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Ermi dev 🧑‍💻

Ermi dev 🧑‍💻

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This is my channel and I’m Ermi. A freshman at AAU, really into aerospace and software engineering. I use this space to share my ideas, the challenges I run into, and my journey as I try to grow in both fields. DM: @ermijemmy ermizamr.tech

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this is my terminal apparently
this is my terminal apparently

yesiiiii
yesiiiii

and there are people who joined when I was off welcome all 🫶

and I wish I had named this week: week -101. Because of the final trauma but I got no time and I should prepare my self quickly.

for the coming weeks I will start documenting my journey, prolly and this week is week 0 of my summer weeks

hello everyone, final is over and we sooo backk

Some of you have the idea and regret of afterquery and there is another wave coming I guess:

Yoo fam how you doing?

use this API key it holds 10$, I dont want it for now

fe_oa_62de8889ef8694a4f695afe6ebee1e23a13a6d8fd89a3930

Repost from ghion
Gift
x3

جوایز قرعه‌کشی

3 اشتراک تلگرام پریمیوم برای 3 ماه

تاریخ پایان

yoooo fam how is it going? I am in my hell era currently but I wanted to share somethings with you

None of the bove😀

Let's how is the gng doing
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Eid Mubarak 🌙 for my muslim fellas

I am writing this for people starting out in tech, if it helps. The very first thing most people experience when starting tech is confusion: “Where do I start?” “What should I become?” “How do I even get there?” These types of confusions become clearer when you get familiar with the tech space. To do that: Join different tech communities Ask seniors or experienced people Talk with your friends Explore different fields Make your social media feeds as much as possible about tech Decide the type of person you want to become in the future Basically, many tech people can roughly be classified as frontend, backend or full stack developers. So identify your interests or simply give yourself time to explore. (No time bond) For a roadmap, you can consider: HTML → CSS → JavaScript → React → Node.js → Express → SQL → React Native... You can also: Follow roadmaps from roadmap.sh Watch developers build projects (underrated) Research things on your own The second thing many people ignore is that these stuffs are not mastered in one or two days. Of course, everyone learns at a different pace, but make sure you can actually build a complete project with a technology before adding it to your “skills stack.” The third thing is: don’t compare yourself to anybody. Trust me, I’m not saying this to make you feel better psychologically. I am saying this because it’s the truth. Everyone in tech is exploring their own path. Nobody’s journey is exactly yours. You have to discover your own way. The fourth thing is,may be personal: Don’t expect a person, institution, organization or school to teach you the tech. Tech is learned best when you naturally explore and build things yourself, not only by listening to boring lectures from someone teaching just to finish a class or only to make money out of it. The fifth thing is: don’t be shy. Socialize. Create a channel. Post your progress. Share your projects. Don’t gatekeep your skills because they may pay you back. At the same time, there are moments where you step back from social media and focus deeply on yourself. That is also important. Just don’t disappear forever. The sixth thing is consistency beats motivation, intelligence and curiosity. Someone who is motivated or  intelligent can't survive when his understandings are tested in different scenarios. Some days you’ll feel extremely motivated and code for hours. Other days you won’t even want to open your laptop. What matters is consistency. Even learning one small concept, fixing one bug or writing one line of code daily builds momentum over time. The seventh is please don't say I have no laptop, I have no good smartphone or whatever related things....trust me...if you don't have the curiosity and the energy to make it in tech with bare hands......you'll not make it when things get comfortable. There are peoples who watch coding tutorial through their phones and do experiments whenever they can reach a laptop. Some people I know personally even used to code in papers and run the full code going to internet cafes. The eighth thing is: learn how to search. Most devs do not memorize everything. They search. They read documentations. They analyze errors. They ask good questions. One of the biggest skills in tech is learning how to learn. The ninth thing is: I suggest you not to chase every trend. Every month there is: A new framework A new AI tool A new programming language A new “best technology” Strong fundamentals will always outlive hype. If your basics are strong, adapting to new technologies becomes easier. The last thing is: enjoy the process. Tech is one of the few fields where curiosity alone can take you very far. There is always something new to build, explore or improve. Don’t make it only about money, titles or competition because burnout comes quickly when passion disappears. Start small. Stay curious. Build consistently. And trust your journey. That's all I can tell for someone who is starting out! and I will support you with all energy I can give this is from my heart 🫶🫶

And this your boy yesterdayyy🔥🔥
And this your boy yesterdayyy🔥🔥

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