- It's down for me
- Movies: - 12 angry men - Whiplash - Prestige - American Beauty - The Thing - V for Vendetta - The Grand Budapest Hotel - Gone Girl - Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Parasite - ... Tarantino or Scorsese movies
Anime: - Howl's Moving Castle - Spirited Away
Not a movie but both great series: - Love, Death & Robots - Black Mirror
- I would be very appreciated if somebody could answer me :)
First of all: 1) I'm a self-taught developer 2) I spend last year building my app on MERN stack
The problem with JavaScript technologies is that you have to add many dependencies into your project. Each module / library / framework has their own documentation which is time consuming if you are self-taught to go through it
The question really is: - Is .NET or any other framework so called "battery included" ? or I also need to add hundreds of dependencies i.e. authentication -> password hashing, jsonwebtokens etc.. - As .NET or any other framework requires more code vs Node.js -> does it pay off later on during refactoring? Means is it more productive vs any JS framework?
I'm really considering to spend next year learning C# with .NET because being solo dev it's really time consuming constantly monitor what did change and what needs to be refactored. JS stack doesn't help with maintaining the project in a long run (or I have limitted knowledge) it is really time consuming stack tbh
I agree that creating a simple CRUD app for web course it is easy but if you need to do something more advanced...
Should I start learning C# ? or .NET also require thousands of depedencies i.e. file upload (multer docs!!! Man I know them almost by heart now...)
- I'm thinking about it too. I would also work on this idea. In general online higher education is something not explore fully yet and the margins are out of space..
You don't need to pay monthly fixed salary - you can have everybody on hourly rate. There are many educators which would like to have additional money by doing 2hrs open online office and up to 4 exams onsite.
IMO the for any education level online school (higher edu is easier to do online) it's a neat idea!
Sign me up
- It can sound stupid but I’m newbie so for me: * Firebase - moving my ideas from local host to online and be able to present this / get feedback. That was/is motivating me to solve more complex problems.
* JS challenges website like coderbyte edabit
* honorable to mention- Hardcore Functional Programming in JavaScript, v2 from front end masters
- 4 points
I have to finish the front end but I don't like to do it so I'm constantly procrastinating.. Funny is that I wrote the backend in nodejs, later in .Net, and at the end with golang but I never finish the frontend...