Are Tech Youtubers Lying To You ?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 634

  • @srijanraghavula
    @srijanraghavula 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +488

    I hate how people only think computer science jobs exist only in web dev, there are other fields too, not just react and node shit

    • @XDarkGreyX
      @XDarkGreyX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      Even outside of those two there is other web dev stuff.

    • @jimmahgee
      @jimmahgee 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      @@XDarkGreyXyeah there’s all the other JavaScript frameworks too 🤣

    • @NoahSteckley
      @NoahSteckley 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Such as?
      DevOps…

    • @TreesPlease42
      @TreesPlease42 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Embedded engineer is a-firing their lazars

    • @Kaizala1933
      @Kaizala1933 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      That's very dependend on your location, most markets don't have jobs outside of webdev

  • @SidTheITGuy
    @SidTheITGuy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +471

    I absolutely adore Prime. and his reaction when he was mentioned is something I will never forget.
    I still can't believe I am featured on his channel today, after multiple years of me watching him. My TH-cam goals are complete lmaoo.
    Because of him, I am now even more motivated to create good content which is helpful to people.
    Btw, I am NOT a PAID ACTOR lmaoo. Some people genuinely appreciate other people, you know.

    • @ThePrimeTimeagen
      @ThePrimeTimeagen  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +181

      I hope you know I loved this video and I think that you did an amazing job at so much of it. I hope you never think that I am dunking on you at any point.

    • @ThePrimeTimeagen
      @ThePrimeTimeagen  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +183

      I really just tried to do a good job of agreeing and disagreeing based on my own experience

    • @nobodyspecial1553
      @nobodyspecial1553 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I may not have agreed with everything you said, but I absolutely love the enthusiasm!

    • @SsaliJonathan
      @SsaliJonathan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Happy for you Sid

    • @nshu8935
      @nshu8935 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @SidTheITGuy you peaked here! XD

  • @EKr-z9k
    @EKr-z9k 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +618

    Primagen the only guy who can turn a "yes" into an 1h video

    • @exginto8053
      @exginto8053 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Have you heared about Baldee?

    • @jl_117
      @jl_117 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      that means hes good at what he does lolol

    • @Guylovesleep6802
      @Guylovesleep6802 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@exginto8053 no why?

    • @Kane0123
      @Kane0123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Mate he’s getting better… used to only get to 30mins.

    • @RandomNoob1124
      @RandomNoob1124 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      If u watched the video, he disagreed with a ton of stuff

  • @StdDev99
    @StdDev99 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +344

    Tech TH-camrs makes you feel that the web industry is the only thing in existence.

    • @monolith-zl4qt
      @monolith-zl4qt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      as a webdev trying to do literally anything else related to programming, it does feel like that

    • @bhaveshsonar7558
      @bhaveshsonar7558 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@monolith-zl4qtno way, try contributing to kernel

    • @matt-xq1xv
      @matt-xq1xv 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      That's exactly why I found tsoding as such a huge refresher. I highly recommend his channel if you haven't heard of him.

    • @AdamS-lo9mr
      @AdamS-lo9mr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@monolith-zl4qtwebdevs do tend to encase every domain they touch in a hard, slick, enamel casing of javascript so you're not entirely wrong.

    • @ghandiwon
      @ghandiwon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​@@monolith-zl4qtI think the reason people feel "tech youtube" is covered in web dev is in large part due to it being one of the easiest to talk about (the other being game development). It has a low barrier to entry; it changes frequently; *everyone* is constantly interacting with it.
      If isn't specifically "tutorial" tech youtubers, I can toss a couple recommendations.
      Sebastian Lague does "Coding Adventures" on dives into his attempts to make things (usually 3D based). He even throws up the source code for his projects.
      Ben Eater does low level analysis and projects (examples: USB interface analysis and building a breadboard cpu with video output)
      ThinMatrix makes a devlog on his long running game development project w/i a custom game engine (more focused on *why* he builds certain things rather than how)
      KRAZAM creates skits for when you want to feel more existential dread about your job in tech

  • @voidmachines
    @voidmachines 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +275

    Advanced tutorials are called books

    • @jamesarthurkimbell
      @jamesarthurkimbell 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +50

      I've seen those in the background of videos and wondered what they were for

    • @freezingcicada6852
      @freezingcicada6852 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I must have read a good majority of books on...sites for pdfs. (libgen)
      I'm calling cap on that, lots of books where they dont even show right thing for learning purposes. Advanced tutorials is you just have to do the thing.
      I treat programming like painting. You could read all the concepts and theory about color/composition, etc. But you dont really understand it till you put it into practice.

    • @RandomNoob1124
      @RandomNoob1124 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      So true lol

    • @The-Dirty-Straw
      @The-Dirty-Straw 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ​@@jamesarthurkimbellhahaha

    • @mike200017
      @mike200017 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Nah, advanced tutorials are conference talks and papers. Most books are pretty basic, even those marketed as "advanced" or "expert".

  • @brdevll
    @brdevll 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    27:38 "the harder I work, the luckier I get" THIS IS SO STRONG

    • @tiagodev5838
      @tiagodev5838 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Haha I missed that gem thank you

  • @sploders1019
    @sploders1019 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    lol I always end up back on the original documentation because TH-camrs oversimplify everything and make it 10x more difficult because they’re afraid to go into how it works, which makes my brain just reject it and I forget the next day because I NEED to know WHY things work

    • @disguysn
      @disguysn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      This is why I don't watch most tutorials. It drives me crazy.

  • @elameend
    @elameend 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +110

    Watched the original video, watched theos review, now watching primes review. Basically my life right now😭

    • @onegamingmoose
      @onegamingmoose 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      The slop machine is going strong right now

    • @SidTheITGuy
      @SidTheITGuy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Sorry about that. lmao. But I'm loving it !!!

