Using AI To Level Up As A New Coder...
7:03
Advice For Any New Programmer
8:45
Critiquing My Old College Resumes
8:37
The Truth About Grinding LeetCode
5:38
9 - 5 Isn't Enough.
6:23
Жыл бұрын
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@shaunkeys7887
@shaunkeys7887 6 күн бұрын
I love to hear someone expressing more of the nuance to using AI. However, I think there’s some more nuance to the topic that should be understood. For me, scrutinizing the output of AI-generated code is far slower than it is to actually write it from scratch, so I’m not sure about its viability for integration into your workflow. I also have dyslexia, so maybe I’m a minority, but given the error rate of AI, I REALLY have to understand the output, which often means re-reading it 15+ times to scan for security vulnerabilities & blunders. I also agree with the point of learning, but would advise that no-one trust the output of an AI for that purpose, because it’s often wrong. It hallucinates, sometimes is easily gaslit and other times doubles down on verifiably wrong answers, and comes up with “close enough” answers that aren’t necessarily accurate, but sounds believable, and speaks them with confidence. However, in today’s world where students are forced to publish blogs on topics they don’t understand as required classwork, and the internet is flooded with bad, short-sighted articles, AI can seriously help cut through the BS by giving you the keywords you couldn’t find on your own, and helping you form better Google searches to get right down to what you’re looking for The main issue is that when we talk about AI, we’re almost always referring to LLMs, which don’t have the intelligence we think they do. They’re next-word-prediction machines, not problem solvers. They’re trained on Q&A, not the steps required to get to the answer, and therefore don’t do their own problem solving. They’re just regurgitating someone else’s answer on the internet, replacing some words, and hoping it works
@DDoZERR0
@DDoZERR0 17 күн бұрын
Pretty cool. I am from Bellevue myself.
@salim444
@salim444 29 күн бұрын
10:54 you should talk to casey and explain to him why the debugger is so slow 😂. First time watcher btw looking forward for the rest of your videos
@bradparker7506
@bradparker7506 Ай бұрын
Nice timeline - very interesting. Don't ever doubt yourself, you will succeed and go far.
@mic1240
@mic1240 Ай бұрын
Purdue, a top 10 engineering school and the country’s largest STEM enrollment university, has held its tuition since 2011. In many rankings it is top 20 or top 10 in computer science, the first such program in the US. University of Illinois isn’t in Chicago as your map indicates, but Champaign. Many BIG Ten schools have great programs and typically save $$$ vs private schools.
@kyan2000
@kyan2000 Ай бұрын
Random thoughts: It is not that difficult to transfer from community college to Berkeley CS. It is super difficult for out-of-state applicants to get in Georgia Tech CS, UW CS. It is easier to get into elite CS schools with non-CS majors, and switch to CS later. UIUC doesn't allow internal transfer to CS though. But you can get into UIUC CS + X majors relatively easy.
@gaiustacitus4242
@gaiustacitus4242 Ай бұрын
Advice for anyone before deciding on a major: Research the day-to-day activities involved in potential careers. This will help you decide if this aligns with your interests. More than 50% of college graduates end up working in jobs which have nothing to do with their field of study.
@PhilopateerAvalon-zt8vi
@PhilopateerAvalon-zt8vi Ай бұрын
No no let people give up the market is over saturated
@joshuaadewale1409
@joshuaadewale1409 Ай бұрын
Not trying to brag but, wow.... having trouble with if/else statements for weeks? And here I'm thinking that because I'm having doubts about myself because I'm not fully comfortable with recursions or JavaScript promises after almost a month. We should not give up. Let's try our best
@user-fy9xu6rz5n
@user-fy9xu6rz5n Ай бұрын
Great video, man. Well-rounded and thorough. Thinking back to my early days, I know a video like this would have really helped
@potatopower2144
@potatopower2144 Ай бұрын
I appreciate your perspective and advice. Cheers
@XDBjoernXD
@XDBjoernXD Ай бұрын
Explore also other teams. I have come from a very bad team, almost soul crushing to a lovely team with supportive, nice colleges.
@br3nto
@br3nto Ай бұрын
I did a software engineering degree right out of high school, only kept it up for a year or two, then left and got a full time job. In that job, I ended up doing a lot of VBA to automate a lot of business process, it wasn’t appreciated because I was spending time coding rather than doing the work they hired me for… but made me realise I really love coding. After a 7 year gap I went back to uni part time, meanwhile got a junior dev job while I finished. Now with 11 years industry experience, I still love it to this day (in the right environment… it needs to be a software first company).
