My honest advice is don't go into computer engineering if you don't like programming. You have a lot of options with electrical engineering that do not require or require very little programming. If you do want to learn on your own C++ is a great place to start whether it be for software or embedded systems.
If you set on it there are a lot of resources out there to learn codeacademy.com and udemy.com both have free intro courses. There are a lot of good books you can pick up which involve free software such as Codeblocks. "Mastering c++" is a good book I started with.
Unreal Engine uses C++. It sounds like your ambitions are beyond just using a pre-built engine, but it's probably the best place to start. Use the engine for simple games, follow tutorials, and I highly recommend Ben Tristem's courses on Udemy.com
At age 31 I was a security guard with a criminal justice degree and 8 year of security-experience. My best year I paid taxes on 28k.
I realized I didn't want to do 30 years as a broke security guard, so I started watching udemy.com computer programming courses ... and at age 32 I quit the security field because I got hired as a web developer, making more than double that.
Anglea Yu's 100 days of Python course on Udemy.com has been incredible. Every day you work on a new project. Yesterday was tracking ISS, today I'm building a trivia game using an API. Highly recommend.
In some ways you might be able to use this as a wakeup call. I was late to the game and graduated with a mechanical engineering degree at 33.
Some of the more senior engineers treated me like I'm some god of Excel. In reality I was writing a few simple macros in VBA. Relatively basic for loops, conditional statements, and relational operators. Something every engineer that's graduated in the last 20 years should be familiar with thanks to an intro computer science class most are required to take.
It's also something that is pretty easy to quickly learn nowadays thanks to places like YouTube and Udemy.com.
I guess I'm trying to say that if you feel left behind, it may not be nearly as hard to catch up as you think (obviously this is going to vary on a case by case basis).
Professermesser.com has a good video course for free, and you can buy a pdf cram guide for a few bucks if you need it. When I took sec+, I just did the video course and bought some practice tests.
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Udemy.com also has some good courses for pretty cheap. I know they have a few on Kali, as well as for pentesting.
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For basic routing/switching, it would probably be beneficial to try packet tracer or GNS3 to get some practice with the command line if you don't have access to physical equipment.
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Also, I would recommend just playing with some tools on your own computer. You can make a kali boot drive and dual boot your computer or just use a VM, so you can play with some of the tools.
Anytime I need to quickly spin up on something new like that, I hit up Udemy. There are many different courses for each topic. Let user reviews steer you to the good ones.
Try not to buy anything there at full price. There are frequent sales where you can get 80-90% off.
To any parent thinking that programming is a rich people skill and teaching that to their kid will cost a lot of money, there are sites like Udemy, etc where you can buy programming courses from the best programming instructors around the world for as low as $10.
If you are into IT at all, there are lots of course on udemy.com which will help get you certified in a certain field for very little money.
Theres a whole lot of stuff on there outside of IT, too.
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2 exams, $300 each. Plus any study materials you may need. I would recommend Chris Bryant on udemy.com. Usually you can get the course for like 15 bucks or cheaper if you're a new signup. His course is all you need if you got a good brain on you.
If that's too much you could just take the first exam. That gives you a CCENT. Its a beginner cert. You could roll the dice and put your resume out with just that and see what bites while you save up for the second exam.
Ich kenne die WIFI Kurse nicht, aber ich würde schätzen, dass das nur rausgeworfenes Geld ist weils sau teuer ist.
Persönlich würde ich mir eher udemy Kurse (https://udemy.com/) stattdessen zu den Themen kaufen und das im Selbststudium lernen. Dafür brauchst mehr Disziplin und du hast nachher nichts zum Herzeigen bei einem Bewerbungsgespräch, aber es kommt dir VIEL billiger und du siehst, ob dich das alles wirklich interessiert (und die Qualität ist sicher deutlich höher).
Such dir einfach die besten Kurse zu den ganzen Themen von WIFI Kurs raus auf Udemy und mach die Kurse dort für 9 €..
Im Bewerbungsgespräch kannst dann auch erwähnen, dass du dir alles selbst beigebracht hast weils dich so interessiert => ich würde auch mal tippen, dass du dich dann besser auskennst als wer, der einen WIFI Kurs gemacht hat.
Right on brother. I second on finding a better job, although in today's society it will be hard to find a working environment that isn't totally cucked.
Also, I'd recommend udemy.com for good intro to programming courses. Python is a great language if you're totally new to programming.
I have had good results with courses on Udemy.com. Joseph Phillips is a great instructor and his certificate for course completion is accepted by PMI. https://www.udemy.com/capm-pmbok6/?altsc=1024854
I used his old course when I was working on my CAPM. I used another one of his courses when I went after my PMP this year. Also having the background material down on the CAPM will help if you later go after the PMP.
If you are repeating the same Boson exams you are just memorizing the questions. You might look at an additional source instead of re-watching Jeremy's videos... i.e. Chris Bryant's videos on Udemy.com.
With the Boson exams make sure to carefully read the explanations for all the questions, even if you answered the question correctly.
Right...If you're doing video instruction, why not just hire one instructor, pre-record all the lessons and perfect the curriculum?