    • @TokyoXtreme
      @TokyoXtreme 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I thought I had seen this already, and it was a rerun. I guess I must've watched Theo's video.

  • @Sommyie
    @Sommyie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Shout out to the 90s single mom's. Even with a step dad, i was raised by her.
    PHP 10+ years ago is how i starred on my path currently. I wrote a very basic customer management application for a snall business and I learned sooooo much from that. The code horrifies me now, but it makes me happy to know i can horrifiy myself

  • @actually_it_is_rocket_science
    @actually_it_is_rocket_science 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    I really hope I'm in the dumbest room because if I'm the 1 percent we are in trouble.

    • @chiragjani4164
      @chiragjani4164 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      us bro us 😆😂

    • @theairaccumulator7144
      @theairaccumulator7144 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We're all in the bottom 1% bro the top 1% is beyond the comprehension of mere mortals.

    • @chiragjani4164
      @chiragjani4164 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@theairaccumulator7144 prime is also in bottom 1%

    • @kidmosey
      @kidmosey 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Strive for the 51 percentile... If you can do better than half your peers, you're golden

  • @TroubleChute
    @TroubleChute 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    "Nobody wants to watch advanced tutorials" I can absolutely relate to this. There are so many topics id cover that are so invredibly niche, just for them to get 800 views at most. I love coding, and covering stuff, but i cant see myself making a huge amount of money covering advanced topics code or otherwise.

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Because anyone with any skill in software development isn't watching a tutorial.

  • @ianhecox90
    @ianhecox90 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    the instant glow up in his face @1:00:30 HAHAHAHAH

  • @IgorGuerrero
    @IgorGuerrero 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    I think Prime is a bit confused here, OP is not talking about TH-cam content creators like him or his buddies he's talking about the "learn Python in 4 hours" courses "creators" which he or any of his buddies or what we know as "tech TH-cam" is not doing at all.

    • @complexity5545
      @complexity5545 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Prime also has tutorial courses in different subject matters (in the past at least). It probably triggered him a little.
      But Prime is a really good programmer and has some correct wisdom/experience with it.

    • @thekwoka4707
      @thekwoka4707 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Prime is the instructor for multiple courses...and working on more...
      But OP is also making WIDE ranging general statements that aren't really justifiable without far more qualification to the statement.

    • @stefl8985
      @stefl8985 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@thekwoka4707 the guy's right, give me a break

  • @DryCOTwo
    @DryCOTwo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Took me 2 years to get my first dev job at the age of 30. In the meanwhile, I developed loads of different projects so I could run intro all sorts of problems and solutions. This set me up for my first job as a dev. My employer said one of the reasons he hired me was because I did all that for 2 years not giving up.

  • @aDaily1222
    @aDaily1222 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +92

    Prime i think you're confusing "good engineer" with "top 1%".
    you can be a good, or even really good engineer, without being "top 1%"

    • @complexity5545
      @complexity5545 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      1% is an adjective that Corp types use to categorize and test their subjects. Most of time these types define 1% as "the top 1% of money." So a "1 percenter engineer" is someone making that tax 3 bracket of profit in the industry.
      There is no such thing as a 1% programmer. I know a guy who made an IBM software/firmware in 1999. He still gets royalties from it up to this day. He's really done nothing else, but he's set for life. He sucks at programming and engineering. He got lucky. He's top 1% earner though in the CS field, but he's below mediocre.

    • @styleisaweapon
      @styleisaweapon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      1% is an arbitrary value and there is no actual stated metric, but we can assume the company means top 1% in profitability

    • @TheOriginalBlueKirby
      @TheOriginalBlueKirby 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@complexity5545You sound bitter.

    • @complexity5545
      @complexity5545 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@TheOriginalBlueKirby Nah, I'm one of the 'richer" ones. I'm just letting you guys know how corp management types think. I'm an entrepreneur and own an S-corp and LLC -- I contract hire the corp types. I make the product and software and I need the greedy corp-types to sell it. I guess I'm considered 1%, I have to do everything when the crap hits the fan. Liability in the Assets = Equity + Liability always comes down to the owner(s).

    • @TheOriginalBlueKirby
      @TheOriginalBlueKirby 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@complexity5545 Yeah sure bud. That's what they all say.

  • @MalushJ
    @MalushJ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    I think his point about meritocracy is correct. You mentioned yourself if you can hire someone less competent to do the job and learn on the job is more ideal for companies. That is not meritocracy, its opportunism. Now I don't think its wrong but its definitely not meritocracy because if it was you would hire the more competent person with the higher income expectation. But companies basically want experienced developers at the cost of hiring juniors.

    • @johnyewtube2286
      @johnyewtube2286 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah, that was a weak point by him.

    • @neruneri
      @neruneri 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Yes, merit is not the primary metric looked at. It's much more of a "cost per merit" type calculation. Companies generally don't want the most qualified person, they want the best deal. Which is completely fine by the way. I'm not knocking against that. But I don't think that's strictly meritocratic.

    • @AD-wg8ik
      @AD-wg8ik 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I disagree with this take. You can’t associate hiring cost with merit. That’s unsustainable. Companies don’t have endless capital. It’s still meritocratic because if both the skilled engineer and the unskilled engineer were the same cost, the skilled engineer would be hired. From your vantage point, the top 0.1% engineers could theoretically ask for $10M a year, and if they don’t get hired it’s not a meritocracy.

