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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • With your background, consider pivoting into another skill subset. Specifically, the Salesforce job market has been completely flooded with people who don’t have a baseline understanding of code and coding best principles and practices.

    People that I work with that understand those, get really far in the Salesforce ecosystem. Having a solid background in those OOP languages would help you really shine in that market.

    It’s a skill set that’s needed and for you, will be relatively easy to go into, just go out and pay $200 to get your admin cert and another two to get your SF Dev 1 Cert. The Apex language is just a flavor of Java and LWC is just JavaScript. You’ll then get a ton of recruiters reaching out.

    Whatever you decide though, good luck and keep at it! It took me over a decade of bouncing around different niche IT areas before I found something that stuck.

    Source for my opinions: I’m currently working as a Senior Enterprise Architect at one of the big 4 consulting firms and have been for years.



  • No way. I started learning computer science on the job when I was older than you. I took my time, asked questions, studied after work every day, got a better job, which led to another better job and another. In just 6 years of working my ass off, I’ve been able to rise the top of my field in IT. You can do it. Anyone can. Perserverance is the absolute key. When it gets hard, and it will… just believe in yourself, and do it anyway.

    Good luck! You got this!


  • Not being curious. Education should never stop. You should constantly be seeking intriguing books, new ideas, different perspectives. Once you’ve lost your curiosity or pridefully believe in one opinion and one way of thinking, no matter your schooling, you have at that moment become poorly educated.


  • Every platform/service/product that is owned by a single company is eventually going to breakdown and turn into the worst form of itself. Companies are driven by this fiscal quarter being better than the last and it is inevitable that eventually quality has to go out the window to increase profits. The only sure-fire way to “reset” quality or force the company to ensure quality is to not monetarily support them. But with the internet, that is very difficult to achieve with having so few platforms that connect us all owned by companies. The only answer on keeping the internet a quality space for socialization and connecting with each other, is decentralization.