Took notes because I, too, have the memory of a bumble bee lol. For reference... 5:30 - calendars - appointments, dates, etc. 5:45 - readdle's calendar app - has good weekly view 6:33 - project management tools - current and upcoming projects, tasks 6:40 - clickup - can add custom fields, link tasks together, flexible for many use cases; good for using in "sprint style" way, can see more easily if too much is loaded onto future 7:42 trello - 4 column board: "this week", "in progress", "DONE!!", "backlog" (!! -- that one's perfect: just the one I needed to add lol); labels, shifting categories, simple tool, good for simple projects 8:56 - notes - catch-all for all of the above, plus ideas, thoughts, etc.; for when not near computer or not in the mood to detailed sort something in yet 9:22 - analog notebook - flexible: can draw, write anything you want, no lines or rules to the notebook; hodge podge, anything goes can be less pressure than rigid "u gotta do xyz" 10:15 - dropbox paper - collab doc writing like google docs; ease of use; great for brain dump -- type faster than write; easy and pretty to link and share 11:16 - siri - apple and privacy; reminders mostly: "hey siri remind me to xyz" while on your mind means less likely to drop something
I use Google Calendar on my phone and laptop. I use Google keep for digital notes and a notebook for analog notes, steps in a task etc. I have a journal for my thoughts. Another notebook for my daily task organization and habit tracking.
I use 5 tools: - Google Calendar: I use it to time block my entire day. Every night, I go over my next 2 day, adjusting, planning and/or getting things ready. - Trello: For in-depth project management. More specifically, for task management of projects. - Physical notebook: It is for a lot of things. (Not-so-)Daily diaries, sketching ideas, brain dump, etc. - Notion: My favorite of the bunch. Here I have lists of books I want to read with their genres, authors, number of pages... I also have: a more organized and structured brain dump (using my own twist of the Zettelkasten technique); overall overviews and wikis of projects; wish lists; more fleshed out ideas; travel planning; and so on and on. - Any do: I use it like a personal and miscellaneous to do list. Things like, "schedule an appointment with dentist", "buy groceries", "cleanup downloads folder", "cleanup closet"... [EXTRA] - This is not a "physical" tool, more like a "mental" one. I learned from CGP Grey a mental tool called "Theming". So, every Sunday I set a mini-theme for my week and re-evaluate my overall "life" theme. I still feel this isn't enough but I'm willing to bet that's because I'm not following through with all this hahaha
i love your videos! youre so inspiring, especially for me, being a woman in tech as well haha!! i recently started the sad boyz podcast and i heard the episodes you did with jarvis and jordan and i loved them as well! 💕
I like the way you are dancing or (saying more accurately) waving your hands in front of the screen during your presentation on organizing things :) BTW, offloading is indeed crucial to maintain a peaceful mind. I'm rather loose on making schedules, but not putting in too many things in a week helps me a lot. I make a lot of transparent paper folders and indexed (believe me, the collation is in Japanese, あいうえお順) ISO A4-sized envelopes for saving a lot of projects simultaneously and putting a lot of post-it notes and many kinds of pieces of papers there.
I am using an excel file named as a simple daily activity tracker to organise my daily activities where I listed down my daily tasks which is needed to complete. When I am working on a specific task then I keep it as progress state. At that moment other stuffs hold pending. If I can complete a task then I mark it as complete state. Today I have been familiar with some new tools by listening you. From Tomorrow I will bring these tools into my phone and laptop. Thank you for introducing these incredible tools to us.
میں صرف یہ کہنا چاہتا ہوں ، آپ کا شکریہ! I'm your subscriber. As an computer science student, I like your channel because it focuses on the social life and challenges in software industry. For a few weeks i got distracted and got depressed and anxious about my future. Today i watched your video and I'm feeling refreshed and in controll. I just want to say, Thank You!
Thank you so much for sharing your organization systems! As university student, I use Google calendar for scheduling events, Google keep for simple notes and some casual tasks, and for school I use Power Planner (I like to make a division between school and personal life). I like to keep things simple and I don't need more than that, but I am considering your applications for the future 😁
I'm starting with my first semester soon and I feel kind of nervous about it. Did you feel at any point like you were overwhelmed with studying or just your schedule in general?
