![rwxrob](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 1 519
- 1 481 233
rwxrob
United States
Приєднався 29 січ 2020
digital nomad, tech job education, outdoor IRL, livestreaming, biking, belabox, Twitch
🤳 DJI Pocket 3 focus settings for IRL livestreaming and vlogging
#djipocket3 #tips #settings
Переглядів: 301
Відео
🌟 Starlink bike trailer IRL Twitch livestream (possibly first ever)
Переглядів 26921 день тому
Livestreaming, coworking, and SKILSTAK Boost education from anywhere with a visible sky. A new era begins for our rwxrob community. Watch live at www.twitch.tv/rwxrob
🚀Amazon Project Kuiper announced mini (7"x7") BEFORE Starlink
Переглядів 765Місяць тому
#digitalnomad #starlink #kuiper
🤷♂️ "Why don't your charge or have 'premium' content?"
Переглядів 670Місяць тому
#techjobs #learning #livestream
🤩 What's up with Starlink being late all the time?
Переглядів 382Місяць тому
🤩 What's up with Starlink being late all the time?
📺 BELABOX, BELABOX, BELABOX: THERE IS NO BETTER WAY TO IRL STREAM!
Переглядів 257Місяць тому
📺 BELABOX, BELABOX, BELABOX: THERE IS NO BETTER WAY TO IRL STREAM!
🤝 BEST THINGS TO SAY IN JOB INTERVIEW
Переглядів 1,6 тис.Місяць тому
🤝 BEST THINGS TO SAY IN JOB INTERVIEW
🚙 Reuse Belabox SRT relay with OBS to stream from laptop without dropping (no matter what)
Переглядів 314Місяць тому
🚙 Reuse Belabox SRT relay with OBS to stream from laptop without dropping (no matter what)
🔰 Install Microsoft Visual Studio Code on Mac with brew
Переглядів 257Місяць тому
🔰 Install Microsoft Visual Studio Code on Mac with brew
🔰 Don't learn XML/XHTML (but know what they are)
Переглядів 335Місяць тому
🔰 Don't learn XML/XHTML (but know what they are)
🤷🏻♂️ "Books, man pages, or Interwebz?"
Переглядів 548Місяць тому
🤷🏻♂️ "Books, man pages, or Interwebz?"
🔰 Basic computer skills added as "stage" to BeginnerBoost
Переглядів 755Місяць тому
🔰 Basic computer skills added as "stage" to BeginnerBoost
🤮 CompTia IS CRAP (but some MUST get A+ or Security+)
Переглядів 3,1 тис.Місяць тому
🤮 CompTia IS CRAP (but some MUST get A or Security )
🤷🏻♂️ "Can't I just use 3 Dell Optiplexes instead of a tower for VMs?"
Переглядів 779Місяць тому
🤷🏻♂️ "Can't I just use 3 Dell Optiplexes instead of a tower for VMs?"
🤮 Get RHCE (RedHat Certified Engineer) credential
Переглядів 2 тис.Місяць тому
🤮 Get RHCE (RedHat Certified Engineer) credential
💰 DON'T SPEND A TON on your first linux lab "server"
Переглядів 2,2 тис.Місяць тому
💰 DON'T SPEND A TON on your first linux lab "server"
📺 Gruvbox terminal with Ubuntu Mono font on Mac
Переглядів 419Місяць тому
📺 Gruvbox terminal with Ubuntu Mono font on Mac
🤷🏻♂️ "How are BSD UNIX and Linux different?"
Переглядів 10 тис.Місяць тому
🤷🏻♂️ "How are BSD UNIX and Linux different?"
I went to a traditional university with weekly assignments, monthly projects and we spent the first six months building things from scratch in HTML, CSS, JS and PHP. No libraries or frameworks, just vanilla X and Y (you could use web components, but not React or Vue for example). We also learned version control, writing documentation, database design, Linux, setting up a server and other useful stuff. After nine months or so we all went to work part time for real companies (banks, e-commerce platforms etc) while continuing study.
I’m glad I didn’t do these online certs for webdev. I just got a JavaScript workforce certificate from my community college. The certificate cost a few grand but I learned Vue and React and advanced JS topics. I don’t really have the money for a full college degree in CS since this is my second career path. Working on a better portfolio now. I have been self-studying JS for almost 2 years and made personal projects for multiple hours a day. I’m hoping my coding practice pays off and I can land a job in the tech industry. I’m also learning Java and C++.
