More than likely the camps don't really provide enough for the money. You can go online, take some crappy course and end up teaching yourself. I can't see how a few nights for a few weeks can teach anything ... Maybe html and css???
Second one this month: Another code bootcamp decamps to graveyard • The Register
'The Register asked The Iron Yard for comment and received a copy of the same statement posted on the website. '
'The Iron Yard, a four-year-old coding bootcamp based in South Carolina, USA, said on Thursday that it is shutting its doors. '
'According to Course Report, a website that tracks coding bootcamps, the number of students graduated from coding bootcamps rose from 10,333 in 2015 to 17,966 in 2016. '
'This marks the second code school to write its own obituary this month. ', "Last year, California's Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education, which regulates code schools, fined Coding School $50,000 and denied its application to operate following complaints that it had misled students."
Code bootcamp are worthless. You spend time and money that you could have used for better results. Good developers will automatic search for solutions even invent their own solutions from scratch if none are found.
Bootcamps only are propaganda channels to brainwash you as a new developer that their solutions are the only way. But the only way to survive as a developer is by becoming very very good. And coding bootcamps and certificates will limit your creative process and trap you into their workflow.
Natural selection, all these people that follows these certificates and bootcamps are unfit to survive long enough in the field. After a couple of years you are burned up and replaced by someone cheaper. You never learned to find solutions all you learned ways to record a play back a certain solution the big vendors wants you to use.
If you clone the competition then you become just average. As a developer you don't want to become "average" you want to become better.
3 comments
1 u/WhiteRonin 21 Jul 2017 00:52
More than likely the camps don't really provide enough for the money. You can go online, take some crappy course and end up teaching yourself. I can't see how a few nights for a few weeks can teach anything ... Maybe html and css???
0 u/derram 21 Jul 2017 00:30
https://archive.is/ANETV | :
'The Register asked The Iron Yard for comment and received a copy of the same statement posted on the website. '
'The Iron Yard, a four-year-old coding bootcamp based in South Carolina, USA, said on Thursday that it is shutting its doors. '
'According to Course Report, a website that tracks coding bootcamps, the number of students graduated from coding bootcamps rose from 10,333 in 2015 to 17,966 in 2016. '
'This marks the second code school to write its own obituary this month. ', "Last year, California's Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education, which regulates code schools, fined Coding School $50,000 and denied its application to operate following complaints that it had misled students."
This has been an automated message.
0 u/roznak [OP] 21 Jul 2017 00:51
Code bootcamp are worthless. You spend time and money that you could have used for better results. Good developers will automatic search for solutions even invent their own solutions from scratch if none are found.
Bootcamps only are propaganda channels to brainwash you as a new developer that their solutions are the only way. But the only way to survive as a developer is by becoming very very good. And coding bootcamps and certificates will limit your creative process and trap you into their workflow.
Natural selection, all these people that follows these certificates and bootcamps are unfit to survive long enough in the field. After a couple of years you are burned up and replaced by someone cheaper. You never learned to find solutions all you learned ways to record a play back a certain solution the big vendors wants you to use.
If you clone the competition then you become just average. As a developer you don't want to become "average" you want to become better.