@TheRealArnoDuebel
@TheRealArnoDuebel Ай бұрын
Syntax isn‘t the problem for me. I just feel like im not capable to actually figure out the logic for the stuff I wanna do.
@anonimowelwiatko4455
@anonimowelwiatko4455 Ай бұрын
Unless your life goals, dreams, interests, hobbies relate to coding/programming, don't pick it up. It's very weird craft. You can spend years working on project that never comes to fruition. Your day to day work might not show visible results (specially backend/SE), you are very likely to get back problems and need to be active outside work. If you work remotely, you might feel alienated by not socializing, quite easy to get depressed. Also you never know how good you are/if what you know is good enough, how much you need to learn. And from everything you learn you will need small percentages. It's a mess. If it wouldn't be that I grew up on MMORPGs and made custom servers, mods and wanted to make something big in future myself, I wouldn't go for it. It's very satisfying when you solve problems for your own project but monetizing is not an easy task. Same as making complete, user friendly, polished application, from start to the end. Even maintaining proper code structure is hard. Test coverage (you better write tests or you will end up with huge mess), architecture, reusability, compatibility, versioning, cooperation (I advice you start with it asap, only overambitious idiot dreamers like me want to do big things solo), refactor, planning in advance tasks to do, writing proper description for your ideas (dressing up abstract concepts), connecting different pieces together in intuitive manner... You can go on and on. It's a mess. If you think about money, become good at anything else that is valuable. If you think that sitting on your ass for 8 hours is cool because you played video games, no, it's not. You will probably start seeing results of this lifestyle in mid 20s. If you are really driven, just be careful in competitive/corporation environment. Brighter they shine, faster they burn. Value your time, be active outside your job (healthy lifestyle should be secondary priority), don't work for free after working hours and don't think that you are not good enough. If you get the job done in reasonable time, you are a professional. It's not a race. Quality over quantity but don't try to be perfect. Good enough, secure, easy to read and share with others code should be a priority. Don't reinvent the wheel, don't overcomplicate, look for easy, fast solutions. Don't treat code review as personal attack on you, be humble as fuck, thankful for feedback/review and learn from better than you. Don't jump between jobs, at least when you are starting and don't have enough leverage. I took slightly above minimal wage position to get experience and advantage on resume. I got promoted after 2,5 year (normally it was required to have at least 3 years of experience but I managed to get some leverage on project I did for company over hours, it was only for promotion) and doubled my income. Then after another 1,5 year or so, I started to burn out (more and more responsibilities were piled on to me, I wasn't only coding, I was making presentations, going to meetings with managers, making architectural decisions, supporting other people, teaching/mentoring juniors, doing reviews, handling part of system as in expertise (be person people would come to ask questions about it), handling other process, cooperating with China/Sweden/India and more. Then I got scouted (just by my experience/job position in specific company alone) and was instantly offered twice as much as I was already earning. Not only I was immediately recruited as an expert (I was trying to get promoted in previous company but they kept me waiting despite that we talked already about my promotion and it was scheduled) but also got literally no responsibilities other than be a good programmer/engineer, cooperate and participate in required meetings. It was amazing change. I went up to top 10% earnings in my country and had less stress/responsibilities. I am still working at this job, tasks are not exciting and there is always something new/different to do but I get job done, communicate, report my progress and respect others as well as myself. Got some leverage over 3 years so I will go for raise next time we discuss my progress. That being said, I rarely have fun at my job. Only when joking around with coworkers. It's very specific area but pay is good so I can afford buying an apartment and think about future, starting my own business/developing proper software and selling it to people, providing entertainment.
@nicolaskevin4046
@nicolaskevin4046 Ай бұрын
The algorithm knows 😭😭
@pisky5067
@pisky5067 Ай бұрын
Quality content!
@zouhairsahtout9682
@zouhairsahtout9682 Ай бұрын
Thanks man for this video, I am actually now start putting much effort on problem solving after almost two years with HTML, CSS, JavaScript and switching from here and there, even an easy problem would takes me hours and some days, but I hope things will take its place.
@bradparker7506
@bradparker7506 Ай бұрын
Good points. If I had to pick one thing that I learned from college that was most important for me was 'problem solving'. Learning coding just comes with practice and time, but if you can't solve the problem, what's the point. I like your videos, well thought out.
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead Ай бұрын
Very well said - appreciate it!
