⚠️ Just found out FrontEnd Masters has a free Bootcamp to get you started. It's got 21 hours' worth of content and a project at the end. They definitely gain some major points for that: frontendmasters.com/bootcamp/
i dont mean to be so offtopic but does anybody know a trick to get back into an Instagram account..? I somehow forgot the login password. I would love any help you can give me
@SelfTaughtDev, what do you think of Lambda School and code bootcamps? I tend to lean towards those bootcamps that don't try to squeeze everything in 3 month curriculum because can you imagine learning code from 8am to 8pm mon-sat? How much can you really learn from that? Not even considering working part - time on the weekends if you have to pay at least for your maintenance life. I guess there's a science in this madness. Unfortunately, no Lambda School offers in EU so just self teaching with TreeHouse / Front End Masters atm.
Hey, I appreciate the video. 👌 I am getting back into web development after quitting for like 2 years. I wasn't super motivated before, but I need to learn all this. I'm in my late 20s and web development would seriously improve my lifestyle and overall health. I appreciate you comparing the two from a more experienced perspective. Thank you for the video. 👊
Idk why, but this seems like it's a pattern for almost every developer. You get into code for a few weeks/months, then stop for a few months/year. Then you come back to code, are serious about it this time, and get a job as a developer lmao But yea, definitely agree that knowing this stuff's important. Tim Ferriss said that in a few years not knowing how to code will be like not knowing how to read.
@@mikefazekas9267 sweet haha. What level are you at on HTML CSS and JavaScript? I haven't even touched JavaScript yet. I want to get in the upper novice levels before I get into JavaScript
Agustin Arriaga I know some what of the basics of JS I can do almost anything in HTML and CSS, hardest thing with JavaScript is figuring out what to do or how to do with JS. It seems confusing, I can do basic DOM changes with it.
Woooo, before paying all that you should work through one of the good courses from Udemy for about 20 bucks, or one of the free ones from freecodecamp on youtube, what language are you pursuing?
@@briandesign not really true. Brad Traversy courses are great and up to date, as is Andrei (I forget his last name); there's some bad instructors on there (bad English, hard to follow etc) but there's a handful of really, really good respectable instructors too.
Techdegree and nanodegree's do carry some weight as long as you have projects to display. They also matter when you already have a dev job since it can make you look current. I think if you had one in combination with an AS / BS in Computer Science, it can definitely make you look like a strong candidate
Exactly! It's the projects that are the important part. And yea for sure. College degrees will definitely help! The only problem is most people come out without having built much on their own ):
@@self-taughtdev yeah...coasting through college. I certainly did it. I didnt have any real projects to show for my time it college at all. It's one thing if you have the knowledge but you need to show it off with projects
do you actually have the money? damn dude if you have it then go for it.... I cant afford 200 bucks a month bro... but hey if you have the money and it dont hurt your budget then go for it 100%
Ehh if they're in the pro version they're probably not that good anyway lol Nothing I found the you needed pro for was very interesting/helpful. I feel like they just have it so they can offer 3 price points.
If you don’t know any code a little css HTML JavaScript I didnt find them helpful. During the basic portion of JavaScript with the author Kyle Simpson I didn’t find him helpful at all. The whole time I thought to myself what is this guy talking about. If you know some code they do have a lot of material that might be helpful .
Yea 100% agree. If you're just getting into it; Go Treehouse. Once you've got the basics down Front End Masters is where I'd go to learn more in depth stuff.
⚠️ Just found out FrontEnd Masters has a free Bootcamp to get you started. It's got 21 hours' worth of content and a project at the end. They definitely gain some major points for that: frontendmasters.com/bootcamp/
i dont mean to be so offtopic but does anybody know a trick to get back into an Instagram account..?
I somehow forgot the login password. I would love any help you can give me
@Bobby Jorge Instablaster ;)
@SelfTaughtDev, what do you think of Lambda School and code bootcamps? I tend to lean towards those bootcamps that don't try to squeeze everything in 3 month curriculum because can you imagine learning code from 8am to 8pm mon-sat? How much can you really learn from that? Not even considering working part - time on the weekends if you have to pay at least for your maintenance life. I guess there's a science in this madness. Unfortunately, no Lambda School offers in EU so just self teaching with TreeHouse / Front End Masters atm.