    • @MalushJ
      @MalushJ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@AD-wg8ik meritocracy is purely picking someone based on their ability. Again I would call it opportunism. You will never find an experienced dev wanting to do the work for the pay of a junior. (Unless they are desperate)

    • @AryadevChavali
      @AryadevChavali 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@AD-wg8ik >introduces strawman
      >"this isn't a meritocracy!"
      ok

  • @jonbezeau3124
    @jonbezeau3124 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I know guys whose career track is entirely stealing credit for everything good that happened at their old jobs on their way to new ones, and moving on again in less than 18 months before anyone quite expects them to catch up with their own hype.

  • @narendrapatwardhan68
    @narendrapatwardhan68 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    You are missing the context that OC is from India, things work significantly different there due to sheer number of people.

    • @ezpie7973
      @ezpie7973 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      That is true, but we Indians are also selfish, I mean that's my experience as an Indian.

    • @narendrapatwardhan68
      @narendrapatwardhan68 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ezpie7973 I disagree with this statement. Indians are no more or no less selfish than any other nationality. The "selfish" behavior you may come across is simply due to resource scarcity as compared to population. It's just a strategy for survival, competition quickly gets replaced with cooperation if you are in a more abundant environment, like US/EU.

    • @XDarkGreyX
      @XDarkGreyX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      ​@@ezpie7973 may I use this in arguments and point to your confession?

    • @XDarkGreyX
      @XDarkGreyX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      He is not ignorant to that

    • @narendrapatwardhan68
      @narendrapatwardhan68 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@XDarkGreyX If you wanna be a racist, sure. Indians are no more or no less selfish than any other nationality. People opt for competition in resource-scarce environments and opt for cooperation in resource-abundant ones.

  • @philosophia5577
    @philosophia5577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    SWE in India with no degree. Culture is very hard. Even if developers at a company wants you, HRs and Management usually ruin things and you always get unsolicited advice from people to go back to college. Still, college is a complete waste of money with no value in india unless you're from IIT, NIT which really matter a lot here.
    But once you're in the industry and at your job - none of it matters, your skills speak for yourself. And I'd rather buy a 800₹/10$ course from a TH-camr like Primeagen, or somewhere i find value rather than paying 20 lacs/ ~25,000$ and wasting 4 years to learn nothing from teachers who have never worked on a piece of code with any users.

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yeah but millions of Indians are going for very few low skill jobs. It'll never work.

  • @acestapp1884
    @acestapp1884 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Another thing with advanced tutorials is that there are a lot more advanced topics. So even if there were the same number as beginner tutorials, there's only a few beginner topics that everyone tutorializes, but hundreds of advanced topics, maybe a few of which have tutorials.

  • @i_sometimes_leave_comments
    @i_sometimes_leave_comments หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A possible explanation for "there are so many beginner courses, but so few advanced courses in comparison" is that a lot of people can pump out some beginner courses after finishing a boot camp (and maybe working for a while), while far fewer people can even understand, much less teach advanced topics.

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Or it's that anyone with any skill in software development isn't watching courses

  • @BenoitStPierre
    @BenoitStPierre 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    There are only beginner courses being promoted by TH-camrs because intermediate and expert people have already learned how to learn, so they will go to docs and finding their own research, TH-cam wouldn't help them.

  • @handomize
    @handomize 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    i liked all the points that primeagen made but fireship did made the gpt craze a lot louder in their videos. in its peak fireship was posting a few videos a week and most of them were about the updates in ai and gpt in specific.imo now they have settled down and its much more palatable though

    • @werid_kid2967
      @werid_kid2967 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thats because he is a content creator he’s going to talk about what everybody is talking about, that’s why it’s called the code report. The summary report of the discussion and update on the topic. If that weeks hype is in ai he’s gonna talk about ai if it’s on react he’s gonna talk about react. And these report are foundation to do your own research and learn more.

    • @ugib8377
      @ugib8377 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      He just wants to put food on his family.

    • @tiagodev5838
      @tiagodev5838 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ugib8377lol

    • @alexyuu952
      @alexyuu952 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ugib8377 "putting food" is when you are desperately looking for any job, because your family literally have no money and the rent is due. When you are rich and successful, hiring people to do edits and research its called "increasing revenue"

  • @piyushsharma3399
    @piyushsharma3399 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    his video really blew up

  • @JustBCWi
    @JustBCWi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    But Prime is a Tech TH-camr. He would never lie to us. Therefore, no Tech TH-camr is capable of lies or deceit. Trust the .

    • @ezpie7973
      @ezpie7973 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well prime sort of live streams in twich and then reuploads in youtube, but hey I agree with what ever prime says.

    • @CoreDump451
      @CoreDump451 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But good people like Prime, Theo, NCommander, Low Level Learning, etc are the exception
      There are a lot of horrible tech TH-camrs, though it's getting better
      A few years ago, the majority were horrible; toxic people like TechLead, Siraj Raval, Jomatech, etc dominated the tech sode of TH-cam

    • @BrendonKing
      @BrendonKing 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@CoreDump451 Even Theo falls into the pitfall of "There's no developer outside a web developer", but otherwise yeah.

  • @zyriab5797
    @zyriab5797 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    FireShip does sell AI as the career ender but I think it's mostly sarcastic. I understand juniors feeling super anxious though.

  • @xicci4760
    @xicci4760 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I disagree with the statement that people don't want advanded programming videos. Sebastian Lague is doing between intermediary to advanced programming stuff (in my eyes) and the views can go to the millions.

    • @mort44444
      @mort44444 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sebastian Lague’s videos are insanely high quality. Most of his projects would already be a ton of work on their own, but he goes and makes beautifully scripted narratives out of it and programs tons of extra visuals to explain technical concepts. The amount of work that goes into it must be insane, but he always sounds so relaxed and you can hear his smile when he talks.
      His videos capture the joyous part of programming so well. I’m always inspired to work on my own projects after watching him

  • @Jonny_Smith_777
    @Jonny_Smith_777 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    3 years to get hired... No thanks, I will get forklift certified.

