күн бұрын
Thankyou so much...😊😊😊
@suen-tech
@suen-tech 20 күн бұрын
You're right
@Ctrl_Alt_Elite
@Ctrl_Alt_Elite 20 күн бұрын
If you want a good childish giggle, on mobile, keep double tapping to rewind at the beginning of the video... bit random but yh 😂
@arentalb4765
@arentalb4765 20 күн бұрын
thanks that was good 🔥🔥
@PhrontDoor
@PhrontDoor 16 күн бұрын
I agree. I hate content 'gatekeepers'. This guy is seeing an issue and fixing it. The other guys are just whinging "oh, you shouldn't do X" and providing no solutions.
@user-kw8qe5fk8v
@user-kw8qe5fk8v 10 күн бұрын
There's always an exception to everything.
@abderrahmanebenchalel541
@abderrahmanebenchalel541 20 күн бұрын
Or they start to think about the reality of life...
@ru2979
@ru2979 Күн бұрын
They might be lazy They might be selfish to share knowledge They want to feel proud by feeling they know more than others
@zxyi9090
@zxyi9090 18 күн бұрын
I like deloading concept.
@user-gc3dh9jf5i
@user-gc3dh9jf5i 18 күн бұрын
DUDE. You had me at C.S. Lewis
@ChrisAthanas
@ChrisAthanas 18 күн бұрын
17 years of ZPR business was the EXCEPTION prepare to compete on global stage where people will simply take your job and you’ll never know why
@adrianbilescu
@adrianbilescu 5 күн бұрын
I tend to disagree with this position. Those who are passionate about coding and have 10+ years of experience should write content when possible. Breaks are important but this does not come at the expense of writing content, good content. There is so much garbage out there and if we don't write content when we have gathered the experience and the pain over the years, we are just being selfish. Now, not everyone should write, some are having a job and love to do music, hiking, or cooking. I'm talking to the passionate developers who encounter resistance and self-doubt when thinking about writing. Development styles and principles are highly opinionated and lead to less quality content. As a mentor, I encourage my developer students to start writing on social media their experience and their lessons. I believe that if we would share more, we would all benefit from it.
@JMxVideos
@JMxVideos 4 күн бұрын
I have the opposite feeling. Due to having a life outside of coding, I'm really afraid that I don't match in this world where everyone seems to be up to date on the latest feature of every framework out there.
@WofWca
@WofWca 21 сағат бұрын
Some people just find actually coding more fun than writing about coding. Imagine writing about going on a hike.
@bitmanagent67
@bitmanagent67 12 күн бұрын
Not sure what this obsession with making content is about. There were ways to make content in the past, it was called contributing to magazine articles and writing books. Did we expect every dev to write a book? NO!!! It is almost a perverted right of passage that states that you are not passionate about your work unless you have a channel, a course, or a GitHub page with a solid green heat map. And you know who champions this garbage; new developers who don't have a body of work that can prove their skillset, hiring teams that don't have proper interview skills, and attention W H O R E S who don't feel validated unless you do what they do. Like Travis said, there is more to life than coding. It supports my lifestyle but is not my life. My mission is to solve business problems for my employer or customer, not give my time away for your entertainment or edification.
@doc8527
@doc8527 18 күн бұрын
Let's be honest. The core reason of burn out is that many just don't like programming outside of their jobs. And that's it. They have to keep talking about coding in order to remain "the feeling of being competitive" in the job market. I got the total opposite experience unlike the video (but not against the video though, it's more like opposite but co-exist). All of the good engineers keep talking about coding outside of their jobs, they never got burn out, coding is just their another hobby but somehow also earn big bucks for them. They will just code something else for fun outside of the 9 - 5 jobs. The only reason they burnout is just the bad company environment, but never the programming itself. Also, love to talk about coding outside of the job !== willing to write blogs. I think half of the video is based on programming or coding is a burden for you. If you just love coding something for fun, you are unlikely got burnout.
@rashshawn779
@rashshawn779 20 күн бұрын
I feel doing other things is better than thinking bout programming all the time.
@tegathemenace
@tegathemenace Күн бұрын
They may not even have other interests😂. They just don't want to take on the work of creating a solid course and learning to sell it.(Imposter syndrome might be a part). It's largely because you'd have to learn business skills, video editing etc And yeah making free stuff for altruism sake is not what most people care about. In short, people only become content creators when there's a solid monetization plan behind it.
@kevinkkirimii
@kevinkkirimii 20 күн бұрын
Great video.