That eliminates tech issues, schedules, miscommunication in the materials, and then all they have to do is pay a few people to moderate the courses and answer questions. And you save millions, if not billions by firing all the teachers in the country (yay for staying safe!)
Essentially udemy.com
Look, if we want to offer a new type of education that's set up like this? Sure, that's fine. But give people a choice, don't force millions of children, and subsequently families into this against their will. Many universities already offer online degrees and they're built for this type of instruction. Not some shoehorned platform that depends on a private corporation (zoom) to provide the future of nationwide education. Like, what if zoom, skype, ring central, etc didn't exist? Would they build their own platforms? Doubt it...
You have got nothing to worry about, I started WGU by already having my CompTIA A+, Network+, and Security+ and even though it knocked out 5 courses, I still had to take certain Introductory classes. They were so easy and basic that I passed them in a few days.
With that being said, the 3 CompTia certs I mentioned are part of the degree and they will teach you what you need to know. Plus you don't get to those courses until you do earlier Introductory IT courses.
So to answer your question, no, you are not at a disadvantage at all.
If you end up struggling with the learning material for the CompTia certs, make sure to check the CompTia subreddit, most will recommend that you watch Professor Messer's videos and practice using Jason Dion exams you can get on udemy.com, they have sales every months for 80-90% off.
Yes, but it will vary by person. When I first started in accounting, it didn't make sense. I really thought I made a bad choice. Then one night I had a dream and overlayed over the dream were T tables, spreadsheets, etc. Literally from then on, it just clicked for me. That was during my classes. They helped a lot, but many can learn on their own too. There are also alternative learning options such as Udemy.com. Getting an entry-level position and learning on the job is even more valuable, especially for the real-world/practical side. MUCH more of bookkeeping is "how the heck did the last idiot do this?" than I expected.
A dica é começar pelo inicio, ou seja, lógica de programação... depois disso vc pode tentar aprender uma linguagem específica. As do momento são Python (fácil aprendizado), java (complexa), javascript (web) e por aí vai. Eu não sou desenvolvedor (sou da infra) mas trabalho em uma software house e vejo bem como funciona. Pra aprender tem a udemy.com que tem muito curso em português e em promoção, por exemplo se vc for hj deve ter curso por 24,90 mais ou menos, se tu achar um curso no valor full, espera uns dias que vai ta na promoção. Se tu manjar de inglês tem a https://www.codecademy.com/catalog que é muito boa tb e com bastante material free. Boa sorte.
For programming, get into learning how to program from online courses. It's helped me a lot of a low price. I get lessons from Youtube and Udemy.com (for $10 each on sale).
Also, invest in a computer that can do 3 screens at once. 1080p is fine, but the point is one screen is going to be dedicated for playing the online video while you follow alongside it. Get Windows 10 Pro if you are going Windows as you will need the Pro edition for some features in development.
Good luck to you. :)
Ik ben een net iets oudere Limburger en student computerwetenschappen aan de KUL. Er is inderdaad niet veel te beleven. Ik raad je enkele online cursussen aan: coursera.org is top over het algemeen. De CS50 Harvard course op edx.org is ook zeer interessant (daar leer je basis CS met de taal C.) Als je geïnteresseerd ben in Python is het Youtube kanaal Sentdex echt de moeite. En het youtube kanaal Thenewboston heeft een goede C playlist.
Blijf vooral weg van udemy.com. Het zijn maar matige cursussen en ze hebben heel onaantrekkelijke aggressieve marketing.
FYI, C++ is praktisch gezien gewoon C met OOP.
Yeah so Unity is an amazing engine and you can do almost anything. You'd want to look up a simple fighting game tutorial and learn how that's done with Unity (on like udemy.com for example). Once you have an idea, make yourself little fighting projects with free assets to get the idea of it all. Then, implement it into your game :D
In short, yes. You can. Just gotta put in the time :)
There are great many free guides and free trials to get started. I know there are a lot of good material at udemy.com (like this one https://www.udemy.com/course/powerbi-complete-introduction/) which will cost you a few bucks, but have like everything from explaining the concept, installing software to sample data and course work. Just search business intelligence. There are also very good free one over at youtube, the biggest ones are Power BI and Qlik. If you know how to code and some SQL, it will come pretty naturally for you I think. I would say that if you are serious and are going to put in a weekend of coding and learning the paid ones with 10 - 20 hours of content is usually well worth it.
If you are looking for very hard practice exams I would say the Jason Dion exams are not only just hard I would go as far as to say they are harder than what's on the actual exam. A close second, if you are looking for another resource, would be Professor Messer's practice exams but the hardest I would say is Jason Dion's on udemy.com.
Link to Jason Dion Practice exams: https://www.udemy.com/course/comptia-security-practice-exams/
just some hints here
you exam results have the areas and fields you lacked in so you can focus in weak areas.
professor Messer is free video course for a+
Mike meyers and jason dion has a+ video courses as well down to 10bucks on udemy.com right now
examcompas.com has quick 20 questions quizzes for free as well combined with wikipedia search your can easy spot and fix some weakpoints there as well.
Hey - good for you to take the plunge.
Kinda' a different situation but I went from DA to DS on my own, saw this post this morning and thought my two cents fit here:
I used Udemy.com for some broad topics that interested me, and their professors were extremely friendly and supportive. Just make sure to professionally format all correspondence, because the professors experience (sorry if being toxic here) a lot of `why doesn't import pandas as pd' kind-of whine-y questions.