Tech Degree, appears to be a great alternative to an expensive in person boot camp.
Hey, I appreciate the video. 👌 I am getting back into web development after quitting for like 2 years. I wasn't super motivated before, but I need to learn all this. I'm in my late 20s and web development would seriously improve my lifestyle and overall health. I appreciate you comparing the two from a more experienced perspective. Thank you for the video. 👊
Idk why, but this seems like it's a pattern for almost every developer.
You get into code for a few weeks/months, then stop for a few months/year. Then you come back to code, are serious about it this time, and get a job as a developer lmao
But yea, definitely agree that knowing this stuff's important. Tim Ferriss said that in a few years not knowing how to code will be like not knowing how to read.
@@self-taughtdev haha. I appreciate the response.
Agustin I did the same thing lol... I started back up this year.
@@mikefazekas9267 sweet haha. What level are you at on HTML CSS and JavaScript? I haven't even touched JavaScript yet. I want to get in the upper novice levels before I get into JavaScript
Agustin Arriaga I know some what of the basics of JS I can do almost anything in HTML and CSS, hardest thing with JavaScript is figuring out what to do or how to do with JS. It seems confusing, I can do basic DOM changes with it.
Dope review man! Just started documenting myself learning code and was looking at front end masters courses
Woooo, before paying all that you should work through one of the good courses from Udemy for about 20 bucks, or one of the free ones from freecodecamp on youtube, what language are you pursuing?
@@chrissabre1761 I didn't like udemy cause they are either outdated or super basic. I'm learning Javascript right now
@@briandesign Ah well , maybe good and cheaper for us beginners. Good luck !
@@briandesign Udemy courses are hit and miss. I agree with you that's for sure.
@@briandesign not really true. Brad Traversy courses are great and up to date, as is Andrei (I forget his last name); there's some bad instructors on there (bad English, hard to follow etc) but there's a handful of really, really good respectable instructors too.
Techdegree and nanodegree's do carry some weight as long as you have projects to display. They also matter when you already have a dev job since it can make you look current. I think if you had one in combination with an AS / BS in Computer Science, it can definitely make you look like a strong candidate
Exactly! It's the projects that are the important part.
And yea for sure. College degrees will definitely help! The only problem is most people come out without having built much on their own ):
@@self-taughtdev yeah...coasting through college. I certainly did it. I didnt have any real projects to show for my time it college at all. It's one thing if you have the knowledge but you need to show it off with projects
Hey man! As a complete beginner, do you recommend starting on the Techdegree right away or maybe get the Basic plan first?
As a complete beginner go do FreeCodeCamp first to make sure you even like code. Then I’d do TTH because they get into more detail than FCC
@@self-taughtdev thanks man. just wanna say your story and your videos are a huge inspiration!
do you actually have the money? damn dude if you have it then go for it.... I cant afford 200 bucks a month bro... but hey if you have the money and it dont hurt your budget then go for it 100%
Maybe there is something i do not understand, but did you mean forums or did you intentionally search for forms ?
forums*
@@self-taughtdev :D Thanks, now i can sleep again.
From seeing this video I feel like am going to give Treehouse a shot! Also great vid 👍
Thanks!
Just note treehouse has some classes in the basic track tgat references that are only in the pro version, so very much a dodgy practice there.
Ehh if they're in the pro version they're probably not that good anyway lol Nothing I found the you needed pro for was very interesting/helpful. I feel like they just have it so they can offer 3 price points.
Great comparison. Thanks!
No prob!
What about *PluralSight?*
Ehh...Had a free trial for a month in April. Not a fan.
I found that they didn't update their courses regularly
If you don’t know any code a little css HTML JavaScript I didnt find them helpful. During the basic portion of JavaScript with the author Kyle Simpson I didn’t find him helpful at all. The whole time I thought to myself what is this guy talking about. If you know some code they do have a lot of material that might be helpful .
Yea 100% agree. If you're just getting into it; Go Treehouse. Once you've got the basics down Front End Masters is where I'd go to learn more in depth stuff.
SelfTaughtDev wouldn’t books make more sense for in depth stuff ?
Open source course like The Odin Project are better than these. Community is awesome.
Yea community is definitely a big help
FORMS. FORMS. FORMS.
FORMSSSS!!
Hello
How’s it going