@aaravvarma1143
@aaravvarma1143 2 ай бұрын
Which one is better, computer engineering or computer science? I heard they both pay well but which one is better for getting jobs afterwards? I heard in cs it’s tough to find jobs because it’s very competitive
@pankword
@pankword 2 ай бұрын
Subscribed to encourage you to keep it up
@zzzzzz_652
@zzzzzz_652 2 ай бұрын
Great video keep goingg
@lh9135
@lh9135 2 ай бұрын
The alternative to the best American universities in CS and to OxBridge in England are the two Swiss federal schools EPFL/ETHZ in Lausanne and Zurich (World's Top 10 and top 6 in science and technology). These two schools are almost free (1750 USD/year tuition fees) and offer world-class CS training, of which that of EPFL is considered today to be just below that of Stanford. And the European centers of Meta, AWS, Disney research, IBM quantum, Google are located in Switzerland, a very pleasant and very safe country. A foreign student is authorized to work 15 hours per week after 6 months of presence at the rate of 27.16USD/hour! An interesting avenue to consider for a young, adventurous American citizen who cannot afford to pay several hundred thousand dollars in tuition fees for a world-ranked 5 year’s master's degree in CS.
@lucasjorge9084
@lucasjorge9084 2 ай бұрын
Great advice!! Keep up the good work!
@aaravvarma1143
@aaravvarma1143 2 ай бұрын
I got into Georgia Tech off from waitlist, but don't know what major I want to do, is it possible to add an aerospace engineering major, Physics major, Chemistry major, Materials Science Engineering major, Industrial Engineering or Computer Engineering? If I complete all the classes required, am I guaranteed this major as a double major or to switch into this?
@bradparker7506
@bradparker7506 3 ай бұрын
Great advice before accepting any letter of offer. Are you still working remote?
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead 3 ай бұрын
Nope - back to Redmond again!
@josiahharris4369
@josiahharris4369 3 ай бұрын
Kyle didn’t say this directly, but I will say it: “Mother Tech eats her young …”
@bradparker7506
@bradparker7506 3 ай бұрын
Welcome Back!
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead 3 ай бұрын
Good to be back :)
@kylerham1083
@kylerham1083 3 ай бұрын
........Stanford, MIT, Carnegie Mellon, UC Berkeley......
@lakshya9917
@lakshya9917 3 ай бұрын
The dream
@cheese-power
@cheese-power 2 ай бұрын
Great schools, indeed! Princeton is also on par in my humble opinion.
@yafetgetaneh1624
@yafetgetaneh1624 4 ай бұрын
Got in for Aerospace, thanks for this.
@mtk3587
@mtk3587 Ай бұрын
Stats?
@bessiefloresgomez1756
@bessiefloresgomez1756 4 ай бұрын
Very insightful!! ❤
@sebastianmelton227
@sebastianmelton227 4 ай бұрын
Can you tell me how you acquired the internship? Highschooler here looking to intern at lockheed for the summer.
@bellefleur2127
@bellefleur2127 5 ай бұрын
This video is so insightful ✨ I’m currently working on my transfer application to GT and I’m hoping to get into the CS program as well. Your videos are so much helpful and informative to me 🌟Thank you for doing such a great job 🎊
@user-rb7ug7oy7q
@user-rb7ug7oy7q 5 ай бұрын
I have a lot of stuff but I can see cons on my stuff getting taken for both instances.
@puduhari1
@puduhari1 5 ай бұрын
Based on your opinion, would you choose Georgia Tech or UT Austin for Computer Science (Goal is to start a tech venture / entrepreneur and not a job in a tech company)
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead 5 ай бұрын
I can't speak much for UT Austin (I didn't consider it when I went to college), but I do recommend Georgia Tech for Comp Sci and I'm happy with my decision. I'd specifically recommend looking into Create-X if you haven't already at GT - I didn't do it during college, but it sounds like it'd be a good fit for what you want to do. It's also important to consider the other aspects of the college experience/atmosphere (which I have lots of videos about regarding Tech) - GT has a lot to offer, but for some people it's just not the right fit.
@puduhari1
@puduhari1 5 ай бұрын
@@KyleKeirstead thank you for your response. Can you please provide some insight into for whom it’s not a right fit. Do you provide consulting calls (1 on 1) with students or parents and if so how to reach you.
@leealysia9965
@leealysia9965 5 ай бұрын
It's quite scary that the graduation rate is only 51% at Tech. I heard similar from a friend whose daughter is there. Do all majors have such low graduation rate? Thank you very much for your videos. They are very good.