The second place, and I did not do this, but informational interviews via linkedin. Reach out to Big Wigs in the industry, explain your situation, ask to meet with them to learn more about their job/day-to-day. Do not straight up just ask for a Mentor, it's selfish and impolite imo. If there's an organic connection then see if you can move the relationship forward with correspondence via slack/email/whatever.
It's going to be a grind, you're going to get a lot of people ignoring you but it's all about finding that one connection so keep at it.
"to learn you need to take chances, make mistakes, and get messy"
Start by looking at what kind of engine you would rather use, there are a ton god ones out there.
Then i would suggest to look at the tutorials already posted on the page of the engines.
You can get music, art etc. for cheap or sometimes even free on the internet (for example freemusicarchive.org for free music).
You don't really need to learn how to code although it would be helpful to speed up things; for decent tutorials/online courses you can look at udemy.com for example. They usually have discounts on classes every so often or during holiday seasons.
There are also alot of good tutorials on YouTube aswell.
As a quick tip, always carry a small notepad with you, or use an app on your phone to write down ideas.
I would also inform myself about videogame pitching; meaning you could pitch ideas to game studios. Just be aware that if you have an idea more often than not if you can't immediately hook them with you will get denied a team, funding etc.
Keep all you ideas written down in a few bulletpoints and don't overcomplicate things.
The more you tack on while working on something the longer it will take and the more money it will syphon.
Be aware that it takes a tremendous amount of willpower to see a videogame development through to fruition. As it can be incredibly frustrating to get things to work or scrap something and make it anew.
I suggest you look up some videogame jams like ludumdare, they provide alot of cool challenges to train and improve your gamemaking skills, and you get alot of constructive criticism.
BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY OF ALL!!!!
HAVE FUN CREATIN!
I wish you good luck on your development journey.
There are dozens of threads on reddit about this. Just google for "reddit learn web development"
You can learn on your own using udemy.com courses or just googling more.
Don't waste your money on a bootcamp. At $12-$15k , those 12-16-week bootcamps are a terrible ripoff and you don't learn all that much. However in some cases they do partner with companies so it can help you get a foot in the door for your first gig, so research them if you must.
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To address your last statement.
- getting a college degree opens more doors when you're a beginner [if you can do it in less than 2 years, do it]
- longterm, experience is all that matters [within 2 years you'll have more exp than just about any recent grad]
- drawback of not having a degree is that some companies will not even look at your resume for certain positions.
Lynda.com and Udemy.com both have really good courses that you can take. There are also the books that you can buy in e-reader form from Amazon. I've done both methods and it's helped me a lot in remembering all of the aspects. Working in a purely Windows environment also helps with that, mind you, but I digress. Hope this helps!
/u/endlessly_curious , came here to ask this. Without knowing your base level of experience, it's hard to tell you where to start.
You at a minimum need to know HTML, at least basic CSS, and some PHP, and possibly some JavaScript or jQuery, depending on whether you want to go theme intensive or plugin intensive. If you are new to PHP or need a refresher, I like to recommend this free Udemy course for the basics. https://udemy.com/code-dynamic-websites/
Hi, I hope you are doing great!
you can just visit Udemy.com
and try to create an account for free!
then go look for the " basic Arabic language " filter to the free courses!
that's it!
Tableau is an incredible resource that can be utilized in many different ways so that sounds like an awesome goal!
I would check out some of the learnings at Udemy.com. They have a lot of Tableau trainings for beginners and some are pretty inexpensive or free. There are also many other systems that they teach should you want to expand your horizons beyond Tableau at any point.
"I want to learn a skill that should take me years to master, but I would like to do it in a week".
So how would you do that?
Use Udemy.com. They are thousand of courses and skills you can learn with $10. They will be some topics you like more for example drone pilot and you can do roof or pipeline inspections. Do you know that oil companies have ROV pilots? The small submarine boats to do subsea pipeline inspections. I was working in Scotland and you know how many kids without university degree earning more than 100k per year, because they are specilized. Also SLB which is a big service company: they have a department for perforation (google what it is on a production well). They need to build the perforation device with explosives. More than 100k
I am saving money to become an electrician. In the UK it is a 5 weeks course and it costs around $3,500. You can do something similar with night college.
To tack onto this Microsoft also offers evaluation versions of their software if you want to go that route as well as offering free virtualization licenses for students or if you're taking certain certification paths.
Echoing what was said above about just coming up with a list of what services you want to run on your server and then implementing them one by one.
Outside of sites like here googling and youtube you should look at linuxacademy.com, cybrary.it, and udemy.com which all have free courses that should help you get started and beyond.
Not in this century.
I know all these new inventions with machine learning and deep neural networks seem like magic and are absolutely mind boggeling. But if you'd actually take a look at how they actually work, and study it you'd probably delete that comment.
There are certainly limitations to how it works, even if it looks amazing. But the AI we've come up with so far just isn't really "inteligence", it's more like a very good immitator of intelligence.
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If you do find it interesting though, check out udemy.com's courses on machine learnig.
