I work as a scientist and learned web development on the side. Found out my company uses the low-code power apps platform. Knowing programming already made it easy to pick up and develop an app. It’s alright but definitely a money saver
Another useful video, thank you Tiff. I definitely need to get on those AI courses by the end of 2023. What AI art tool did you use for the beginning shot? Looks super fun
SQL was originally the Structured English QUEry Language, or SEQUEL for short, as a play on QUEL, another relational query language, until it was discovered that a UK company held a trademark for the "SEQUEL" acronym, so IBM changed the acronym to SQL (Structured Query Language). When I first started as a developer, I didn't know the history, and I used to pronounce it S-Q-L. When I learned the history, I realised I was wrong and started to pronounce it sequel, because the correct pronunciation is, and always has been, sequel.
I am a student in university. And I am learning MERN stack web development. And i have learned this Stack some days ago. Should i continue learning this or change this sector? If i change the sector which sector should i choose. I am in a big confusion. So, i need your suggestion. I hope you will replay
Did she really stopped the video right in the thick of it to show us her unrelated outfit ?!? :O I was focused on the stuff and had to relisten 3 times looking for a connection before acknowledging there was none... You telling me there is a public for this type of tone in the programming space. It's giving low-key self-obsessed. Not trying to be been, content was very informative this was just...off. Anyway, it's free content. Can't complain.
I’m 57 with long outdated computer experience - am I too old to get into the field? Can you offer me advice in a good place to start and a direction to go ~ I’d like to learn ChatGPT as well ~ my dad was a computer expert and says I’m too old - but I hate being left out of the AI world - and I would like to get an actual job in this field somehow.
computer science electrical engineering mechanical engineering computer engineering mechatronics engineering *or if a school offers a degree or certificate related to robotics whichever you choose, you will need to make up for the lack of knowledge (ie choose electrical engineering and take mechanical engineering and computer science courses, etc)
Hi, thanks for the great info. I wonder if you could please help me with a question about SQL? What are the prerequisite skills to have before starting with SQL? Also, there many types of it like, MS SQL, MySQL, PostgreSQL. Do those share common areas? Thanks in advance.
So happy you included the cloud. I am taking the AWS solutions Architect professional exam next week. After I get my cert, maybe we could hook up. Are you single?
I’m an older expat and getting started . I go on sites but don’t get the basic skills to start . How to progress and keep interested? Might be a great video ?
What about Prompt Engineering? Answer me someone 😁 As I understand - there are no professional specialists there yet. When I had a project (from research to realisation) with OpenAI GPT, Prompts templating, OpenAI Embeddings, Vector search - it was something like a "rocket science". Now I understand how much it costs and I am seriously thinking about some major changes in career, from Senior Developer to Junior Prompt Engineer or something close to this. Could you give some advise, or roadmap in few words?
Tech guy here - This is a list of most in-demand buzz words. Don't go learn robotics unless you want a career in robotics. And, just to be clear, there is no such thing as "AI". AI is a buzz word that you use when you talk about machine learning and other technologies that allows a system to make a decision. If you want a career in "AI", you are looking for a career in something that is in its infancy. There is lots of room for failure here. Cloud computing is also a buzz word. A cloud is just a computer system on another companies hardware or infrastructure. Yes it is essential to know what cloud computing in and to have a skillset that allows you to use one of the major cloud infrastructures (e.g., AWS, Azure, Oracle, etc.,), but if your skillset is "cloud computing" it's like saying that your skillset is "computers". It makes no real sense. When you start a tech career, you have to be intentional. Tech spans logical, physical, and virtual infrastructures. It includes anything from designing logic gates to securing PII. Don't be fooled into thinking you can just study one "in-demand tech skill" and you will have a career. You will - for sure - be teaching guitar to 12 year old's before you pay off your student loans.
Your teaching us to become slaves as employees.. how about teach us self employment, contractors routes into the tech world as “age” wouldn’t be any barrier there! 🤭🎉 .
A.I. will kill innovation. We are making people dumber, as is evident in this video. Now hurry up and invent a "smart toilet" because that's where this industry is headed.
Hey Tiff, thanks for your video :). Do you have tips for note-taking when learning technology subjects from various resources (e.g. courses, blog posts etc.) Do you organise your notes by courses or topics? For example, if you learn a topic from a course in coursera, do you take notes according to the topics outlined in the course? If so, how do deal with courses that containing overlapping material? Also, if you want to add to your existing notes from additional resources (e.g. blogs and youtube videos) about a topic covered in two courses, which sets of notes do you add it to?