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead 5 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm not sure what the statistics are by major, but I think the important thing to keep in mind specifically with Tech is that only the 4-year graduation rate is low (as opposed to the overall graduation rate). Historically Tech was known for having a lot of people drop out, but that hasn't been the case for a while. A lot of students take time to do internships/co-ops, which means it might take a 5th or 6th year to finish the program. There's also a lot of classes for some majors - if you're not coming in with a lot of credits (from AP/dual-enrollment) and you don't want as demanding of a workload, taking another semester can make things a lot less hectic. I also do know some people who were able to graduate in 3 years (they generally came in with a lot of credits). So, while it is a low statistic especially compared to the other schools in the video, I personally wouldn't worry too much about it, but everyone's circumstances are unique.
@rochelledunn1279
@rochelledunn1279 6 ай бұрын
This is really incredible, thoughtful guidance for any student trying to pick a college. I will be showing this to my senior HS daughter (not a CS major) as you bring to light all of the details they should be considering while narrowing down a college list. Thank you!
@AzizasVlogs
@AzizasVlogs 8 ай бұрын
Thank you this was verrrryyyy helpful
@customkush7103
@customkush7103 8 ай бұрын
I’ve been living with roommates for the last 4 years and I’m finally about to move into my own space and I’m so excited. I feel like a prisoner confined to my bedroom because I prefer to keep to myself and don’t use the common space especially when my roommates are using it.
@MrJazz1352
@MrJazz1352 7 ай бұрын
I’m 28 and still living with roommates smh. Really need to get my money up.
@prod.gregupnext2958
@prod.gregupnext2958 3 ай бұрын
@@MrJazz1352don’t rush it
@LebronJames-ll4bh
@LebronJames-ll4bh 3 ай бұрын
Naw Rush it lol .. 4 years myself and I’m a home 🏡 owner saved my money and got the job done … it’s nothing like having your own fr …
@yvanlebron8304
@yvanlebron8304 8 ай бұрын
University of Washington have a 53% am I right?
@Green58211
@Green58211 5 ай бұрын
Not for the CS school.
@YouranZang
@YouranZang 9 ай бұрын
Hi, your videos about Georgia Tech are really helpful! I'm a freshman and I'm considering transferring to GT next year. My current major is physics, and I want to apply for Electrical Engineering or CS major at GT. I heard that the process is highly competitive, and could you give me any advice on it? Thanks!
@singularitylearning8796
@singularitylearning8796 9 ай бұрын
Hey Kyle, do you know how good the Physics Undergrad program is in Georgia Tech?
@RumplestillSkin99
@RumplestillSkin99 9 ай бұрын
I love living alone but bills sometimes can be hard I can usually make it through just fine but money still freaks me out a bit 😂
@HollyScarlett_
@HollyScarlett_ 9 ай бұрын
I’m choosing to live alone now
@saadbahlouli5161
@saadbahlouli5161 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this, great video! I'm a sophomore that just transferred to GATech. I would admit I'm behind in CS but I'm committing a lot of time to catch up this semester and add personal projects and knowledge of data structures/algorithms. We'll see what happens
@user-pd8bv9lg3f
@user-pd8bv9lg3f 10 ай бұрын
I've discovered it's horrible both ways. When I had roomies, there was big roomie drama, either roomie was smoking narcotics, aggressive, domineering etc, but when I lived alone, got so paranoid, started talking to myself, etc.
@finnishboy5923
@finnishboy5923 6 ай бұрын
Idk maybe you're just mentally ill?
@samuraichampionz
@samuraichampionz 4 ай бұрын
Go outside, don't stay inside. Don't listen to your parents bullshit about staying indoors.
@LevelUpNorrr
@LevelUpNorrr 4 ай бұрын
@@samuraichampionzexactly! And conceal carry
@tristanrodenhauser5267
@tristanrodenhauser5267 10 ай бұрын
Did you ever have a interest in the College of Computing Study Abroad Programs to Berlin or Barcelona? Are these competitive?
@iersssel
@iersssel 11 ай бұрын
Very fun video to watch. For the sake of KZfaq I do believe you should've finished the chicken task
@ChristopherCurtis
@ChristopherCurtis 11 ай бұрын
Someone needs to fork chicken and call it "badger mushroom snake"
@alexandereakins8917
@alexandereakins8917 11 ай бұрын
yeah, so now that you've introduced us to chicken...we're gonna need you to recreate Minecraft in it. Sorry. Thems the rules.
@KyleKeirstead
@KyleKeirstead 11 ай бұрын
I think that would take me the rest of my life 😂