    • @egemen261
      @egemen261 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yup, a complete waste of time and energy for something that's too late to catch.

    • @Jonny_Smith_777
      @Jonny_Smith_777 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@egemen261 yeah, the demands and competition is way up there now while payouts are getting low

  • @TheViperZed
    @TheViperZed 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I absolutely disagree with the take that there is comparatively little content for intermediate and advanced engineers on YT. Essentially all the conference talks fall into either of these two categories, and in a lot of cases the content from talks that are not immediately applicable to the niche/language you are working in still provides creative nudges in what you might want to try or look into in your niche/language. These aren't tutorials, of course, they're nudges and nods towards topics that you as someone who's got some experience under their belt can then go an expand upon. Self direction in learning is probably the most crucial skill you can develop as a software engineer, except for maybe being a person people actually want to be around.

  • @Thorinori
    @Thorinori 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    DAMN that transition was smooth as soon as you were mentioned

  • @thisbridgehascables
    @thisbridgehascables หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Uncle Steph ‘s video about Laravel was not a knock on php. He’s actually a fan of php and laravel. I watch Uncle Steph .. that’s his kinda alias .. he mostly never recommends one language over another, he’s more on the side of which language or languages or stacks will get the job done. A lot of this coding languages can perform similar operations and can produce the same end result just in a different packaged way.
    I’ve learn PHP, JavaScript, Go, and now Python and some Swift.. and like Prime always says.. build something - best advice!

  • @octavioavila6548
    @octavioavila6548 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I occasionally do watch more meaty stuff. It is still in the beginner domain but more meaty. Like Computer Science courses from MIT courseware. Courses on Theory of Computation, Algorithms. Judea Pearl’s causal inference stuff

  • @MungeParty
    @MungeParty 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I agree that a meritocracy is ideal, but I'm not going to kid myself and act like everyone agrees with that sentiment. There's sadly a lot of people who view meritocracy as inherently unfair. Also just like with any other industry getting a job at your ideal company is more about who you know than what's on your resume. It's not a either or situation though.

  • @rickZie
    @rickZie หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Whenever I get stuck and need motivation, i always come back to this primes video to watch last 15 mins.

  • @brag-
    @brag- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love opening a Primetime reaction video seeing it's over 4x longer than the video it's reacting too.
    Can tell it's about to get extra spicy!

  • @kmwill23
    @kmwill23 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    by the time you do "advanced stuff", you are already competent and don't need advanced tutorials.

  • @gonzalomunoz2767
    @gonzalomunoz2767 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Yeah advanced vids would be cool but when you're at that level, you're already comfortable with going to the official docs and just reading the thing and building whatever you were trying to build. You no longer need someone to take your hand and show you step by step how to do the thing and explain to you a whole bunch of super basic stuff you need as context. There's just no need. Still would watch though. Like I'm watching this even though I don't technically need it rn lol

  • @krishankanhaya_
    @krishankanhaya_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Learning is often a rear view activity , and if you can look in someone else's rear view,I think you'll save yourself from a lot of heartache. 👏👏

  • @AnomalousWord
    @AnomalousWord 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    "Just because something bad happened to you does not mean it has to be bad forever." TRUTH!!!! I just found your channel a week ago and I just want to say that I appreciate the honesty and passion that you bring to this space. If I hadn't fought my way through addiction, depression, and the other things in life that made me want to end it all I wouldn't be who I am today. I haven't "won" my battles or conquered the demons, but I can guarantee you that my life experience has made me a stronger and better person than many who have had it easier. You have to have experienced some shit to have empathy and want to help others. Keep doing what you are doing. You're a real one! Thanks!

  • @rdubrdub
    @rdubrdub 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The bit about tutorials makes sense. Once you are at the point where you want "advanced" tutorials, it is usually faster to read about specific things you don't understand (exceptions are really complicated problem spaces) -- because you already have a fundamental understanding of whatever it is you're working on.
    Beginner tutorials help get you that fundamental understanding and they have a super-low barrier to entry

  • @torbgoe
    @torbgoe 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I somehow also feel like it's a "problem" how software engineers are to a certain degree expected to be incredibly passionate about their job, to not only treat it like a job, but also have it as a hobby. I see how this expectation can be toxic for certain people.
    Most days, when I get home from work, what I want to do is to make food, go cycling, play a game, not write more code and design more software.

  • @computernerd8157
    @computernerd8157 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Companies also refuse to train as well, so maybe we should all become contracters because that how companies treat developer in general if you are entry level.

  • @FaisalKhan-iw6tw
    @FaisalKhan-iw6tw 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I watched first 7 mins of this so writing to not lose my thoughts.
    Prime is so. Out of depth in this one. He is completely right in his individual takes but is not getting the point the TH-camr is trying to make. This is india. You need to think in terms of sheer fuckin scale and supply and demand.
    There be snake salesmen

  • @georgehelyar
    @georgehelyar 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    There are some really common red flags i see when hiring, like only building mindless crud apis and hopping between jobs every 6 months, and it seems to be a cultural problem. People need to stop doing that, build interesting things, show that they can work on a variety of problems, show that they are interested in the job instead of interested in trying to hop the ladder etc. The number of awful applications that people send is insane and it makes the people doing the hiring just reject instantly without any remorse.