Odom ICND Official Cert Guide
Neil Anderson course on Udemy.com
Jeremy Cioara course on CBTNuggets.com
Boson ICND2 practice exams
That's what I used, but if I had known then what I know now, I would use this:
Todd Lammie's book
Chris Bryant course on Udemy.com
Boson ICND2 practice exams
Not that there was anything wrong with the sources I used (it got me a PASS). Yet I would do things differently if I was starting over with studying for ICND2 today.
Also, I wanted to add that while hypergamy is real, that can be a GOOD THING. Women care more about social status, whereas men seem to care more about physical appearance. Oprah is a Billionaire, but not a whole lot of dudes are trying to steal her from her boyfriend. Contrast that with our current president. He is an overweight (probably obese) senior citizen with hair plugs, that married a model and (while in his 60's) had a long term affair with a playboy playmate that actually wanted to marry him.
The thing about it is you can change social status (at least your economic status) FAR easier than you can change your appearance. If you are a NEET, get some skils/education/training that provides you with better career opportunities. Go on udemy.com and take one of their "learn to be a web developer/programmer" style courses and change your career path. Trust me, money/success makes things MUCH MUCH better.
A "master" class on photography on Udemy.com I think it was $15 for about 20+ hours of lectures and assignments. It's the top rated course with the most reviews.
Have learned so much from me being a photo noob. You probably can find similar videos on learning photography for free on youtube, but this one makes it easier to learn in one place.
There is a very strong demand for folks who can write python programs and this demand is going to last for a long long time and will provide very good money and great career.
You just need access to a computer
Como dijo el comentario que está antes que yo, las carreras de ingeniería en sistemas o en computación tiene buena salida laboral afuera. Si tienes un nivel intermedio en inglés va a ser un plus muy valioso.
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Te recomiendo que vayas adelantando, métete en FreeCodeCamp.com y ponte a hacer algún curso de lenguaje de programación, son gratis, vienen con certificación y están en español.
O puedes meterte en Udemy.com, allí hay cursos pagos, pero de vez en cuando hay promociones de cursos gratuitos con certificación de todo tipo de lenguaje de programación.
If you want a good Udemy course on back-end API development, I can recommend this one: udemy.com/course/net-core-31-web-api-entity-framework-core-jumpstart/
Covers making an API project with EF and JWT, and has .Net 5 and .Net Core 3 portions. Pretty much everything you need to do back end work.
You can purchase courses on Udemy.com for 15 dollars, and it gives you a certificate upon completion. However, I don't think that the Udemy certificate is that valuable. I would ignore the certificate requirement and would focus on learning instead. Good luck!
BTW, I took this course at udemy.com. It was fantastic! I feel so comfortable working in it now. It's only $35.00.
https://www.udemy.com/course/take-your-sibelius-skills-to-the-next-level-course-1/
It depends on what you want to invest into it. If you have around like 10-15 € left, I think the best and fastest way to learn unity, is by going on udemy.com (a website for online curses) and search for a Unity course. There are excellent courses with more than 150,000 students. But if you dont wanna put money into it or you dont have it, following youtube tutorials is also fine and you can get all the knowledge you need, even if you might use more time for searching up and understanding.
I also learn by video much easier than reading docs/books. My recommendation would be to check out Udemy.com for courses in the language you want to learn. They often go on sale. I purchased a 49 hour Vue.js course for $12 on sale a couple of months ago.
The course is great. Each step is 5-10 minutes long and he provides great examples for each concept. He provides "starter" code that you can use on your local machine and code along with each exercise. Then there are small tests and quizzes for each chapter. I can't speak for Java but I'm sure there are some great Java courses there as well.
I really like the online training courses at udemy.com. In particular, this one on Flask is excellent.
https://www.udemy.com/course/python-and-flask-bootcamp-create-websites-using-flask/
The only problem is that it's now $94.00! They have sales frequently and you can get the course for about $11.00! That's what I did. But I would have to say the course is worth at least that for what you learn.
I really wish I had learned Flask first. I spent about 2 years trying to figure out Django. But once I tried Flask, everything just started to make sense. I love Flask!
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
udemy.com (if a parent will pay for it in your case)
This is how I got started on coding when I was in 7th or 8th grade and it's a very good starting place in my opinion. If you get your parent to pay for the subscription for codecademy then they give you projects while learning that you can do and projects help you learn.
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Kalau ada komputer dan internet, beli course bootcamp di udemy.com, harga rata2 di 150rb. Anda ingin programming yang hasil akhirnya apa? Ambil salah satu, misalnya: Mobile apps, Web Developer, Machine Learning.
Kalau untuk web developer dan Machine Learning, saya bisa bantu berikan recommend.
If someone wants to learn how to use Fusion360 you can go to udemy.com and search on Fusion360. You will find a good number of lessons on how to use Fusion360. Some are for pay but there are a good number of free ones as well.
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
This is a totally new beast for you. Be patient and take your time. Professor Messer is great, though I find him a little dry at times. Everyone is different, and I found I like Mike Meyers videos on UDemy.com. Mike's a hoot, and explains things more simply sometimes, but may not always be as technically complete as Prof Messer. I found Mike's videos much more engaging, so maybe that's a better starting point.
