There’s been some talk recently of the need for programmers and how people that are unsatisfied with their current employment can find work in that area while making a decent living. Does there exist some sort of virtual meet-up for people that are working towards becoming programmers? I’d like to form, or be part of, a support group of LW-ers that are beginning programming. There may be something like this around that I’ve just missed because I mostly lurk and not even that regularly anymore. (Hoping to change that, though.)
Is there a reason to believe that a LW-related environment will provide better help than existing environments, such as Stack Exchange, or one of the free online universities?
I believe there would be some advantages from the LW culture. For example questions like “which programming language is the best?” would be processed differently in culture which pays attention to mindkilling and values being specific.
On the other hand, LW is just a tiny subset of the world, and there is the strength in numbers. If a website is visited by thousands of programmers, you are more likely to get your answer, fast.
I could give free Skype lessons in programming (specifically Pascal, Java, JavaScript) if anyone is interested (send me a PM). There are probably more people like this, so we could have a list somewhere. Not just a list about programming, but more generally a list of LWers willing to provide professional-level advice on something, categorized by topic.
The main reason I am interested in a LW-related environment (other than it really being my only online “community”) is because I know there’s been talk here before about people switching fields to become programmers. That’s a group of particular interest to me, since I’m one of them. I also know of at least one other person here who is working on becoming a programmer through self-study. There was a post a while back about encouraging more people to become computer programmers, so I’m betting that there are more of us out there.
There’s been some talk recently of the need for programmers and how people that are unsatisfied with their current employment can find work in that area while making a decent living. Does there exist some sort of virtual meet-up for people that are working towards becoming programmers? I’d like to form, or be part of, a support group of LW-ers that are beginning programming. There may be something like this around that I’ve just missed because I mostly lurk and not even that regularly anymore. (Hoping to change that, though.)
Is there a reason to believe that a LW-related environment will provide better help than existing environments, such as Stack Exchange, or one of the free online universities?
I believe there would be some advantages from the LW culture. For example questions like “which programming language is the best?” would be processed differently in culture which pays attention to mindkilling and values being specific.
On the other hand, LW is just a tiny subset of the world, and there is the strength in numbers. If a website is visited by thousands of programmers, you are more likely to get your answer, fast.
LW articles related to programming:
Free Tutoring in Math/Programming
Learn to code
What is the best programming language?
Computer Science and Programming: Links and Resources
Advice On Getting A Software Job
I could give free Skype lessons in programming (specifically Pascal, Java, JavaScript) if anyone is interested (send me a PM). There are probably more people like this, so we could have a list somewhere. Not just a list about programming, but more generally a list of LWers willing to provide professional-level advice on something, categorized by topic.
The main reason I am interested in a LW-related environment (other than it really being my only online “community”) is because I know there’s been talk here before about people switching fields to become programmers. That’s a group of particular interest to me, since I’m one of them. I also know of at least one other person here who is working on becoming a programmer through self-study. There was a post a while back about encouraging more people to become computer programmers, so I’m betting that there are more of us out there.