    • @darnaram
      @darnaram 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i think the issue is bad management and bad incentives for the employees, this only motivates people to leave the company as switching will anyway give them better salary than a promotion

    • @doriancerutti5331
      @doriancerutti5331 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      THIS, people build todo list, calculator, etc and think that’ll get them in the door. Then go complain how nobody is hiring😂 I thought this too until I built a complex crm and showcased it, I got hired pretty fast. Employers are looking for those BIG projects not 10 small ones

    • @TomAtkinson
      @TomAtkinson 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@doriancerutti5331 Nice. I like this. Spicy. That's why I built the AminoSee DNA visualisation. It converts DNA into an image. Technically useless and an art piece. I kinda forgot to polish it though so I dunno if it isn't broken how I left it oops. It's cos I got high. My first node CLI app is the truth of it.

    • @ferinzz
      @ferinzz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Not sure about engineers, but at least for the company i work for you can expect general support to take roughly 6 months to learn everything.
      An engineer jumping every few months is no good fit for anyone.

  • @kidmosey
    @kidmosey 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    wait, I'm supposed to be UPDATING my linkedin? I haven't touched it in the 10 years since I got my job.

  • @heeru379
    @heeru379 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    5:08
    Abdul Bari woke up,
    Chose to be a Hero,
    And left like nothing happened. ❤

  • @TheSimpleDev
    @TheSimpleDev 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Normally I agree with Prime, but when he said "You think you do but you don't" reminded me to much of Blizzards Allen Brack telling gamers they didn't want classic WoW with those exact same words... so the community continued to run Pirate servers for it for years. I think he would be surprised how many of us do watch advanced tutorials.

  • @umarrii
    @umarrii 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    First came across this through Theo and closed it after the opening line and Theo saying exactly in agreement. There's no way something like that can be done properly while still being relevant to everyone watching.
    They call out TH-camrs using money for views, yet they also assume that people watching the videos are all looking for jobs or work in the field, when many people are just interested in a technology or picking up a hobby.
    I only came across the tech TH-cam space recently and enjoyed Fireship's videos, learning a lot by drawing my interest due to his style and making me want to make stuff for myself. I'd hate if he suddenly tried to shove jobs down my throat. Like now I've been trying to make stuff, I consider getting Fireship Pro to support him as extra thanks for supplementing this interest that no one else could for me while also potentially allowing me to further that, but its really all about the want to support than the need as there's more than enough available for free.
    He's also very clear in his content when the topic of jobs is brought up too. For example, he'll talk about Svelte and how awesome it is but he still lets you know it's not good if you're looking to get hired because everyone hiring is looking for React. But it's fun, so here's Svelte, and so on..
    Load of waffle from me and idk if it makes sense but just thought i could share my experience as someone relatively new to the space.

  • @blipojones2114
    @blipojones2114 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    These dudes are flooding the internet since all the layoffs....like a dev tsunami

  • @paulramasco6769
    @paulramasco6769 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    No industry operates soley on a meritocracy. We'd all like that but from an early educational/work life we're taught to network because "It's not what you know but who you know". Of course, this is overly simplistic. Obviously it's a mixture. For some positions it is absolutely what you know but again, that's a mixed bag. I don't know about FAANG companies but as someone that been an electronic technician/engineer for the government for over 20 years with several certifications and degrees I've been passed over for positions by people with less than 5 years of experience (or no experience) and journalism degrees, if they even had one.

  • @M4AH1990
    @M4AH1990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    @33:00
    I agree. Fireship's tone has actually been more sarcastic about the whole "developers! be afraid of AI" thing.

  • @jvandervyver
    @jvandervyver 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Working for a US company as a non-US employee. It is 100% not a meritocracy. Unless the criteria for meritocracy is that you get promoted faster because you are located where your management is located, work fewer hours than the remote office and require everyone to work in your TZ. Then yes, meritocracy.
    Otherwise I can say with 100% confidence that the US software dev market is made up with people with highly inflated egos about their abilities compared to their counterparts outside of the US.

  • @TurtleKwitty
    @TurtleKwitty 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "This guy tim making a video gpt will replace programmers and then makes a short 'no they won't' thats a good arc" youre forgetting that shorts dont have nearly the same reach/audience as the video though. It's a veru different audience watching shorts, for a good arc something that was noteworthy enough to be frontpage of your media the retraction should be noteworthy enough of a frontpage of your media

    • @ThePrimeTimeagen
      @ThePrimeTimeagen  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You are absolutely correct in the sense that shorts do not have the same reach as long form, they typically have significantly larger reach potential

    • @TurtleKwitty
      @TurtleKwitty 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ThePrimeTimeagen They have higher numbers, but not in the same audiences as main videos about programming from what I've seen, I honestly don't know anyone actually jumping into dev that watches shorts

  • @ai-aniverse
    @ai-aniverse 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I feel so outta place because everything is mostly JS and webdev and I work in C++ and embedded.

  • @cariyaputta
    @cariyaputta 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Meta and beginner contents are always the low hanging fruits, the world needs more reaction and javascript tutorials. There are still the OG tech youtubers who have real contents, like Bo Qian or Javidx9.

  • @Short..
    @Short.. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Conflict of interest here, to keep short:
    Fellow content creator defending other content creators instead of attempting to be impartial, though fair as they are entitled to their own opinions.
    Does he do the same bad things mentioned in the video? No, key word: **defending**
    i'd agree with him on accountability, no one takes it on yt, they just continue to sell, then often demand or get upset at viewers, It's an unequal relationship.
    Do the viewers deserve to feel dissatisfied over free content is the real question.
    In the past i'd say no, but now with so many ads & elongated videos purely for view-time....... I'd argue people have a right to be dissatisfied of essentially being milked all so influencers can continue living the free TH-cam life-style.
    Everyone has to make a living that doesn't make TH-camrs any special & therefore excuse predatory behavior whether that is misleading people for views, shoving courses with false promises, or elongating videos for more viewtime. The latter has gotten really bad over the years, its a yt/western thing as it's something I've never seen on Chinese video platforms but most people don't notice the gradual change.
    I'll try to cope with the length of this reaction by saying this: maybe I'm too zoomer, & got used to coping with elongated intentional slow talking yters by speeding everything up! I watched this on 3x speed prime T_T

  • @evellior
    @evellior 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'd counter that the "no one wants advanced tutorials" is very much as untrue as the chat was saying, but it's that as you start to give more and more advanced advice and tutorials those things become more and more specific to a particular subfield. Eg: the advice to work on your portfolio applies to pretty much anyone interested in the field, but a video that gets into the weeds of what belongs in the service layer vs the data layer of an api server will only appeal to the fraction of your audience that understands what that means and is interested in backend development.