For UDemy, look for discounts, and use a clean browser (no cache/history). If you go look, the initial price will be cheap, say $30 for a NET+ course, but if you go back a few days later, the price will double or triple.
FWIW, I didn't use the study guide books from my SEC+, at all, but I am also working in an IT field. That said, I also did a lot of "googling" to help understand certain things.
My area of expertise is in the SRE and DevOps space, which I really enjoy because its kind of a hybrid of software engineering and infrastructure/systems, so if you are into that I would google for those terms or start with a Docker course. If you have no background at all then you may want to literally google "devops for total beginners".
The Docker Mastery with Kubernetes + Swarm by Bret Fisher on uDemy.com is really fantastic, but requires a little background knowledge:
>Are there any course requirements or prerequisites?
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>No paid software required - Just install your favorite text editor and browser!
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>Local admin access to install Docker for Mac/Windows/Linux.
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>Understand terminal or command prompt basics.
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>Linux basics like shells, SSH, and package managers. (tips included to help newcomers!)
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>Know the basics of creating a server in the cloud (on any provider). (tips included to help newcomers!)
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>Understand the basics of web and database servers. (how they typically communicate, IP's, ports, etc.)
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>Have a GitHub and Docker Hub account.
As far as specific programming languages, golang is definitely the rage at tech startups, but python/ruby/java are still major players as well.
Typically I would say learn a programming language and get some actual projects built, then if you are interested in how we test/deploy/update those projects in production get into the devops side of things.
Both fields pay about the same for a senior position at a tech company ($200k base plus 100-300k equity depending on seniority and the company).
Glancing at some of the coursework is a good way to freak yourself out and get down about pursuing it. Go on youtube and check out Professor Messer's Network+ course, he has hundreds of hours of video for the CompTIA Net+ as well as the A+ exam. Exam Cram is also another good route, buying the books and also checking out the authors videos on Udemy.com. If you've been in helpdesk for over a year chances are you're theoretically A+ proficient.
The best thing to do in my opinion would spend some time really soul searching and determine what you want to do. Getting certifications without a career path is kind of like going to the grocery store and buying ingredients for a 5 course meal before you ever determine what you want to cook.
keep in mind, its will take a very long time before you can really make anything good, and then much much longer before you could get an internship or a job for it. I would easy 200-300 hours for an internship and 800-1000 for a job. I also bought a full stack web dev course on udemy.com for $10 and that was much more userfriendly thatn freecodecamp.org at first.
I enjoy this instructor:
Maximilian Schwarzmüller
https://academind.com/
The courses drop to about $12 USD. I highly recommend.
Take a look at Udemy.com, they often have courses that are barely $20 [they are often marked way down].
Look into getting the Cisco packet tracer, this will help you get some experience albeit in a simulated [software] environment
https://www.netacad.com/courses/packet-tracer
Youtube has tons of videos covering every topic. I'm currently upskilling on Cisco ISE right now and quite frankly youtube has been one of my resources.
There are many different areas to Game Development but I would honestly start with the game engine Unity(easier to pick up and the community is big) and learn C# language. There is no "idea" guy position, you must learn one of the core topics of game development. Youtube, Unity.com, Udemy.com, etc are all excellent resources to help you get started.
What helped me, is going to UDEMY.com and taking Godot lessons while learning programing. And thanks to that, today I can do so many things, and knowledge is growing exponentially. ANd the, once i have a small grasp, even without finishing all lessons, just try do it yourself. It will be hard! But, if your conscious will is stronger than your past, you will succeed! You go full speed, or don't even start. Your mind of your will with your conscious strength is a cutting edge of your learning success. The choice is yours.
I was stuck at B1 for a few years until I went full immersion and currently live in Germany. It is possible to become fluent without any immersion but is very difficult, and the only people who can do that, are people who only focus on german or are extremely disciplined.
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B1 to B2 is in fact the biggest jump in German in my opinion and probably any language I would imagine. That jump is where you begin to formulate actual thoughts into conversation and not just translating sentences, and where this also begins to feel more natural.
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Best way to self study:
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Learning German has reminded me of going to the batting cages, I used to go into the super fast cage before anything, because after getting used to that speed, I would move to the one that was the speed of my age group, and the ball literally looked like it came in slow motion. So fast german rap music helps too. (Lakmann - intro, Hurra die Welt geht unter, 65 killer rap) . Some people dont like rap though, but it helps cause its fast sometimes.
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udemy.com has some good courses too.
Do a job on the side. I did photography for parties and weddings. It helped greatly with paying down my student loans.
Later on, I learned that doing online courses helps me a lot. I got into web programming. I got lucky where a lot of my programming skills can be taught on online courses. I do video lessons on Udemy.com for $10 each.
Give up drinking and smoking. I've saved thousands compared to my friends who drink and smoke.
1) Buy Crack the Coding Interview, It may or may not be the holy grail to interviews BUT it certainly will tell you how to get into the Big N companies
2) Sign up for leet code. do all the algo and data structure questions. If youre free, dedicate 10 hours to it. Burn yourself out, make yourself cry. Get into high pressure situations so when interview day comes you can be relaxed even under high stress. If you get something wrong , good, go over it again, and if you get it wrong again, go over it again
3) Study, plenty of shit on youtube
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Now lets answer your question: Model of bootcamps: Bootcamps typically consist of a bunch of hippy dippys who some how learned code, never worked in industry and are there to teach you a language and a couple of frameworks, data bases and then boom youre on your own. Infact most bootcamps have prerecorded lectures youre watching and just spitting out assignments!