@@robinschoeppner I definitely feel overwhelmed, specially in university with online classes, but with some organization, I feel more productive and I am able to get things done in time. You should watch Mayuko's streamings on Twitch, with Pomodoro method maybe you can feel more relaxed while still working.
I'm in therapy for anxiety working in tech, too. We are so much alike. I set rules for notebooks, too. Then, end up writing a bunch of nonsense in the same notebook. We are probably both A type personalities that like to be in control of things.
Yessss I love clickup for organising my work. It's so much more customizable than trello, asana and the Microsoft version. Plus they're constantly (almost weekly) making updates based on what users want!
Im constantly reorganizing my GTD system as i have to manage my ADHD was using taskwarrior on the CLI for a lot of my tasks and now im fully sold on time blocking on iCalendar, siri reminders like you are (since i can do it anywhere any time and its so easy), and for all documents, videos, articles, papers to read i use raindrop.io for my sole collection point and then i have the free reader app from the appstore for all of my RSS feeds that if i like them, ill move to raindrop. then i process my collected items and put them into my zettelkasten system in Obsidian :) hacking on these workflows is so fun, but its hard to rein in and stick with something that consistently allows you to actually execute on your work
I use the Calendar from Microsoft Outlook to keep myself organised. Glad to see from your video that there are better ones out there. It's more or less my modern day equivalent of a homework diary that I used for Secondary School. I would not mid one that would interact between an Android Smart Phone, a Windows 10 Desktop PC and an Apple ipad. I will run a search for the organisers you suggested to see if one of your apps does the job. It would be handy to have it linked between devices, so that whenever I am on the move, I know what I need to do. Other daft things I do is keep a series of old envelopes and write on them what I need to do the next day the night before, set my alarm on my phone early and stick the envelope on top of the phone so that when I wake up in the morning, the envelope is the first thing my hand touches and reminds me if I need to be somewhere or do something.
This is a pretty cool video. The way you show how you organize your life feels very simple and straightforward. But the video has a lot of awesome tips and tools. Awesome content.
I love this! Thank you for sharing. I am still amazed that you can multi-task on SO MANY THINGS. I am hoping getting a bit more organization and workflow into my own life can help me balance more projects in my personal time. Again, thanks for sharing - I love the quality of your videos.
So openly expressing your vulnerabilities, Oh you seem so relatable I don't know if I should say this, you seem a bit stressed about work like at 6:35 Don't worry Mayuko, if you feel somethings not right, it'll be right in time. Let time do it's thing. Meditate, it helps Thus video was 3 months ago, I hope you are better now
Great video I've been needing some organization in my life. Trying to balance a full time job teaching myself to code and everything else. Just a idea you should make a discord server I don't know of any small coding servers yet
Quick note 1. Calendar 2. Project management tools( click-up and trello) 3. Note (notebook and dropbox-paper) 4. Siri ?????? Thank @mayuko, i love this video so much!
Currently I’m using Evernote for free but it is glad to know about drop box paper!! Mayuko’s video is very suitable for my English listening skill. So, thank you!!
Hey mayuko! I'd actually love to see your thoughts on if college rankings actually matter in the CS & Tech industry. Is this something incoming people in tech should consider in making college choices? Do college rankings actually affect job prospects?
You are highly organised and those were some great tips ! I mostly use One-Note / Pen paper to try keep myself organised -- I'm still at the beginning phase of work ( 6 months exp. ) and don't maintain a calendar but I think I should start on that too. One question how do you decide to note things down digitally / physically using pen-paper ? Like when or how do you decide to switch between the two -- I mostly clutter up my one note with digital notes and have to go back to physically sorting them out.