  • @cicerohellmann
    @cicerohellmann หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    "TH-camr" general advice is all a senior developer will tell you because we went trough it and that's how it works.

  • @electrified0
    @electrified0 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    On doing software engineering for the money - my take is that there are two layers. Layer 1 is the one many of us occupy, myself included. I work in the advertising space, which is something I am disinterested in to the point that I make an effort to block or pay my way past every ad I encounter. However, the problem solving of debugging issues, the art of designing scalable systems and the grunt work of implementation are all things I find interesting, which allows me to overlook my disinterest in the business. Where this hurts me is when the job is burocracy, since I'm unable to motivate myself to do a good job on paper pushing tasks to achieve something I don't particularly care about, but when it comes to code and architecture I always do my best to deliver the highest quality software to my ability. If I didn't find the technical work interesting, I could probably still get a job with a high salary but my work would not be high quality because I wouldn't go the extra mile when my paycheck is already secured.

  • @JustinDejong
    @JustinDejong หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't even code, but your content is entertaining, and when you said "Consider Communism? I did. No." had me sold as a fan.

  • @pyaehtetaung
    @pyaehtetaung หลายเดือนก่อน

    3:36 flip you are the best.

  • @morethanmello
    @morethanmello 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    29:07 You're totally correct, I left my job as a auto tech to make double the money working for AAA. 12hr/5 days a week changing tires on the freeway, changing batteries and fixing cars. Money was great until, they were putting our safety at risk, reduced our earnings and cut our staff. Now theirs no amount of money in the world that would make me care about the job. I love helping people but not at the sacrifice of my life.

  • @tiagodev5838
    @tiagodev5838 หลายเดือนก่อน

    TIL nail clippers cannot be used on a dinosaurus ❤️ I love this guy. I can relate to his defeat, I’ve been there!

  • @stephankwapis
    @stephankwapis 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Regret can be a weird ego thing. It’s telling yourself you’re so smart now if you had another chance you’d be amazing, but that’s probably not true, you’d just make different mistakes in new and exciting ways.

  • @valhalla_dev
    @valhalla_dev หลายเดือนก่อน

    A couple things, from a (much smaller) TH-camr's perspective:
    1) yes most youtubers are dishonest. When I say most, I mean by quantity. I would say most of the big names, at least in the english speaking space, are pretty honest. Fireship, Prime, Theo, WebDevCody, Tsoding, JBlow, Casey, they'll all tell you like it is. Frankly, the lying and game playing has diminished returns as your audience grows because you'll find more people will call you out on your bullshit.
    2) there aren't as many advanced tutorials because 1 - people won't watch them. I create content on malware development and there's a nosedive in viewership that occurs right as I start talking about the Windows API. and 2 - most advanced developers have learned how to learn and know they need to read the bare minimum about the problem they're trying to solve, and they go solve it. That's what Casey, Prime and JBlow are good at.
    3) you can blame TH-camrs all you want, but here's a flipped perspective: TH-camrs respond to what people will watch. That's their job, is to respond to the demands of their viewers based on the signals of viewership, watch time and likes. So you can blame TH-camrs, but perhaps some blame should be put on the fact that people click on videos with clickbait thumbnails and bullshit titles. Honestly, I get tired of folks complaining about clickbait when most people don't have the intellectual capacity to click on a video that doesn't have a cringe ass face in it. And yes, when you go to my channel, you'll see that I use them... because they work.
    4) I really wish folks would stop complaining so much about financial incentive. Like yes, TH-camrs will try to get you to buy things. There is absolutely a bad way to go about it (TechLead) and a better way to go about it: offering value in exchange for money. Nobody is walking up to you in your office saying "wow, you're only writing that code because you get paid to do it, so sad you won't work for free" so stop getting mad when TH-camrs are trying to sell a course. If they're ripping folks off, yeah, get pissed, but reacting negatively to the entire idea of a TH-camr trying to sell stuff is silly.
    Anyways... back to Rust I go. Good vid Prime

  • @ai-aniverse
    @ai-aniverse 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fireship is too tongue in cheek but I see how the nuance can be lost in translation perhaps.

  • @simple-eastner
    @simple-eastner 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    9:07 Stick around doesn't work that way when comes to Tech Job search. I was laid off in 2008 recession and LinkedIn was not that thing yet, but I had created my portfolio, bought a domain and used subdomains to show case my work, volunteered to update clean a 90s site of local bakery. Few months into 2009 recruiter would say to me: "you are looking for laasst 6months", "you might want to reduce your hourly rate", "why are you not getting interviews".... Strange, but employers/interviewers start to think if this guy is good, why is he in the job market for so long?

  • @RogerValor
    @RogerValor 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Maybe advanced tutorials is the wrong name, but there are channels, that do solid advanced overviews about certain topics, that I love like gold, as all they do is cover an entire topic, so that I can quickly check if I have understood all, or see if there is something inside, that helps me solve an advanced issue.

