Love your content. This one was tough to listen to. When you come close to the mic and then back away it's super hard to hear you. One moment my ears are straining to hear you and bam you're right up against the mic again, coming in loud and clear. Your content isn't boring, keeping one volume shouldn't put anyone to sleep. 👍
I haven't started to properly learn to code (just went through the basic concepts of web dev and learnt html syntax), and this video was already so useful to me! I'll surely click on the rest of the series. Thanks!
Great Video 👌🏼 Want a full series of it 😃 One suggestion: As you move near-far w.r.t mic, the audio volume rises and reduces, do make it consistent please. You may use Adobe Audition to make audio on same level.
Love this video :) Very usefull And Please man, add compressor on your recorded voice. Sometimes you move your mouth to mic and talking really loud, and then you move away from mic. As usually in all programms they have presets for compressor, so this is not as hard as it might look :)
Can see why you were ESL teacher:Your gift for tech + pedagogy = awesome. Clearly, explaining tech concepts is its own skillset. You have that. Your ease with the tech vocabulary & explaining things = goals. How do you get that comfortability?! Thanks. Greetings from Chicago.
Originally became an English teacher just to travel, haha, but thanks. Tech vocabulary just comes from exposure to this stuff, working in a tech company, reading books, courses etc
@@AaronJack Thx for insight + response. Subscriber since Code Drip & now your new course(es) are on my radar. Always valued your no bs, get-to-the-point without too much injection of your personal life. Seems like you’re flourishing in Ukraine [I can’t remember].
Hey could you make a video talking more about what’s needed for this next wave of digital activity for the human race, specifically decentralization and eCommerce? What’s needed for eCommerce? Mobile? Web? Desktop? Other? Shopify developers can get by with basic HTML, CSS & JS (stated in their website). Is that what you mean?
Hi Aaron, I'm enrolling in either master of IT or Cybersecurity for next year and I want to get started learning some foundations knowledge on my own since I have no background in tech other than my interests... I saw your earlier videos on how you got started with CS50 course, I was wondering if you still recommend that as a started point from Zero? I'm looking to go into software dev or security career path. right now I am overwhelmed by the infos available and I really need some kind of structured advice on how to get started learning?
Great information here! Would love to see the CSS and Javascript vids, too. Also, please please please stop moving away and back toward the mic. The waves in volume are doing a number on my ears.
At least JS. HTML and CSS come naturally once you finally need and use them a bit. In regards to python though, why...? JS is just as capable serverside with Node.js, and I've found it to perform much better in all situations than PY. Bottom line: learning JS gives you the power to be a full stack developer. Code from the server can literally be pasted into the client if needed in JS. With python, you're stuck with using wrappers of C/C++ for data science.
Great video, but I have a question regarding what you said at 7:13. I think a website can't read cookies from another website, because the domains don't match. Because if that were the case, I could just steal your Facebook login info (cookies) when you visit my website Unless I'm misunderstanding what Aaron said or I'm missing something
It's going to have taken me about 8 weeks to finish the course with roughly those hours. The assignments sometimes need 8-16 hours each if you have no coding experience.
We consider anything more than 20h per week "full time" so you can definitely finish in 7 weeks if you are consistently putting that amount of effort in
All Im gonna say is that Im 2 years and 3 jobs deep in the industry and Ive never done more than a take home coding assessment that was just as easy as looking up some stuff and getting the right results. That's not to say this stuff isn't important but for the love of god dont study this like its going to make or break you. Cause once you land a first job (with a company thats litterally taking a risk if you have no prior experience) it gets much easier after that once you get some credibility and actually have an idea of how this stuff goes. Granted there are conpanies that will grill you on these topics, I think if your just starting out you should get some experience under your belt first before trying something of that level.