I moved my notes to Obsidian in a Zettlekasten style and love it. Each note is a single idea which are then organized and linked in a logical way. If I take a course I will link all the individual notes to the outline, but they are also linked in my overall content. While studying for a cert test I made a specific section for that and linked relevant notes in. For example, I have an AWS section under my Computer Science group. Within AWS I have individual notes on the services or concepts. If those concepts are also relevant to python they’re also linked there. If I learn more about a topic in a new course I’ll expand or edit the original note and update the source info. This way all of the knowledge stays together regardless of where I learned it. What I’ve learned is to link notes to the lowest possible knowledge domain, so rather than linking a note on firewalls to Computer Science you link it to Security or something even more precise. Security is then linked to CS and all those links make up the hierarchy so it makes finding everything on a specific topic easier. There’s a learning curve involved in a setup like this, but the outcome is worth it. I use this system for all my learning from computers to dog training. If I’m learning it and want to use it again the notes go here.
@steveshay5364 Thank you for your detailed response. You mentioned that when you learn new information from a new course about a topic, you add or edit existing note on the topic. However, what if the next course covers additional topics as well. Would these additional topics be linked to a course outline?
@@kiaraa1505 yes. When I’m studying the goal is to strengthen the overall knowledge of a topic regardless of source, and for that goal I improve the individual notes and add them to the larger outline where appropriate. But I also create a note that is the outline of the course or book with those same notes linked in to the section or chapter were that topic was covered. In the case of a new course that crosses topics it’s exactly the same: the individual notes go where they fit in the overall outline, which in this case would be in two different branches, and they all get linked to that course. Generally an individual note is focused and precise enough that it doesn’t cross topics, but when they do I first try to split it up logically, but if that’s degrading the knowledge then that one note just lives in two places on the outline. Sometimes it happens that way. In my case it’s generally an computer topic that’s used for business decisions, so I make the note as generalized as possible and link to it twice. Other times that note becomes the technical version of the topic and I create another one that’s business focused. It’s all about how you want to use the notes, and I find value in the connections to the larger topics while also remaining clear and concise individually, so in the tech/business scenario I might also link those two notes to each other as related topics. Notes will often be edited again later on to meet these goals, but that process helps to strengthen my understanding and recall so it’s worthwhile. Hope that helps.
Computer Vision is still big, from what I observe. Perhaps that could be put under robotics for some applications. It could count as AI for other applications. Yet there are so many other applications of CV that don't involve robotics or AI/ML.
These are great for the US market, but I've been doing computer courses for 30 years and have yet to land employment in the UK tech sector, I drive cars for a living, certs, ai, cloud, sql, dbms, seo, design etc... and can't even land an interview, im convinced these are ghost jobs to make the UK 'look' techy and competitive. I wish it were as easy as you make it appear. I have to use the gig economy to use any of my gained skills.
Your videos are very good, thank you. But can I ask why do you have so much filter on your face? I think your face is pretty nice and you dont need any filter. But I can just be wrong and you dont have any filter on your face.
For Microsoft Azure in particular Microsoft provide a lot of short courses on MS Learn. They allow you to use their free sandbox as you work through the examples.
Hi I'm Ariful Islam leeton im software engineer and members of the international organization who and investors public and private sector and Co Founder open A. I
Hey Tiff, How to make a perfect resume with projects for remote react developer job? 🤔 Where to search for react developer job? I am from India. If the answer is too long then a video on this topic will be better.
I'm still in the learning process, but your channel has been so insightful and I will continue watching it for some years now xD. I'm taking a Udemy Full-stack course by Dr. Angela Yu, it's called the complete 2023 Web Development Bootcamp. I like how it takes you from the basics until to what is current, ofc it just gets harder and harder but that's sort of the point. I'm hoping that once I'm done, your channel and others will help decide what the next step will be in regards to where I should focus my growth D:
I'm a java developer but I think I want to become an AI engineer, I wonder how hard is it? 🤔🤔🤔 Really interesting video, thank you for your great content!!!
Thank you! It sounds like you already have the base technical skills of being a developer so just apply those learnings and skills to the AI sector! I love courses on Coursera for that :)