@thelatestartosrs
@thelatestartosrs 20 күн бұрын
They do create content, there are conferences
@HideBuz
@HideBuz 20 күн бұрын
Screw those critics. Travis, I L O V E your content. It was so invaluable to me. I often found that the best people in something were horrible at explaining. They don't know where to start because they forgot how difficult it was for them to begin learning long ago. So it's up to beginners and intermediate to teach beginners, because we know exactly what was hard when we started. Continue your journey! Ignore the haters!
@user-de3ty4sq8o
@user-de3ty4sq8o 18 күн бұрын
This is somewhat true. Your can expert a person that has coded for long to know that because we have a lot to learn
@AdilKhan-vf2es
@AdilKhan-vf2es 20 күн бұрын
With AI around would it make sense to start a channel? Realistic?
@backstabba
@backstabba 20 күн бұрын
It doesn't make proper videos or narration. Why learn oneself to be a video editor on top, unless you use it to promote your company?
@user-nb7nb1hh1j
@user-nb7nb1hh1j 20 күн бұрын
@@backstabba I like teaching and the company part sounds nice. Is it sensible to do it in this era with AI and all?
@bam_bino__
@bam_bino__ 20 күн бұрын
great excuse to never do anything in life
@liquidmobius
@liquidmobius 20 күн бұрын
Smoking meats 😂🤣 please tell me that was a Zuck reference
@christiandgreat8127
@christiandgreat8127 20 күн бұрын
Because we dont have time for this. ;)
@adeyemiblessing
@adeyemiblessing 18 күн бұрын
I thought this was Traversy media, then clicked. Just found it weird to see someone else in the thumbnail
@corylowe5557
@corylowe5557 17 күн бұрын
You you said smoking Meats, I was thinking about Mark Z.
@AnythingGodamnit
@AnythingGodamnit 20 күн бұрын
This is sage advice. I definitely identified with my work for a large portion of my career. Not only did it make me a worse developer (too much ego, not making connections that I might otherwise have if I was spending time in the real world) and a more boring person (could barely communicate with strangers), but it negatively impacted my health big-time. My body eventually said no for me, since I was too stubborn to pay heed to all the signs it was giving me.
@MichaelDoornbos
@MichaelDoornbos 20 күн бұрын
I feel seen.
@hightidesed
@hightidesed 5 күн бұрын
for me its actually the opposite, creating videos takes a lot of time, time that id rather spend engineering software and building projects.
@Stiven-sg5dv
@Stiven-sg5dv Күн бұрын
...because they are busy building an entire fullstack startup app from scratch all alone
@stephanb.322
@stephanb.322 Сағат бұрын
Those who can, do; those who can't, teach.
@javastream5015
@javastream5015 18 күн бұрын
Sounds like you recommend a Nikola Jokić philosophy. - I want to go home! - Nobody likes his job.
Why Most Self-Taught Developers Never Land The Job
7:28
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 146 М.
Reading Good Books WILL CHANGE Your Life
9:21
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 9 М.
How To Choose Ramen Date Night 🍜
00:58
Jojo Sim
Рет қаралды 57 МЛН
I MADE A CARDBOARD SWING!#asmr
00:40
HAYATAKU はやたく
Рет қаралды 32 МЛН
ШЕЛБИЛАР | bayGUYS
24:45
bayGUYS
Рет қаралды 663 М.
The App YOU or I Could Have Built... ShipFast
6:52
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 92 М.
This Is Why Managers Don't Trust Programmers...
28:04
Thriving Technologist
Рет қаралды 133 М.
ChatGPT Can Now Talk Like a Human [Latest Updates]
22:21
ColdFusion
Рет қаралды 293 М.
Why You’ll WASTE The Next 3 Years…
6:06
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 223 М.
Programming Is NOT Enough | Add these 7 skills…
13:19
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 409 М.
Big Tech AI Is A Lie
16:56
Tina Huang
Рет қаралды 180 М.
Every Developer NEEDS To Know 12-Factor App Principles
12:51
Travis Media
Рет қаралды 11 М.
Double Your Productivity using this ADHD System (Invented by a NASA Engineer)
13:32
How Senior Programmers ACTUALLY Write Code
13:37
Thriving Technologist
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН
Save Work Efficiently on Your Computer 18/05/2024
0:51
UNIQUE PHOTO EDITING
Рет қаралды 307 М.
Introducing the all-new iPad Pro | Apple
1:29
Apple
Рет қаралды 37 МЛН