Have you heard of Notion? I suspect it might take away the need for clickup and dropbox paper entirely. Extremely versatile, though there is a bit of a learning curve
Hey! nice video, i have one question. How to keep focused and disciplinate yourself to keep your organization style? If you have tools to remeber stuff, i always forget that i have tools to forbid me to forget
Hi mayuko, just some suggestions for your videos. I think it will be better to add more b-roll kind of footages in between rather than sitting and talking. Also i personally love when you move around and do some stuffs rather than idle talk❤️
Hey Mayuko,. I am a 15 year old aspiring coder. I have looked into software engineering and computer science, and I think SE is more my style. That being said, I don't know how to start. I thought I should just start learning Python right now so that I might not need to go to college (I've read that apparently tech companies like Google, Facebook, etc. don't care about degrees anymore), but after watching a few videos some people who were already in the profession said that you don't even need any knowledge of the coding language you are going to be using - just needing to be able to learn it fast was important... So that being said, should I even worry about learning to code? Should I worry about going to college (if I started coding right now) or just go to a bootcamp to get an edge? And lastly, I've seen many people say that I should create a website of my projects, is that a good idea? Thank you for the help. p.s. - love your vids, keep up the great work :)
While I'm not Mayuko, I still think I can offer some advice on the topic. College is a great way to learn programming, but it's not the only way. As you pointed out, many companies no longer list a degree as a pre-req. However, if you do not go to college, you will need to learn many topics that would be covered in college courses. Mainly data structures and algorithms, along with a few others depending on what type of programming you'll be doing. You are correct that you do not need to know the programming language to get a job, but as you said, you need to be know how to learn a programming language fast, and that only comes with experience. You absolutely need to learn how to program. I went to college, not a bootcamp, so I can't speak intelligently on them. That being said, good programmers do not become good by attending a bootcamp or going to college. Good programmers become good by constantly learning new things and practicing. Going to a bootcamp or even attending college is not enough. You need to practice. This is just my opinion, but don't worry about a website. When you get close to the point where you're looking for a job, you should start putting projects in a git repository. I wouldn't worry about that now, because git is a whole other beast and can be relatively complicated. Bottom line: start programming. There is no secret to becoming a developer. You need to put in the work and practice. Python is a great language to start with. Just download it and start writing code. Since you will need to program a lot, pick some projects that you really enjoy, and work on them in your free time. Pick a relatively small project first and solve it! Google and Stack Overflow are your friend. As a side note based on my jaded experience, don't post questions on stack overflow. Try to find people who've already asked the question. People on that website are elitist and look down on people trying to get into the wonderful world of programming. Have fun and never get discouraged! Learning to code is one of the most rewarding experiences!
From my experience, I don't think you need a tech degree for most general office or at home programming jobs. Data Science is one of those programming jobs that it would help if you were good with Calculus, but other then that you can code just about anywhere without a degree. Tech degrees are good for if you don't know exactly what you want to do with computers, or if you just want to know a little about everything. My school didn't really have more than 5 hard-core coding courses out of a total of about 40 courses. What we did cover were things like virtual machines and networking. Degrees are great for networking/security, sys-admin, and hardware-building types of jobs for large companies. I feel like I've wasted a ton of hours learning how 1s and 0s make colors tbh. I started learning C++ when I was about 15, and this allowed me to shoot ahead in college and take more classes at once. Highly recommend learning Python or C# over C++ though.
Anyone have any advice for a university student (Economics - can't switch to CompSci) wanting an internship as a back-end software engineer? Have 2 years left at uni and i've been teaching myself code in my spare time. I can currently work with Java, Python, R, SQL and do not have any relevent work experience. Should I freelance, learn more languages, join hackathons etc.. ? Cheers!
Took notes because I, too, have the memory of a bumble bee lol. For reference...
5:30 - calendars - appointments, dates, etc.
