The Harsh Reality Of Being A Software Engineer

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In this video I explain how the software field is a great field to be in but there are some unpleasant things you have to be aware of. I then give my recommendation is pursuing a job in software is still a good idea.

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The most important thing to remember about software engineering is that it is only an interim step to your final career goal, being a youtuber.

Rockyzach
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I have just come across a few of your videos today and man it seems like you are speaking to me directly. I appreciate your share bruh...kudos.

drinkinginparadise
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Burn out happens in all professional careers that's why I'm switching from teaching at least I'd get paid more 😂 Imposter syndrome happens to all of us at some point just know that however you got there, you deserve it 👏👏

aquavibes
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You should do a video, job hunting for developers. How is different from other sectors, where to look, how has ai affected the type of candidates being looked for by employers etc.

h-mix-v
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Really good overview - I've been in the industry for more than 20 years and I still frequently have imposter syndrome and doubts about my skill level. Things are always changing and there is rarely a straightforward solution to complex problems.

peterbradley
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oh yes and BURNOUT! I used to do recreational coding but now...I wouldn't dare lol

truthhurtsohwell
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Software engineering is not like tennis. You have to play against better tennis players in order to get better at tennis.
Occasionally, a senior would give pointers but I learned tons by observing existing code and trying to completely understand it. That helped me find random timing or logic bugs that others would miss. If I saw a style or algorithm that I liked, I would make a mental note or copy the code into a file for later retrieval.

picklerix
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Pushy management is the norm. So burnout will also be the norm.

AlexJames-jvem
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I'm retired now and went through exhaustive deadlines and could NOT get any help ( as a Senior ). I also had to support other developers who get STUCK easily. But, doesn't AI really help now with basic coding and testing problems. All in all, I never thought that complaining was of any use. Getting paid well was the REWARD. Don't expect ATTABOYS and PARTIES from management because you are just a EXPENDABLE REPLACEABLE RESOURCE on a PROJECT.

getsmartpaul
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Im a 42 yo AA man. I recently started thinking about doing this.

DADTHEFATHER
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There are unexciting parts?? Oh my god, it's not for me...

niksatan
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Try burn out from TOXIC physical labor jobs, being rushed to make production, all while having to work multiple other jobs because you cant afford to live.. and still can't with multiple jobs lol. This is why im switching to tech 😂😂😂 i rather have mental exhaustion, being able to sit down, making 100x more than what i am now.. only having to work ONE JOB .. sounds lovely to me :)

nashaeshantell
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What about we in Africa can we get a job from here

ayodeleayomidotun
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You will sound good without the music as well

HasanSiraj-cmwp
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Still better job than being a dev in Java Enterprise 💀💀💀

shedontlove
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Look I've been in software engineering for over 10 years now. Worked for companies, freelanced, experimented, built projects. This been the most overhyped profession on youtube for the past 10 years now. The hard reality is that it is hard, very very hard and no chat GPT or anything can help you if you have no knack, inclination, or otherwise called innate TALENT plus hard work. Time and time again I observed those who are or can be good at programming or in engineering. The ANSWER - those who want and can do MATH and LOGIC. If you hate math, don't like use logic - do not got where super wise kids dominate today. You are in for major embarrassment and impostor syndrome will be your next name. And I see more and more true talent coming in and less tolerance for newbies, dabblers or "coding school" attenders. If you can graduate in 4 years in CS do it first. If you can't - don't go to IT, period!

chazzman