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Guess what, yeah projects are cool but they are only cool enough to get your foot into the interview at BEST. From there on your bootcamp is 100% useless from there on: Refer to steps 1-3
If youre applying to some small startup the bootcamp may have some benefit since they will probably be more involved in checking your work than if you can solve some complex orgasm/algorithm. But since youre exclusively interested in Big N, steps 1-3.
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Finally check out Udemy.com there are LOTS of online bootcamps which are the SAME thing as on campus bootcamps just without the physical building . The courses are amazing, they have discussion boards and cost 15-30 bucks usually. GO FOR IT!
I went to an actual bootcamp for a few days, found out its a bunch of clowns, and then moved on to my own learning, got more done, and enrolled in an MS in CS(which is also totally fine for you if youre still iffy now)
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Lol for real tho you can get some decent foundational stuff by spending 20 bucks on a course or two, do an hour a day for 30 days. Get a course on Game Maker Studio 2 and you will learn enough to prototype some basic stuff. Just my 2 cents though, have never been to college so cannot comment on that.
Thanks for your help. Bought and began doing this Udemy course last night. I skimmed the whole course and it seems rather simple, so I'll definitely be on the lookout for something a bit more advanced.
I've purchased lots of stuff from stacksocial and can verify they are legit. I don't know much about gamedev.tv so I can't speak to the quality of their courses. If you're iffy you can always find some Unreal courses on Udemy.com as their stuff is usually top notch
You should know though this bundle looks like it's ONLY Unreal, and has nothing to do with Unity. If you want to learn Unity you should find another bundle or check out learn.unity.com
I already knew some HTML and CSS. I took an intro to Javascript course to understand what it online (Udemy.com). I was already familiar with designing web pages.
When it comes to learning Angular from nothing, I specifically recommend having a dual screen setup and following along to this video course: https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-guide-to-angular-2/
The author, Maximilian Schwarzmüller, knows what he is talking about and is an excellent teacher. A dual screen setup will allow you to play video on one screen and follow on your own screen.
I seen you asked if your late, i just got my first full time front end web developer job at 29. I taught my self and did some college courses. You for sure can do it by your self though just staying disciplined. I would recommend
freecodecamp.org
udemy (yes theres fee on some but the odd course you can find free)
odinproject
never too late to start, good luck!
Hang in there! Try System Dynamics and Controls
Mathematical Modeling of Systems and More at Udemy.com. Wait till they have a sale and purchase the course. Try, getting a good study buddy maybe even hire a tutor.
It will work out, I'm sure of it.
Learn to program: there's always a need for software developers. There's frontend work, backend work, mobile apps, games. Either freelance or get hired at a company. Very good chance you're either working from home or in an office somewhere.
Pluralsight.com, Udemy.com, FreeCodeCamp.org are good places to start.
There's also IT in general, I would start with the CompTIA certs (A+, Net+, Security+). That should get your foot in the door somewhere working Help Desk. From there you can branch off into an almost limitless number of specialties: Linux Admin, Windows Admin, Network Admin. You could work with databases, mainframes, in the datacenter doing physical stuff like cabling. You can get into InfoSec, which has even more branches: Cloud security, governance & compliance, security engineering, ops, the list goes on.
You can also try to start with cloud stuff first but without some background it'll probably be harder to get started. I'd suggest picking one cloud provider and getting good with them and pick up certs.
I don't know what country you're in but if you have access to a computer and want to learn digital skills you can try udemy.com and find a course in marketing or tech (learn programming) that allows you to get jobs with no qualifications. These sorts of jobs will eventually lead you to a decent comfortable salary in most major cities.
Alternatively, there are a lot of jobs you can pick up in the meantime whilst you figure out your career path, particularly with jobs in the new gig economies, Uber, Deliveroo, Just Eat etc.
There is a ton of great advice here so I hope you find your path, as for dealing with confidence, the best advice I've given people is to surround yourself with growth-minded people that always push you to be better, you'll slowly find yourself becoming happier as you improve.
well, first you got to find out what CAD-software they are using... its gonna be an uphill battle though - but you might be able to find affordable tutorials on udemy.com.
(The courses are almost always on 90-95% sale - so you dont have to pay more that 11-25$ pr. course)
hey your story sounds very similar to mine! I took the extra time to learn how to automate quality assurance testing using selenium and it spawned a great career. Check out udemy.com for cheap courses on the subject but I highly recommend perfecting a new skill with the freedom you have! lmk if you're interested in resources but I made a small career guide for quality assurance testing and I'm happy to share it - it completely changed my life around and now I have freedom and independence :)
I have a couple of suggestions for you, I've seen multiple people talk about just creating 1 simple object a day in blender without skipping a day and how much it helps them retain the skills learned. Second, when I was learning blender I would scower youtube for the perfect video for what I wanted to learn and found it hard to do sometimes. Take a look at Udemy.com. Basically, instructors make courses that are reasonably priced during sale times, (between 10 and 40$) they are tailored to a specific area you want to learn blender for, whether it's making video games or photorealism there's a course for it. If you decide to check them out, always check when the course was released and what version of blender they are using. ALSO very important to watch the first preview of the course as some instructors have very heavy accents.