5:45 - readdle's calendar app - has good weekly view
6:33 - project management tools - current and upcoming projects, tasks
6:40 - clickup - can add custom fields, link tasks together, flexible for many use cases; good for using in "sprint style" way, can see more easily if too much is loaded onto future
7:42 trello - 4 column board: "this week", "in progress", "DONE!!", "backlog" (!! -- that one's perfect: just the one I needed to add lol); labels, shifting categories, simple tool, good for simple projects
8:56 - notes - catch-all for all of the above, plus ideas, thoughts, etc.; for when not near computer or not in the mood to detailed sort something in yet
9:22 - analog notebook - flexible: can draw, write anything you want, no lines or rules to the notebook; hodge podge, anything goes can be less pressure than rigid "u gotta do xyz"
10:15 - dropbox paper - collab doc writing like google docs; ease of use; great for brain dump -- type faster than write; easy and pretty to link and share
11:16 - siri - apple and privacy; reminders mostly: "hey siri remind me to xyz" while on your mind means less likely to drop something
the best organizational tool i ever had was the planner you got in middle school and high school
yo my planners back in the day were PROLIFIC
*Mayuko: ”How I Organize My Life”*
Me: I can’t even remember what time my Zoom classes are
Well that's why we have calendars haha. It felt so bad to put personal stuff on my calendar but damn it was useful lol
I use Google Calendar on my phone and laptop. I use Google keep for digital notes and a notebook for analog notes, steps in a task etc. I have a journal for my thoughts. Another notebook for my daily task organization and habit tracking.
I use 5 tools:
- Google Calendar: I use it to time block my entire day. Every night, I go over my next 2 day, adjusting, planning and/or getting things ready.
- Trello: For in-depth project management. More specifically, for task management of projects.
- Physical notebook: It is for a lot of things. (Not-so-)Daily diaries, sketching ideas, brain dump, etc.
- Notion: My favorite of the bunch. Here I have lists of books I want to read with their genres, authors, number of pages... I also have: a more organized and structured brain dump (using my own twist of the Zettelkasten technique); overall overviews and wikis of projects; wish lists; more fleshed out ideas; travel planning; and so on and on.
- Any do: I use it like a personal and miscellaneous to do list. Things like, "schedule an appointment with dentist", "buy groceries", "cleanup downloads folder", "cleanup closet"...
[EXTRA] - This is not a "physical" tool, more like a "mental" one. I learned from CGP Grey a mental tool called "Theming". So, every Sunday I set a mini-theme for my week and re-evaluate my overall "life" theme.
I still feel this isn't enough but I'm willing to bet that's because I'm not following through with all this hahaha
i love your videos! youre so inspiring, especially for me, being a woman in tech as well haha!! i recently started the sad boyz podcast and i heard the episodes you did with jarvis and jordan and i loved them as well! 💕
NO BINDERS................. Leslie Knope and Amy Santiago want to know your location!
*NOTION MAYUKO NOTION*
Notion gang rise up B)
for real
I like the way you are dancing or (saying more accurately) waving your hands in front of the screen during your presentation on organizing things :)
BTW, offloading is indeed crucial to maintain a peaceful mind. I'm rather loose on making schedules, but not putting in too many things in a week helps me a lot.
I make a lot of transparent paper folders and indexed (believe me, the collation is in Japanese, あいうえお順) ISO A4-sized envelopes for saving a lot of projects simultaneously and putting a lot of post-it notes and many kinds of pieces of papers there.
I am using an excel file named as a simple daily activity tracker to organise my daily activities where I listed down my daily tasks which is needed to complete. When I am working on a specific task then I keep it as progress state. At that moment other stuffs hold pending. If I can complete a task then I mark it as complete state. Today I have been familiar with some new tools by listening you. From Tomorrow I will bring these tools into my phone and laptop. Thank you for introducing these incredible tools to us.
میں صرف یہ کہنا چاہتا ہوں ، آپ کا شکریہ!
I'm your subscriber. As an computer science student,
I like your channel because it focuses on the social life and challenges in software industry.
For a few weeks i got distracted and got depressed and anxious about my future.
Today i watched your video and I'm feeling refreshed and in controll.
I just want to say, Thank You!
💖💖💖 you got this fam
Thank you so much for sharing your organization systems!
As university student, I use Google calendar for scheduling events, Google keep for simple notes and some casual tasks, and for school I use Power Planner (I like to make a division between school and personal life). I like to keep things simple and I don't need more than that, but I am considering your applications for the future 😁
I'm starting with my first semester soon and I feel kind of nervous about it. Did you feel at any point like you were overwhelmed with studying or just your schedule in general?