FreeCodeCamp has a bunch of good videos from experts though. No fancy certificates, but I dont know a better place to learn c++, or building a .Net web api from scratch where you just follow along and skip what you already know from other languages. Sounds to me like their web development course is missing a few fundamentals though. Tell them in the future to check out the free Harvard course CS50, then follow it up by CS50W for web development. That'll teach fundamentals.
ahahahah
How old were this kids?
I wasted so much time worrying about leetcode when you should really only do it 1-2 months ahead of time max. Focus on getting the interviews first.
From my perspective the Odin project is definitely awful, because it doesn’t really provide a “standard” implementation of its goal, and those community solution are much of “showing off their skills” instead of concentrating on problems. If you’d like learn knowledges of JS, you’d better go to MDN or watch videos of Traversy media, which are really useful.😊
Yes I too wish to return to 2013 levels of hardware support Linux had for my primary OS.
FreeCodeCamp is incredible and covers HTML in depth. Not sure how they didn't know what a header and a p tag was - the most basic of HTML. These students must not have had any interest in the subject or something idk..
Almost got my RHCSA, I just need to pay for a voucher at this point to take the test and I do want to get RHCE but that's about all the money I'm ever going to give to Red Hat at this point.
I just passed the rhcsa yesterday. Looking at rhce now. What affordable study resources would you recommend?
That’s crazy I learned basic HTML and CSS in like 30 minutes
Not surprised. That recent survey that had css not in a <style> tag was a dead giveaway.
Project Odin is the best Plattform I used so far
Stop demotivating new learners lol
One thing I hate about university is that most stem courses can all be simplified to just cramming for tests. The only way to see real employment from school is to do co-ops. Online learning tools give me the same kind vibe. They should offer actual employment rather than BS participation prizes.
im passing the freecodecamp web dev course, and i feel that, i feel that i cannot depend on the site. So i decide to iterate to others resources like yooutube channel 100devs, dalto, to see how they put their stuff. I learn that when i watched some of the freecode camp tutorials in other places, become more easy to learn and actually understand. Neverless, none of that give me the security ,the confidence of make a website. Give me that ok, seems like we need to break the wall that i build depending of what im seeing, so i start to try some stuff from zero to test myself. And put all the new stuff and old stuff that i supposed to know. And also i ask other programmers more advanced and with jobs. Shorthand. we need to be responsible of our learning. discipline and self critique. and reward ourself with make something from 0.
The thing is, I think most people are just not taught to self teach. What I found as a solo learner of many things, is that you really can only learn if you wish to. It takes a lot of investigation and paying attention to your own mistakes so you are able to rectify your own issues. Students should be taught to value understanding of subjects whether they're even able to reach the limit of understanding or not. To put it plainly, people just need to put their thinking caps on instead of ticking boxes.
It's genuinely funny that you had to get a little buzzed to make this video.
I've been taking a KCNA exam course on CloudGuru, which has helped me develop applications. Despite its high cost, I believe investing in education is one of the best uses of money. I think this certification can also enhance job prospects, given that it's an exam rather than just a course. Knowing Kubernetes is highly valuable in the IT industry.
I teach golang in my channel
Hello, I want to ask. What do you mean by "Polygon Approach to Programming" maybe I heard it wrong but, can you elaborate it more. I want to learn any technique to learn programming faster or at least never forget the concepts
yeaa there is a lot you have to do on your own to "learn" and be successful. obviously. anyone just going through the motions , minimal effort is not gonna learn no matter how good the learning tool is.
The xc project made containers work on freebsd, natively.
I was introduced to CodeCademy and Scratch in Middle School and almost none of it translated to college, especially now as an engineer. It's more straightforward now to make a project from scratch than 2013 (especially when you're a preteen) but starting a new project is the best way to learn. I wish more people would emphasize the step-by-step layout for absolute beginners when starting a new project or how to build a front end UI with an API and explaining what each part of the project does.
I still don't remember the boilerplate that sits on top of a html page, the doctype stuff. And I'm not a beginner.
The FreeCodeCamp course basically holds your hand throughout the entire length of the course. I took it, but only to an extent, and i realized i wasnt learning as much as i felt i was merely by completing the sections of the course. Designing websites on your own and messing up and a lot of trial and error is the only way to learn web dev
Next time do Odin Project, instead being one resource it gives multiple.