  • @teneshvignesan6227
    @teneshvignesan6227 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    ngl the thumbnails are getting cringey. keep it oldschool mate

  • @JohnSmith-ox3gy
    @JohnSmith-ox3gy หลายเดือนก่อน

    Didn't expect him to start handing out black pills. I feel bad for his experiences in the field and I think this experience will keep getting more common near term.

  • @_jovian
    @_jovian 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Calling fireship one of the worst perpetrators is crazy lol, bro is immune to sarcasm.

  • @AnuragSingh-om2wr
    @AnuragSingh-om2wr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The thing which pisses me of is that prime is saying from the perspective of a content creator, they should be allowed to make content, monetize it, sell something yada yada yada, but what is missing here is the consumer side, in india fear is prevalent when it comes to unemployment, and fear mongering is the way creators take advantage of people. Another thing he assumes is that people have the basic knowledge or ability to recognize scams but if you see, the people that have access to internet in india then you will realize, most of them come from a very poor background where surfing the internet is considered a skill in itself, and you expect them to have this ability to recognize patterns, most of the parents of 90s with poor background even fear using tech. fearing that they may get screwed.
    Really hoped that he would have looked more from the standpoint of the consumer instead of a content creator in this instance.
    Still love to listen to primes takes on specific tech

    • @AnalysisRenaissance
      @AnalysisRenaissance 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      But if you look at it like that, the guy in the video is also part of the problem, as some of his points demotivate people from viewing youtube which has enough content to build a career.
      He damages his viewers by tunnel visioning them and then points fault to people that go against his opinions. Fearmongering in his own way.
      Reality is not a safe haven where everything you think is correct, everything you disagree with is bad and harmful, that's why everyone should be allowed to make content, as most of what you think right now to be correct is actually just your delusions.
      This, of course, creates the entry barrier that you mention, but if a person is not willing to dig through TH-cam off all places (not even coding itself) then they may be simply not valuable enough for the industry.
      TLDR. Skill issue.

    • @isodoubIet
      @isodoubIet 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      People need to take responsibility for their own actions.

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      If you're so scared you won't get hired. Maybe it's not for u?

  • @joyboricua3721
    @joyboricua3721 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Mind that some companies say they pay relocation from another country but this sometimes has lent itself for some sort of human trafficking; they take your passport & hold you for work until they want.

  • @GreedoShot
    @GreedoShot 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    stefan mischook loves php, a video that just explains why it isn't used in a certain use case isn't a youtuber bashing php
    i get the feeling this guy doesn't really know anything about the people he's dragging, he just screenshotted a bunch of thumbnails he thought would make him look good

    • @isodoubIet
      @isodoubIet 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "Opinions are bad" the video
      Really, really weak.

  • @vsolyomi
    @vsolyomi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Now I really want to know where I fall on the Devin-Fireship spectrum...

  • @RogerValor
    @RogerValor 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Whenever someone contradicts himself in a presentation about the 1% at the same time existing and not, he tries to produce false humility, bending space to at the same time appeal to all, but still ensure he is considered at least among the 1% being right. It is interesting as a paradox, as I think it grows out of envy, and forms a cognitive dissonance, and in turn, will resonate with anyone who shares that exact same dissonance, and therefore envy or fear. Which I do not judge, btw., I think we were all there at some point, I visit that place frequently.

  • @dreamingacacia
    @dreamingacacia 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like the idea of "don't make hyper transactional contents". It's much deeper the more you think about it.

  • @AScribblingTurtle
    @AScribblingTurtle 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    - When it comes to advanced tutorials and courses on TH-cam, I Agree. Unless you search them out specifically, you are most likely not watching them. YT lives from "Entertainment" no matter how hard you slam that "Education" category in your TH-cam-Studio.
    If someone wishes to learn, they'll get annoyed by interruptions through unfunny jokes. If they wish to get entertained, they'll get bored by dry education.
    That does not mean, that there can't be great advanced tutorials here though.
    I got my Java (and by extension, OOP) Start thanks the TheNewBoston Channel and their, now 14 Years old, extensive course on Java.
    But, with how much TH-cams priorities have changed over time, a course like this would probably never be lucrative to make today.
    - Fireships AI "Phase" (in big air-quotes) was an annoying with how much he leaned into it, but I've never read his "AI will come for you Jobs" statements as sincere.
    I guess this boils down to Humor and Sarcasm being hard to read on the Internet.
    If you don't know his content, than his dry type of humor could read as fearmongering.

  • @tashima42
    @tashima42 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It’s pretty easy to have the perspective that it is a meritocracy and it works pretty well when you are an american guy with a CS degree from an American university. Even being relatively poor in the US already puts you in an incredible advantage over almost everyone else

  • @AkiiiMatcha
    @AkiiiMatcha 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I usually watch videos about stuff like language design, penetration testing or videos in which ppl are building compilers and stuff I think that’s fairly advanced

    • @TheOriginalBlueKirby
      @TheOriginalBlueKirby 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes very advanced to watch someone else build something

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Watching someone else build something isn't an advanced tutorial

    • @AkiiiMatcha
      @AkiiiMatcha 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Trying to grasp the concept of what they are building in its entire complexity is what I am taking about. It’s like listing to a good piece of music, just randomly consuming these videos won’t get you anywhere.

    • @TheOriginalBlueKirby
      @TheOriginalBlueKirby 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@AkiiiMatcha It's exactly like listening to good music. It might entertain you and give you some tingles, but you're not the one performing.

    • @AkiiiMatcha
      @AkiiiMatcha 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@TheOriginalBlueKirby it’s exactly like listening to good music, you are trying to understand what people thought when creating it trying to understand its intricacies to grow and hopefully create equally meaningful experiences. Of course if you are just aimlessly consuming the content then you are wasting your time, but that’s not what I am talking about.