@@robinschoeppner I definitely feel overwhelmed, specially in university with online classes, but with some organization, I feel more productive and I am able to get things done in time. You should watch Mayuko's streamings on Twitch, with Pomodoro method maybe you can feel more relaxed while still working.
Are you majoring CS? And where are you from?
I've been getting into Airtable over the past few days and it is quickly becoming the way that I organize almost everything.
I created a whole Trello board for our wedding planning late last year and we haven't looked at it for almost 6 months now coz of this pandemic 😭
these videos with the nice music in the background and chill talks are always super calming. thank u mayuko
Nice video!
I use Notion, Things and Calendar (the one in spark too :D). I also use my analog notebook, which I love
I have been watching her video's regularly now almost lol
I like that since she's my role model
I love how your videos are so calming and give positive energy. Love you. ❤️
I'm in therapy for anxiety working in tech, too. We are so much alike. I set rules for notebooks, too. Then, end up writing a bunch of nonsense in the same notebook. We are probably both A type personalities that like to be in control of things.
You're a huge inspiration for me. God bless you
sprint planning for your content creator life... I... LOVE IT
Yessss I love clickup for organising my work. It's so much more customizable than trello, asana and the Microsoft version. Plus they're constantly (almost weekly) making updates based on what users want!
I love your videos! You inspired me to be a Software Engineer and to start learning coding. ❤️❤️
Really love your vids, so informative, cozy and serene, dont stop making them.
enjoyed this video while sipping on tea.
Im constantly reorganizing my GTD system as i have to manage my ADHD
was using taskwarrior on the CLI for a lot of my tasks and now im fully sold on time blocking on iCalendar,
siri reminders like you are (since i can do it anywhere any time and its so easy),
and for all documents, videos, articles, papers to read i use raindrop.io for my sole collection point
and then i have the free reader app from the appstore for all of my RSS feeds that if i like them, ill move to raindrop.
then i process my collected items and put them into my zettelkasten system in Obsidian :)
hacking on these workflows is so fun, but its hard to rein in and stick with something that consistently allows you to actually execute on your work
I've been using an almost identical workflow, with the main exception being that I use Readdle's calendar app instead of Apple's.
I use a white board to write top 3-4 things I need to do for the day
I Love using the Marie Kondo methodology of simplifying my life
I use the Calendar from Microsoft Outlook to keep myself organised. Glad to see from your video that there are better ones out there. It's more or less my modern day equivalent of a homework diary that I used for Secondary School. I would not mid one that would interact between an Android Smart Phone, a Windows 10 Desktop PC and an Apple ipad. I will run a search for the organisers you suggested to see if one of your apps does the job. It would be handy to have it linked between devices, so that whenever I am on the move, I know what I need to do. Other daft things I do is keep a series of old envelopes and write on them what I need to do the next day the night before, set my alarm on my phone early and stick the envelope on top of the phone so that when I wake up in the morning, the envelope is the first thing my hand touches and reminds me if I need to be somewhere or do something.
This is a pretty cool video. The way you show how you organize your life feels very simple and straightforward. But the video has a lot of awesome tips and tools. Awesome content.
Fascinating discussion of organizational tools starts at 5:28. Prior info is overview providing context.
I love this! Thank you for sharing. I am still amazed that you can multi-task on SO MANY THINGS. I am hoping getting a bit more organization and workflow into my own life can help me balance more projects in my personal time.
Again, thanks for sharing - I love the quality of your videos.
So openly expressing your vulnerabilities,
Oh you seem so relatable
I don't know if I should say this, you seem a bit stressed about work like at 6:35
Don't worry Mayuko, if you feel somethings not right, it'll be right in time. Let time do it's thing.
Meditate, it helps
Thus video was 3 months ago, I hope you are better now
These are some real great ways, thanks 🙌
Great video I've been needing some organization in my life. Trying to balance a full time job teaching myself to code and everything else.
Just a idea you should make a discord server I don't know of any small coding servers yet
Anyone’s Siri got activated when Mayuko said ‘Hey Siri’ 😂
I looked at my HomePod at that exact moment but it didn't get triggered! 😂
Your videos are awsome. I love your chill vibe ! :D
I really love to see your face, You have a positive vivrant...so happy and so chill..how can you keep yourslf so calm and innocent..