Misleading title! You just gave them the website without checking first and either gave them tests or exercises midway to test what they were learning and didnt teach them about localhost and other things...
I'm at my first tech job and I have never seen anyone pull required over time in our dev division. Even in our devops infra team it is quite rare. This is an issue based on role/team/company. Working in tech already ruins your health due to the time commitment, sitting, etc. if they want to ruin your sleep and thus your health temporarily or long term I hope you are very highly compensated. I have no issue with occasional overtime but pulling all nighters repeatedly and being on call is totally different. It seems like you can pull overtime or treat yourself like shit or avoid taking care of yourself temporarily when you're young, but in my case (in a different industry) doing so lead to a chronic auto immune disease occurring much earlier than it otherwise would have. It's a lot better now that I have more control of my lifestyle and it's very consistent.
I didn’t watch past one minute of the video but it’s FREE code camp just putting that out there. I’m currently in school and they charge 1500 per class to barely teach anything
Where is this?
😂😂
I done a C++ course on Udemy, full story is on my UA-cam page. BUT the difference is, for each lesson in the course, I coded alongside it, copying the code (and making changes) as the lessons went on and make notes in my own words. This was of massive help to lock the concepts in my head. I could have just sat there and allowed the course to play, but I took control and really learnt.
Merry Christmas! You look like the doctor from Hägar, he always has bad news...
Fantastic video though!!,!
I think it depends on the person and also their ability to write notes and practise. Some people are able to learn something simply by reading. Others need it painfully and repetitively reinforced. Other need to write detailed notes on it. Others need to write bullet points. Some need to use paper. Others have it all on a computer or tablet. I am seeing myself that I need to have it reinforced. And so I am starting to get myself into the mindset where I will simply open an IDE and try to code something I’ve learned and code from scratch. Same with other things. I, personally, will learn by doing. I see that is the only why that I… ME… can learn. But I think this really depends on the person.
I could do it. Have made 2 for other people and 1 for myself.
"Escape analysis" is when the compiler determines whether values are allocated on the stack or the heap. Ofcourse the are other nuances to how it works in Golang but the general idea is around memory allocation and management. Love your old and new content.
The outcome of success is mandated by the will to learn and work.
I think this is normal for most programming courses out there...I did one last year and was pretty basic and mediocre, I mean I learnend 80% of the stuff I know just by myself. But the thing is, at least in that course, you had to make a fullstack project in order to get the certificate. We where 20 people at first, only 5 of us got the certificate 😅. The others couldn't do anything, some did all the 6 months that lasted the course and still couldn't understand the most basic things....
But wsl is faster
It's not the problem with these 'free' websites, they're great. It's that some skip lessons big time, zippin' their way through the course
I can't understand why people think that what makes one a developer is the fact they memorize stuff and don't copy paste from internet. I mean, people really can't understand how pathetic is, to think you're better because you remember say the syntax well. Don't you understand that everything is copy-paste? Even when you write something on screen from your mind. You basically copied that from some source and pasted inside your mind and then copied it from your mind and pasted it in your screen. What the hell is the point? You'll never manage to memorize everything and that's stupid. The objective should be to understand how something works. Big picture -> connections of puzzle pieces -> puzzle pieces. The reason, these platforms fail to teach, is because they focus on giving puzzle pieces to their students to memorize. It's the connections that make you understand something, not the components. People couldn't built a web page out of pure scratch without looking? So what? I've designed and developed websites many times and still can't do a simple web page. I still forget things all the time. What is the point of not looking? What is the point of knowing the speed of light when you can simply just check it on the web? I mean that's why it's all there.
🤣🤣 Kubernetes runs the tech world yet has one of the worst code bases.
Why should they? Making web pages is a designer's job, not a programmer's one.
This is why learning how to learn is an essential skill. The problem is teaching them how to retain what they learned. It doesn't matter what bootcamp you go to. If you don't practice and don't do space repetition, you'll not remember anything.
That’s why I love this field. It all comes down to fundamentals. Also, a creative mind and the ability to keep learning, make things, and keep solving problems
Hey dude, can you please mentor me?
As someone who went through FreeCodeCamp on the journey to becoming a professional developer, your 5 year old knowledge on FCC is out of date completely. At least as of 2020 the certificates require a project to be completed and if I recall right you end up making at least 5 sites from scratch by yourself just on the first leg of the cert. and they teach you how to host on GitHub. I really don’t care if you like it or not, but figured I’d at least let others know