as a 10 year senior dev i appreciate the time you have taken to share your knowledge with the community. much appreciated. keep crushing it but remember the value of breaks and recovery. take care and god bless.
Aff, finally found a non trendy channel, from a real person that had real experiences, knows what he’s talking about and give practical advice. Subbed. Much obliged Rahul, blessings for you.
Rahul, you are still an incredibly inspiring role model for all of us. Your attitude, persistence, perspective, and intelligence are a great example, and I wish you all the best at Taro. Your and Alex's videos, posts, wisdom, and forum have all helped me countless times
I think System Design (or more simply writing good Specifications) will become more and more important. AIs are already are able to write "atomic" pieces (unit tests, fuzz tests, scaffolding code, case analysis based on data-type), and I think engineers will just get more time to "explore the space of solutions"
This is great! I am not a SWE but an ML practitioner and what you said is applicable for our careers as well, including interview prep! Always have been a Taro fan, Thanks for sharing Rahul
Thank you for sharing your experiences and valuable takeaways! You truly are a force multiplier the way you’re helping all of us out, and I appreciate your humble attitude despite your massive success.
The thing about getting interviews & passing interviews being 2 different things (37:07) is sth I figured out on my own. Good to see that I am going in right direction 😄
It was a great exercise (and really fun) to summarize learnings from every chapter of my career. I was racing against sunset at the end of the day haha.
I've just subscribed to you and would definitely share it with others as well. Its been an year since I started in my software engineering career and this video is a great start for me to begin things with. Even though its an year, I still feel like I am navigating in a sea still figuring out what to learn as still there's a lot to learn. So For Example, There are so many things which I feel to Learn like LLD, Design Patterns, or AWS etc. Can you tell me one thing like I feel there's a lot to learn and see there are many things on my plate and I fear I might take a lot of time to learn all of this. How would I tackle this situation ? Iam very thankful if you can advice me on this!!
Great video and I agree with everything except work life balance, if everyone on your team is working 60 hours and you decide you only want to do 40 then you're gonna get pipped, you can always work more than your team but you can't really work less
Using AI tools is great, but you need to understand the code that's generated, and what the tradeoffs are. Too many junior engineers are blindly copying AI generated code and not really learning anything.
I still wondering why he still hasn’t reached million subs at this point. I have exactly 2.5 years as backend engineer and I will say I took all her tips and tricks for him . There are no contents close to what you are sharing. Thanks a lot
Rahul bhai nobody is giving me a job. I don't come from engineering background but I know a programming, building websites and mainly machine learning. I taught these things to myself in past years now that i started applying I am not even getting any response for even pre-screening 😢... interview is different thing but man it sucks. Does engineering degree matter? What are they looking for
I really liked how you referenced a vital reading material from patio11 which I otherwise wouldn't have stumbled upon. Also: This video will most probably be my number one reason to give taro a try so keep up the good work!
15 years of Software engineering, and no insights about networking, parallelism, concurrency, scale. Has it come down to only interviews. These big giants became due to novel and innovative thinking. THis culture of interview-type-engineers would not push engineering or humanity forward.
as a 10 year senior dev i appreciate the time you have taken to share your knowledge with the community. much appreciated. keep crushing it but remember the value of breaks and recovery. take care and god bless.
Aff, finally found a non trendy channel, from a real person that had real experiences, knows what he’s talking about and give practical advice.
Subbed. Much obliged Rahul, blessings for you.
Didn't know you failed in any interviews.. always thought you were born to crack interviews
I've failed more interviews than I've passed
🤣
Yeah. He failed the google ceo interviews
Nobody is born with any capabilities, and talents could be extremely beneficial, but it would have come with continuous practice.
Amazing advice! I add my 14 years to your 15, absolutely bang on!
Rahul, you are still an incredibly inspiring role model for all of us. Your attitude, persistence, perspective, and intelligence are a great example, and I wish you all the best at Taro.
Your and Alex's videos, posts, wisdom, and forum have all helped me countless times
I think System Design (or more simply writing good Specifications) will become more and more important. AIs are already are able to write "atomic" pieces (unit tests, fuzz tests, scaffolding code, case analysis based on data-type), and I think engineers will just get more time to "explore the space of solutions"
AI is still pretty bad at writing tests lol. At least that is my experience with gpt
@khaihoang7420 I've generating test cases and auto-hotfixing a test-suite using cursor Composer. works well for ~10k line codebase.
Thanks for making all of these videos, every video you put out is definitely worth watching
Thank you 🙏🏽 worked hard on this one
The insights about learning, experimentation, and creativity are so so valuable
I just joined a new company and i really needed to hear this, like seriously every second is gold
Love the good honest advice, thank you for making this!
This is a really great video. I particularly enjoyed the section on networking and leading with kindness!
One of the best video I have watched in a long long time about Software. Well done Boss
You are legend boss🎉
he is both indeed
Solid gold. Thank you Rahul.
Thank you so much for putting a tone of real-life experience out there, it’s so valuable to anyone at the beginning of their careers 🙏
Rahul I'm not whether you gonna read this comment, BUT YOU ARE RARE LEGEND.