Quick note
1. Calendar
2. Project management tools( click-up and trello)
3. Note (notebook and dropbox-paper)
4. Siri ??????
Thank @mayuko, i love this video so much!
Would love try those new apps and tips, looking forward to have a more organize life, Thanks Mayuko!
I'm in love with mayuko
Apple stickies works for temporary things and note for something lesser temporary.
Mayuko, I've been watching your videos for quite a while -> That means that I've been applying some of your tips into my life.
Currently I’m using Evernote for free but it is glad to know about drop box paper!! Mayuko’s video is very suitable for my English listening skill. So, thank you!!
Peaceful video 😄
Hey mayuko! I'd actually love to see your thoughts on if college rankings actually matter in the CS & Tech industry. Is this something incoming people in tech should consider in making college choices? Do college rankings actually affect job prospects?
self learning and side projects beat formal education EVERY time.
Google calendar, Google Talk, Google Keep, and Google Docs. What else do you need? And GitHub Projects for projects.
Great Content
trello, google calendar, google docs , drive and to do list !!
I luv all your videos 👍👍
英語のリスニングの練習も兼ねながらいつも楽しく見ています!
Hope you can check out Taskade in the future!
You are highly organised and those were some great tips ! I mostly use One-Note / Pen paper to try keep myself organised -- I'm still at the beginning phase of work ( 6 months exp. ) and don't maintain a calendar but I think I should start on that too. One question how do you decide to note things down digitally / physically using pen-paper ? Like when or how do you decide to switch between the two -- I mostly clutter up my one note with digital notes and have to go back to physically sorting them out.
She is sooo cool!
Thanks for the tips! Getting and staying organized may seem like a full-time job sometimes 😅
Hello Mayuko: I love your clip video. It's good tools. Thanks for sharing. Arigato gosaimasu.
Have you heard of Notion? I suspect it might take away the need for clickup and dropbox paper entirely. Extremely versatile, though there is a bit of a learning curve
Try Notion. It's really useful
Hey! nice video, i have one question. How to keep focused and disciplinate yourself to keep your organization style? If you have tools to remeber stuff, i always forget that i have tools to forbid me to forget
Hi mayuko 👋, good video 👍
Keep inspire 💯
I'm using JIRA , OneNote and collections (Chromium Edge feature) for organising my personal life.
Didn't knew about trello till the date.
Thanks
I use my head cuz my memory isn't so bad but this is interesting
MORE OF THESE VIDEOSSS
Me watching this while panicking cause I’ve got a class in a few hours and don’t wanna join it.
I use Trello, Google Keep and Evernote 😁
Haha! I just remember the episode where Jake met Amy's father cool cool cool cool!
Your cool Mayuko✌️
tnx ... i need that ...
Thank 'Girl
Hello mayuko can we talk about to your indoor plants
These videos are full of that Wednesday vibes
Hey Mayuko, what do you think about Notion? I use it to save articles and write documentation/summaries about classes. Take care! 🤗
Hi mayuko, just some suggestions for your videos. I think it will be better to add more b-roll kind of footages in between rather than sitting and talking. Also i personally love when you move around and do some stuffs rather than idle talk❤️
Your oral speaking is so perfect and native. I am your new fan. Just curious, whether English is your native language?
jUST Neeeded this vidoe... thanks
Try notion app it's really good!!
HI SAGE!!!!
"I AM BOTH SHIELD AND SWORD"
Have u tried using notion as a productivity app? If so what do you think about it?
You r just like an open book❤️
Who’s a life saver? 💯% MAYUKO IS A LIFE SAVER. don’t forget to check out her sponsorship blinkist
I'm watching for entertainment 😁😂so I subscribed
Tbh I'm using Habitica - it's playful and I actually get my things done :D
Can we please talk? UwU
日本語でもききたいこの話!!
hello mayuko
How you maximize your apple watch?
Can you make VDO on how you use Trello for productivity? 🙂
I procrastinated during zoom classes lol.
I know I like you for a reasonnn, you like Brooklyn Nine Nine too! 😆
I feel even notion is good. Never used trello though.
damn, even your hair looks healthy and organized. what's the secret queen?
