Going back to school...
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@scottalanmiller said:
Over 100 views and over 50 posts on an after hours posting. Pretty impressive
You and I both tear up threads, any thread we're on is going to explode with posts, even if it's just one of us.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Do you know anything about what kind of programming you are going to want to do after you graduate? What is the programming goal going to be?
God willing it's a cushy enterprise job, and I mean a real enterprise, not like four jackasses sitting in a subletted room some place churning out garbage for Rentacoder
Oh, so you were talking about Nathan Latka's Enterprise of programers with Lujure and https://heyo.com/. They used to operate in a apartment over a bar, not sure if they still do.
I won't name names or anything. I will say that a company named after Ed McMahon's popular catch phrase is ill thought out.
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I would not be surprised if PluralSight didn't have some good training videos too.
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And CodeAcademy has some free stuff. Doesn't teach you a lot, but doesn't hurt either, IMHO.
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Any open source projects that might be beneficial to look in on and eventually contribute to?
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@RamblingBiped said:
Any open source projects that might be beneficial to look in on and eventually contribute to?
Thousands. But that is generally a bit more of an advanced thing as you have to not only learn to program but make changes to other people's code which is way harder than making your own. You have to learn a lot and a lot of open source is in C.
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@scottalanmiller Yeah, I've done a lot of the codecademy stuff. Finished their Python modules, started the Ruby, and have started going through some of the web dev stuff as a refresher on HTML5/CSS3.
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@RamblingBiped Depends on the language, but most open source projects are pretty crappy, even popular ones. Once you have a focus of language, then we can better answer that. If you're set on Java, I'd suggest maybe OpenBravo or exo or whatever it is. I can't recall, but I have seen the source trees of those and they weren't too awful.
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I started developing in Javascript. I am really liking node.js and everything that goes along with it.
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railsforzombies.org is a awesome place to start when you want to learn the rails part of it, when learning RoR
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@lance said:
I started developing in Javascript. I am really liking node.js and everything that goes along with it.
We like it here as well, depending on the next year or so we may start switching everything over to it.