GeeMale
Senior Don Juan
Both I guessAre you asking for suggestions on what to take, or what I did?
Both I guessAre you asking for suggestions on what to take, or what I did?
I started to code at age 9 and just organically ended up working for local companies, eventually moved to Germany and managed engineers with Master's degrees as a highschool dropout.Both I guess
you don't need anything other than an interest in IT and IT skills to get a job as a junior qa.Is this enough to help get job as QA?
Haha - the product owners I work with are pretty good. Does annoy me that they are paid just as well as devs though.Yeah, I love coding AFTER work, but not coding AT work for some retard product owner.
I know that "realm"How do you know this
It's great! Software development in our country is a very popular area and many young people want to do it. Some areas still do not look attractive for software developers and this is sad. For example, the tourism software industry. As someone who runs a travel blog, I read some very interesting information here on how important it is to develop quality software in the travel industry and how important it is to select a quality team for this. From integrating with multiple systems to resolving booking issues, incompatible payment systems, CRMs, vendor systems and distribution issues, the challenges that travel companies face are not so small or insignificant. These and many problems can be fixed. You agree with me?I'm just finishing up a degree... I started 10 years ago.
I did mainly programming languages and I thought I would probably go into it here in Canada after I finished (which is in just a few months). After hanging out with my programmer friend for a bit, I have determined that the field is rife with beta/cuck/leftard guys and girls. All his friends are fat nerds with fat, bossy wives/gf's that have multicoloured hair and sub to every type of feminism on the planet. Not to mention guys in various stages of divorce that are still convinced their wife is doing right by them. I honestly don't know if its a good career change considering my previous workspace could clock six figures with very little added stress (ESL). I don't want to work around a bunch of 20 y/o cringelords who simp to some b1tch and have to completely hide my personality so as not to 'offend'. Learning game has changed me, and I don't think I can change back. My friend is a pretty hardcore 'luxury communist' and I'm guessing most of the industry subscribes to this bullsh1t theory aswell and I have problems not calling these people out. Every programmer I run across looks like a soy, acts like a white knight and has very little in the way of game.... very very little.
Contrast that to ESL where every other teacher is a hardcore right wing sexpat. Difficult transition.
That said, I have a dude passing me dev jobs from Japan, I can send you the link if you like. I'm pretty sure I'm disqualified considering my wife is Chinese. Also I'm in a bunch of rooms in Weixin that are essentially job boards. There are quite a few jobs scrolling for american coders to help with QA. I got my italian friend a job at NetEase a few years ago and now he's assistant to the head of the game test division. He gets around 4k/month which is 20,000 dollars in their money. He lives a sweet life, has a personal chef and tests the latest sh1tty games coming out of NetEase (as you can see I didn't get the job). He's also hard right, has no end of women and is easy asf to talk to. I suspect IT in other countries have a different cut of guy. Maybe. His degree is in biz economics.
Which country are you from?It's great! Software development in our country is a very popular area and many young people want to do it. Some areas still do not look attractive for software developers and this is sad. For example, the tourism software industry. As someone who runs a travel blog, I read some very interesting information here on how important it is to develop quality software in the travel industry and how important it is to select a quality team for this. From integrating with multiple systems to resolving booking issues, incompatible payment systems, CRMs, vendor systems and distribution issues, the challenges that travel companies face are not so small or insignificant. These and many problems can be fixed. You agree with me?
As a senior software engineer for a global bank, I disagreeIt's an absolute wank of a job.
Favorite Language?As a senior software engineer for a global bank, I disagree
Favorite Language? C#
Do you use COBOL? Nope but you can almost write your own paycheck and conditions of employment if you know how to.
What do you think of C#? I love it. Beautiful language to both code in and look at. Sometimes the .NET Framework can be a pain in the ass but usually it is OK. Interested to see if Blazor ends up unifying front end and back end design systems into a single architectural framework. I think C#'s Web Assembly compiler needs to be improved from what I hear tho as it takes longer than other front end systems to compile. C# is what Java SHOULD be if Sun Microsystems didn't sit around high fiving each other for 10 years while Microsoft developed C# from the ground up and blew right past them and never looked back. Kotlin is supposed to be a big upgrade over Java but I have never used it before and it doesn't seem to be getting adopted that much from what I can gather.
Because it's very subjective. I enjoyed my last ~$800/day gig and pulled close to $17,000 in March. But now I've gotten a CTO position with less coding and prefer that even if it pays less(total comp depends as I have equity too).As a senior software engineer for a global bank, I disagree