If money is no issue, I would suggest looking on udemy.com for a good video course.
If money is an issue I would suggest plain old youtube. There are many good providers of .Net related content.
And as stated by someone else. The actual microsoft websites has a great deal of tutorials.
btw : .Net is not a much as a language, but more a whole framework, that contains more than 1 language. C# is the programming language that is mostly used in .Net.
Uh, what? I don't send out spam emails to Udemy students. I have an email newsletter on my inventwithpython.com site, but I haven't even sent out any newsletter emails yet.
Can you double check that you signed up for the course at https://udemy.com/automate/ and not an impersonator? Can you post some of the spam messages if you still have them? (Or describe what they would say?) Also, was this through Udemy's DMs or to your personal email that you signed up with?
Everyone on my dev team said the same thing. I get it when you want to learn the nuts and bolts of making code work -- from what I've been able to find, C is a little better there.
When you're in the middle of learning a specific language, you may not be interested in how the compiler interprets or why a syntax does something. You should know those details one day.
u/awzthrakt -- I learned most of my formative language skills on Udemy.com. With some confidence, I've gone back to see what C & Python are all about. Good luck to you and never stop learning!
I actually started by playing guitar as well but music theory (for me) was hard to pick up on guitar. I found that the piano was easier to pick that up on because I could see all the notes in order as opposed to the guitar where they are seemingly all over.
My learning process was just a few brief YouTube videos with some basic coordination exercises that I did min 5 minutes per day for months. I chose 5 minutes because I wanted to not have an excuse. I could fit 5 minutes in easily. Some days would play longer, but as long as I did 5 minutes it eventually turned into a habit and I never felt that I NEEDED to set aside a crazy amount of time.
Eventually I moved on to a course on udemy.com called "Piano for all" which teaches basic to intermediate. I liked his teaching style so I got into some of his classical courses (Satie, Back) and now I am not an expert level by any means but can get around the keyboard and most importantly, I know how to learn now.
I don't have a piano, I have a usb key board. An 88 key arturia, but you can pick up any usb keyboard, I would just make sure its 88 if you can swing that. I started with a 49 key and it was fine for a but but eventually you need the extra keys to play along.
Connect that to a DAW, and you are good to go. Eventually if you are playing for a while and want to go all the way to a full real piano, then at least you know its not a phase and can go for that
I got a 'coupon code expired' message when I tried to get this. Note that I had to enter the code manually because the link didn't work; I use udemy.com in Canada, however, so that may be the issue with the link.
If you can pass these practice tests, you can pass the actual exam easily. I finished in around 8 minutes with a 950. Granted it's definitely not as helpful as actually learning the material and understanding how Azure works but you will definitely not have trouble with the exam.
ayyy, I've started seriously getting back into drawing after one of my instructors linked me a course from Udemy.com that was on sale for 85% off for the basics of character drawing, then I also bundled in Digital Coloring (which can be applied to traditional as well) and background/landscape and brought out this old entry level wacom intuos tablet from my closet to begin practicing my old hobby again
In addition to the learningdita site, consider getting yourself an academic or personal license of oXygen so you can work at home and at your leisure.
If you REALLY want to get into good stuff in the long term, consider learning about the publishing side. For example, DITA OT, XSLT, XSL-FO, and so on. There's a course on udemy.com that would be a good place to start with XSLT: https://www.udemy.com/course/practical-transformation-using-xslt-and-xpath
Hey I recently started learning Python and I suck so much at it. I got alot good books like
and much more books that I bought and thought it would be an investment to do so.
I also learn on SoloLearn.com as well as Udemy.com and alot of other things.
So I have good resources but I dont know how to write a program or use the stuff I learnt. I feel like giving up because Im too stupid to be a good at using all of this and get a job. Like I seriously feel stupid or I ask myself that this may not be for me, what do you think I should do? also I do all of this because I like programming and I enjoy it
Look up Professor Messer A+ and use Mike Meyers course for A+. These courses are great to use and will help you get your A+. Professor Messer's course is free and has practice exams for $25. Mike Meyers has his courses on Udemy.com and are around $10 when it is on sale. Udemy has sales constantly and he also has practice exams on their as well for about $10.
Avec un DEP tu peux facilement te decocher une job de helpdesk à 20$/heure n'importe ou. C'est 40K$/an. C'est pas pire pour qqun qui commence. Le meilleur conseil que je peux te donner c'est d'essayer d'apprendre un language de scripting (genre, Powershell, Python) - ca permet d'automatiser des processus. Ca va te donner pas mal plus de valeur.
Automate The Boring Stuff sur udemy.com ... ca vaut la peine.
I have a great free suggestion for you. I have tried this course a few years ago and it really created a foundation for me and taught me the basics in an a very accessible manner. Basically a few weeks in a row different meditations progressing from easy concepts to harder ones. You do the same one in the morning and evening so you practice the exercises and will remember them longer. Mediations are standard 10 minutes and have nice structure, I can still heard his intro and outro in my head although it has been years, pretty amazing.
