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need advices

im 29 yo. recently lose my job, and thinking about use some of my saving money to school for programming, for the sake of not being homeless, but idk consider of my age, will it helps me in the future to survive if i have a degree on programming.

pardon my english

54 comments
  • I did a "game design" school when I was younger, but couldn't get a job as a programmer. Worked for a laboratory for a little over a year, and then went back to school to get a software engineering degree. I was 28 when I went into it, worked with "youngsters" of 18 years and older. It was completely fine.

    I'm now 50k in debt, but I'm also making twice as much as I did with my minimally paying job at the laboratory. It's going to be a boon in the long run, IMO.

    Then, luck should be taken into account. Once you are done with your degree, perhaps the market will have recovered a bit, because I'm hearing a lot of negative feedback lately.

    edit: If you're not sure, you can take a peek at this graph of free MIT YouTube courses. Choose something interesting on the right, then figure out where to start on the left to get to your chosen point. Each course can easily take about 100 hours, which sounds a lot, but if you do them you can take that knowledge and more easily extrapolate information in the future.

    • sorry my english is very bad, but what im digest from ur comments is there is a luck included to get a job in programming,, am i right?

      ill look into it tonight for sure

      thanks a lot sir..

      pardon my english

  • There will always be a need for talented systems engineers with emphasis on security. Programming in general is a good thing to learn anyways but understanding systems, how they work, and how they communicate is equally as important. There’s a lot of manpower needed for information security right now.

    • can u ELI5 for me, please.. or are there any article or videos to explain it for me

      thanks for the explanation :)

  • I'm in my late 30's and I'm a junior dev, having been in the role for just over a year. If you are persistent you can do it. From my experience it has been a hard and at times frustrating job simply because there is so much I don't know, but that comes with the reward of the eureka moment, where when something works it is one of the best feelings.

    Now in terms of doing a school, if it's a scheme where you pay for the training and they say they'll get you a job at the end, please be cautious. I have a few friends that went down this route and they say they were the lucky ones to land jobs, but in their groups everyone else was left out in the cold at the end.

    This was just my process but I did the Java MOOC course that taught me enough to get going, I was doing this at the same time as working in IT. It's completely free. For frontend learning I've been using Scrimba which has free content but also a paid for subscription, it has been alright and the way they merge the recordings with the IDE is good and the free content feels more substantial than what you'd get with Codecademy.

    I'm still just a noob at all of this, and there is so much I don't know but I'm happy to try and answer any questions you have.

    • no i mean the school for degree..

      thanks for the link dude.. ill try to access the link

      i believe you have a lot of knowledge, and you will become pro someday..

  • Why not getting a job with flexible hours or even something in shifts. This will get you paid rather well and if haven’t got a wife or kids for the moment use your spare time to study.

    I’ve known a security guard who only worked nights, very well payed. As nights are call he used it to study.

    Many possibilities all depends on your willingness and personal situation. You do not always have to throw money against something to succeed.

    Like mentioned in previous posts. You really need the obsession to become great and that will take some years. Do kot expect the big $$ in the beginning.

    • that is what i planned to do, find some flexible job, while learning to programming..

      and idk ive been thinking with my age rn, i dont asks for to much.. just enough for survive and maybe for my building pc interest to healing

      • You're young. I switched jobs and profession twice already. For me, it was the other way around and back again. Came from programming (10 years) then Linux adminstration (2 years) and decided to do Geography. Studied it and the programming skills helped me there, too.

        There is always something you can take with you to the next job or profession.

        I wasn't lucky to get a job where I can use my Geography studies so I am now almost 2 years in web programming. I did not have much experience in the field, but I found a place where my Linux adminstration knowledge is useful and I improved web backend programming skills (PHP) on the job.

        Soft skills count, too. Reliablity, ability to work in a team. Recruiters look for those things.

        And btw. I got my Linux knowledge initially only from personal unpaid studies and projects in my free time.

54 comments