  • @MrXaxen
    @MrXaxen 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There's the problem with the whole senior "i don't know what i'm doing" shtick where you know enough to be effective, even when you might do some things wrong, but you're so good at doing it wrong it takes no time at all giving the impression that you in fact, know what you're doing. When you know enough, you might not know, what you don't know and should know to be better. It's a conundrum that really can only be solved by exposure and experience.

  • @M4AH1990
    @M4AH1990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    @37:38 I believe he's talking about the fact some youtubers would be so quick to catch the trends without analysing it first. Especially, if they provide their opinions with unwavering certainty.
    And I kinda agree. It's okay to make honest mistakes. That's only human. It's not okay, however, to make doom-and-loom videos just to cash views on the trends, and there've been a lot of that.

  • @TheAndiKurz
    @TheAndiKurz 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    15:00 the main reason why I wouln't watch advanced totorials is, because why would I listen to someone explain it to me in 1 hour, what I can read in 5 minutes documentation?
    And because you are advanced you know already how to learn and that is just try it out until it works!!

  • @TinBane
    @TinBane 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There’s so many things that go into getting a job. How you interview. What your attitude is. What the culture fit is. Primeagen would be a bad hire for a “do what your boss says and no freedom” role. I know people who somehow thrive in that.
    I’ve hired tons of devs from different backgrounds. There’s no secret. Going to uni X, memorising sorting algorithms, etc. I want someone who will turn up, who is smart enough, and has a good attitude. Someone who will be honest and own fuck ups, and want to try interesting things. But I’m hiring for where I work. That’s culture.

  • @Cuptial-ev9tb
    @Cuptial-ev9tb 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    lol bottom 1% is named Devin. This is so satisfying coming from Twitter

  • @danielmajer1648
    @danielmajer1648 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Or maybe the general incompetence in the industry has grown so much below the average expectation baseline, that now any decent developer look like a mfing warrior

  • @khubaib-binehsan
    @khubaib-binehsan หลายเดือนก่อน

    And here is bro understanding both his and your context equally

  • @sheriffderek
    @sheriffderek 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Fireship lied to me - and now I can't be in the top 1% so I'm going to give up now bye.

    • @sheriffderek
      @sheriffderek 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      (also pretty sure he was serious about techlead being a satire)

  • @gammalgris2497
    @gammalgris2497 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The advanced stuff is there. But most will not watch it. Just look for the teacher or university professor putting up lectures and theory and stuff. There are also people you can watch on TH-cam or twitch showing and explaining their trade/ job (i.e. showing how to make a game with a game engine, programming, building hardware, etc.). It's just special interest. It's nothing with mass appeal.

  • @climate_sentry_123
    @climate_sentry_123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    there's a niche of videos about advanced topics that glance over how something is done, but they don't give you experience of how to do something - that's what you obtain by practice

  • @Karurosagu
    @Karurosagu หลายเดือนก่อน

    Money is the weirdest motivator ever
    When you slow down because you earned a lot of it, that is when the burnouts start happening

  • @sonnetsoftheapocalypse
    @sonnetsoftheapocalypse 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    His context may not be targeted to international tech youtubers more so with Indian tech youtubers since the scene is different there.

    • @bigpod
      @bigpod 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      problem is he is mostly naming international youtubers

    • @ghandiwon
      @ghandiwon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Fireship is my favorite Indian tech youtuber

  • @AayushChaudharyGames
    @AayushChaudharyGames 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For the people starting out, you need to realise that there always will be people better than you.
    And as a beginner, you can't become 99%tile when you 'begin'.
    To become one, you have to stick for long enough ans branch out to become a category yourself.
    (this came from me recently joining gym, i cant become the most jacked dude in the gym in a month, thinking of competition will be stupid, over time i will have achieved my goal that is to be strong and good)

  • @nevokrien95
    @nevokrien95 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I feel like sosen like videos have a very important role in learning.
    They are not about hownto solve that 1 specific problem. They show you how to think about your code. And also what good code looks like.
    Its very opionated which is good it gives u a diffrent view on things.

  • @harrys5038
    @harrys5038 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    my up next is Prime's "I spent 18 Months using Rust and Regret It". Okay Mr. "I wouldn't say I regret it"...

  • @thekwoka4707
    @thekwoka4707 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I don't want advanced tutorials. I mostly don't want tutorials at all. But something like zero 2 prod in Rust is great. ITs not advanced tutorials. It's a high quality overview that touches the "why what how" from start to finish quickly.

  • @tobozon4161
    @tobozon4161 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I can’t believe in a niche where you can do anything in the world yourself alone people are complaining about jobs or carriers.

  • @mattymattffs
    @mattymattffs 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I watch quite a bit of advanced content around c#. Mostly on how to reimplement certain features to gain a better understanding

  • @DominikZogg
    @DominikZogg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I came from PHP 12 years experience and switched to Typescript about 4 years ago (I still maintain PHP libraries atm). I prefer Typescript (import/export, FP, Typesystem) but i have no reason to hate on PHP. And when i read about PHP does not scale i laugh, cause they seem not to understand there are application server projects for PHP as well and then its faster than node for example.

    • @tasheemhargrove9650
      @tasheemhargrove9650 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      When people say PHP doesn’t scale, they’re not comparing it to node.js. They’re comparing it to Java, C# and Go. PHP isn’t faster than those languages and those languages have an entire ecosystem built around enterprise systems and micro-services.

    • @DominikZogg
      @DominikZogg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@tasheemhargrove9650Java would be faster when not using Spring or other heavy frameworks.

    • @DominikZogg
      @DominikZogg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We destroyed Java services with node very successfully.

  • @seancondon5572
    @seancondon5572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1:06:45 - yeah? Well if you move zig, you know what you doing. FOR GREAT JUSTICE!