You can find it on Udemy.com search for " mindfulness Per Norrgren". I checked if it was still up and it is still free, can confirm.
What kind of thing are you interested in? Are you interested in coding? Audio/video editing? "I want to make money lol" is not going to help. There are a ton of options, you may as well pick something you're interested in and would enjoy doing. There are several really cheap courses at udemy.com if you want to browse there. They have a sale like once per month where courses are $10-$15usd if they aren't cheap right now.
You can do all my examples, basically for free with the right tools.
I'm not sure of an actual course that teaches Music Theory completely. Udemy.com is usually my go to place for courses. The prices fluctuate a lot so don't buy the course until it's under $15.
I read a book called "The Complete Idiots Guide To Music Theory" that helped me A LOT. It's pretty thorough.
Also, I have a guitar blog and I did a post about the basics of Music Theory. I would love your feedback on whether the post is helpful or not.
https://guitargilly.com/you-dont-need-to-read-music-to-learn-music-theory-heres-why/
Awesome! Lmk if you have any questions when you get into that mix. I have taken a couple courses on Udemy.com and watched other engineers eq their mix and observed their techniques. It really helped me a lot in understanding how to balance the sound frequencies.
just take it as advantage, its really cool to have someone who is advanced in what u're learning, they gonna help you and give you a good power to surpass them.
and about where u can learn, YouTube is full of courses or you can search om udemy.com just search about what they already studied.
have a great day
Hello, go to udemy.com and for a small amount about you can get course on Xilinx Vivado, HLS, AXI and Video Processing. There is also courses on verilog. They usually have sales throughout the month for $12. Also, check out Adam Taylor's blog site.
The A+ is an exam that covers a broad scope so it's not just a test of what you know, you also have to prepare and know how to pass the exam, which is challenging. This is why Reddit has many stories where 10 year IT vets fail the exam. Step one: Print off a copy of the objectives for review. The objectives are the roadmap to success. This is a vital step that many discount and afterward, fail the exam because they spent time studying things they didn't need to.
Prof Messer on Youtube is what most people use to study. The course is free and each of his videos is directly tied to one of the objectives so it makes studying more organized as you can digest in smaller pieces. Go directly to his website vs youtube as the courses there are more organized and there are no annoying youtube ads every 2-3 mins.
Some also use Mike Meyers from udemy.com but while Meyers gives a ton of great info, it's just general info and it is more difficult to tie his lessons to the objectives without some hoop-jumping. Whatever you choose, take good notes! After studying Messer or Meyers, once you feel you have a handle on the objectives then use Jason Dion's test prep from Udemy. His course is about $15 (don't pay more than this) and it has a couple of very "exam-like" practice tests/PBQ's you can take. Take the tests, review the objective lessons on the questions you missed, then repeat until you are consistently scoring in the 70-75% range. Do this and you should pass the actual exam easily.
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Trailhead is free, but after that, check out Udemy.com You can also take pretty extensive online Salesforce classes. They routinely have sales where a class that costs 100 bucks is 12.99. You have access forever once you purchase. Have you tried the Salesforce user groups? Their meetups may be on hold due to the pandemic, but check in your area. Good luck.
>Hanging a “COVID biohazard” sign at the Chinese language institute is certainly reason for discipline
Absolutely not. A university enrolment is a commercial contract for educational services, similar to purchasing a course on Udemy.com.
The university has absolutely no right to enforce behavioural standards that don't relate to academics (e.g. plagiarising work, disrupting classes).
Any other behavioural issues (if they are criminal in nature) should be handled by police, not the university.
Learn the Spring framework which is used to build web apps using java. It teaches you strong OO skills, back end databases, front end development such as HTML, JS and even cloud. This will make you highly employable since most developer positions will require not just knowing a programming language but also a framework. I wish I did this when I was still in university. I only learned it after I graduated. I would go to Udemy.com and find courses on Spring or other frameworks to start off. (note: wait until they go on sale for $14.99) Then start building projects (this is the most important step because it will test your knowledge). Note: Mobile development is not as popular as it was in the early 2010s. Full stack Web development is where the market is trending too so I would focus on that. Good luck!
Android was the first framework I really learned and since then I've learned another dozen or so frameworks with similar strategies.
I typically start with a highly reviewed course from various learning websites. I'm personally fond of Udemy.com. Worth noting I've never paid more than 15$ for a course, there's always coupons or sales.
Go through the 30-40hour course, actually do it all, google the things you don't know and try to really understand it.
After that take what you've learned and start making a personal project from scratch using what you've learned. You'll realize there's still a good number of gaps. Google those.
Then google best practices, it should give you a list of topics. Try reading broadly about them and figure out which ones seem the most important. Don't be afraid to ask people to point you in the right direction, but rarely should you ask people for the actual answer.
At this point you're probably somewhere between the beginner/intermediate range in the given technology and you can keep learning/using w/e you learned.
A health certificate. Oh sorry, serious replies only. So...
Go to udemy.com and select some programming courses. Some are fairly cheap, around $15 or even cheaper. You'll receive a certification at the end. Of course it's not a real diploma, but you can actually learn something useful.
If you want an actual professional certificate, that'd take years and fat bucks even online.