Genetics bro -.-
Hey Mayuko,. I am a 15 year old aspiring coder. I have looked into software engineering and computer science, and I think SE is more my style. That being said, I don't know how to start. I thought I should just start learning Python right now so that I might not need to go to college (I've read that apparently tech companies like Google, Facebook, etc. don't care about degrees anymore), but after watching a few videos some people who were already in the profession said that you don't even need any knowledge of the coding language you are going to be using - just needing to be able to learn it fast was important... So that being said, should I even worry about learning to code? Should I worry about going to college (if I started coding right now) or just go to a bootcamp to get an edge? And lastly, I've seen many people say that I should create a website of my projects, is that a good idea? Thank you for the help.
p.s. - love your vids, keep up the great work :)
While I'm not Mayuko, I still think I can offer some advice on the topic. College is a great way to learn programming, but it's not the only way. As you pointed out, many companies no longer list a degree as a pre-req. However, if you do not go to college, you will need to learn many topics that would be covered in college courses. Mainly data structures and algorithms, along with a few others depending on what type of programming you'll be doing. You are correct that you do not need to know the programming language to get a job, but as you said, you need to be know how to learn a programming language fast, and that only comes with experience. You absolutely need to learn how to program. I went to college, not a bootcamp, so I can't speak intelligently on them. That being said, good programmers do not become good by attending a bootcamp or going to college. Good programmers become good by constantly learning new things and practicing. Going to a bootcamp or even attending college is not enough. You need to practice. This is just my opinion, but don't worry about a website. When you get close to the point where you're looking for a job, you should start putting projects in a git repository. I wouldn't worry about that now, because git is a whole other beast and can be relatively complicated.
Bottom line: start programming. There is no secret to becoming a developer. You need to put in the work and practice. Python is a great language to start with. Just download it and start writing code. Since you will need to program a lot, pick some projects that you really enjoy, and work on them in your free time. Pick a relatively small project first and solve it! Google and Stack Overflow are your friend. As a side note based on my jaded experience, don't post questions on stack overflow. Try to find people who've already asked the question. People on that website are elitist and look down on people trying to get into the wonderful world of programming. Have fun and never get discouraged! Learning to code is one of the most rewarding experiences!
From my experience, I don't think you need a tech degree for most general office or at home programming jobs. Data Science is one of those programming jobs that it would help if you were good with Calculus, but other then that you can code just about anywhere without a degree.
Tech degrees are good for if you don't know exactly what you want to do with computers, or if you just want to know a little about everything. My school didn't really have more than 5 hard-core coding courses out of a total of about 40 courses. What we did cover were things like virtual machines and networking. Degrees are great for networking/security, sys-admin, and hardware-building types of jobs for large companies. I feel like I've wasted a ton of hours learning how 1s and 0s make colors tbh.
I started learning C++ when I was about 15, and this allowed me to shoot ahead in college and take more classes at once. Highly recommend learning Python or C# over C++ though.
Which camera do you use to record this video? really nice. I saw two cameras in your amazon product listing. wondering which one? :)
Hi! I used my EOS R for all the shots in this video. I film with my G7X for all the vlogs!
基本的にスケジュール管理は全部頭の中でやるので手帳とかカレンダーアプリに予定書き込んだりとかはしないんですが、強いて言えばメモとして残したいことはLINEで自分だけのトークルーム作ってそこに書き込んでますね 笑
jira scares the shit out of me...specially those bug tickets...I really hate those
Anyone have any advice for a university student (Economics - can't switch to CompSci) wanting an internship as a back-end software engineer?
Have 2 years left at uni and i've been teaching myself code in my spare time. I can currently work with Java, Python, R, SQL and do not have any relevent work experience. Should I freelance, learn more languages, join hackathons etc.. ? Cheers!
Does your anxiety make you forget often and feel like you're forgetting everything you've done?
Anxiety can hinder working memory, causing us to forget important tasks...
Ilona Codes thats how i feel since january 2019
Nice video
love from INDIA..
Hello what indoor plants behind u
I'm still 14 but good to know.