You are an inspiration to anyone.
aww shucks. thank you
This is great! I am not a SWE but an ML practitioner and what you said is applicable for our careers as well, including interview prep! Always have been a Taro fan, Thanks for sharing Rahul
production quality goes crazy on this one
Thank you for sharing your experiences and valuable takeaways! You truly are a force multiplier the way you’re helping all of us out, and I appreciate your humble attitude despite your massive success.
thanks man! it helps me alot!!
The thing about getting interviews & passing interviews being 2 different things (37:07) is sth I figured out on my own. Good to see that I am going in right direction 😄
This is one of the most common ways I've seen people waste time -- prematurely jumping to phase 2 when they're in phase 1
Thanks already in my watchlist for this weekend 🫡
Excellent video! Thank you for sharing. I'll have to check out Taro
Great content Rahul, keep it up!
Thank you for this video. Your experience gives me hope
This is a banger, thanks Rahul! 💙
Rahul locked in for this one 🔥
It was a great exercise (and really fun) to summarize learnings from every chapter of my career.
I was racing against sunset at the end of the day haha.
this the best Ive heard from you after learning android development from you. Thanks, waiting for more
Thank you very much!
since I am following you, Each video of yours really add value and by each video making me more hungry to learn more and more
Thank you so much brother ❤
About 40 minutes in, this video is crazy good so far
I've just subscribed to you and would definitely share it with others as well.
Its been an year since I started in my software engineering career and this video is a great start for me to begin things with.
Even though its an year, I still feel like I am navigating in a sea still figuring out what to learn as still there's a lot to learn.
So For Example, There are so many things which I feel to Learn like LLD, Design Patterns, or AWS etc.
Can you tell me one thing like I feel there's a lot to learn and see there are many things on my plate and I fear I might take a lot of time to learn all of this. How would I tackle this situation ?
Iam very thankful if you can advice me on this!!
a hidden gem
that tilted outlet on the bottom left is killing me lol
hey Rahul just wanted to let you know that you are doing amazing work on this channel. Keep it up mate.
Hi Rahul, love your content! If you were a new grad starting in today’s job market, would you choose iOS or Android development, and why?
I'm not sure I'd pick either :P AI is just powerful now and will likely change how we develop software, I'd try to dive deeper into that
Great video and I agree with everything except work life balance, if everyone on your team is working 60 hours and you decide you only want to do 40 then you're gonna get pipped, you can always work more than your team but you can't really work less
How you feel about using AI models like chat GBT to help students debug quickly and build projects?
how much help is too much help?
Using AI tools is great, but you need to understand the code that's generated, and what the tradeoffs are.
Too many junior engineers are blindly copying AI generated code and not really learning anything.
@@RahulPandeyrkpcan’t agree with this enough
And before GPT (and still today) the same thing happened with StackOverflow and tutorials like Rahul organized for us around 4:15
I still wondering why he still hasn’t reached million subs at this point.
I have exactly 2.5 years as backend engineer and I will say I took all her tips and tricks for him .
There are no contents close to what you are sharing.
Thanks a lot
Thanks gang
13:16 Don’t scare me.
rtfm and make something with what you learn
The work-life balance section makes me think I don't want to work at amazon or meta haha.
I would rather be a hobbyist foss dev than working in an industry
Rahul bhai nobody is giving me a job. I don't come from engineering background but I know a programming, building websites and mainly machine learning. I taught these things to myself in past years now that i started applying I am not even getting any response for even pre-screening 😢... interview is different thing but man it sucks. Does engineering degree matter? What are they looking for
Bro @Rahul change your thumbnail picture lmao
how old is bro he look 23 whats the skinscare routine lol
Good salary skin routine
Money?
I am sure its just diet and healthy lifestyle.
I like your T-shirt
one of the best corporate t-shirts I've received 👕
13:17 Not very much longer it seems
Bhai, I love you so much. From India 🇮🇳. Love you bhai. You teach so amazing that I can highly understand what you're teaching, man.
I really liked how you referenced a vital reading material from patio11 which I otherwise wouldn't have stumbled upon. Also: This video will most probably be my number one reason to give taro a try so keep up the good work!
A 1337 engineer has terrible hand writing ;)
15 years of Software engineering, and no insights about networking, parallelism, concurrency, scale. Has it come down to only interviews.
These big giants became due to novel and innovative thinking. THis culture of interview-type-engineers would not push engineering or humanity forward.
Hey Mudda!
There are online courses for that on Coursera, Udacity, Udemy, etc. Textbooks, etc. I found the video very helpful
😂😂😂 matlab kuch bhi.
LoL
Bro made $800k but can't get the apple pencil 😂
I guess CA is taking too many taxes
What do people refer to fellow engineers as “they”. Seems a bit odd to listen to
it's shorter than saying "he or she"
@AniketSingh-nx4ds its correct grammer.
@@adityach7 just use either of he or she. He does know the gender of the engineer l suppose
@@AniketSingh-nx4ds why use one when you can include both