im going to go against alot of the boomers on this forum and say that this is one of the first major steps of moving to the next evolution of display - i.e. moving away from 2d screens
Yea, I've decided to stick with it. I'm doing the hons part-time so it will take two years. But since its unisa its remote so I can do it from anywhere. I hope to complete this first year (4/8 modules), emigrate to the UK then complete my last 4 modules while overseas.
software engineering. Yea one route I was thinking of is working at a big tech company's office in the UK then internally transfer to a US office after a few years. I was only considering doing masters in the US because there is no lottery for a study visa. I don't trust the H1B lottery, can...
im doing honours part-time and im finding it really useless for my career. I only applied because I may (but very unlikely) to do masters one day...and a masters is also useless for my career at this point. I only thought of doing a masters as a means of immigrating to the US as its an easier...
Go is decent! Its easy to pick if you've already been exposed to a couple of programming languages. Easy to pick up, easy to read, opinionated formatting, AOT compiled as opposed to JIT like Java and C# etc.
AOT compilation is sorta the direction a lot of these backend frameworks are going such...
i've been learning Go and its a rather strange language. But it is very quick to pick up and has far better performance than python ever could for BE services. It also seems to be gaining popularity which is cool. I don't count it as a systems programming language though like the poll intends...
I'm looking at Canada, however I have a 3 year degree (BSc) as opposed to a 4 year degree (BSc Hons) would this be a problem ? There is always some sort of shenanigans when comparing 3 year degrees to 4 year degrees, and since you went through the process, what is your experience on this ?
Most of the comments on here I've seen are married people with kids which I'm guessing means 30+ years old. I'm 25, single, living with parents, mid level software engineer and hoping to emigrate to UK/Germany/NL or Ireland next year. Are there any younger people on this forum looking to...
Estonia is great from what i've seen. Very very forward thinking country who does its best to distance itself from its Soviet past. Great startups to find work, Tallinn is beautiful, 99% of government services at online 24/7. They're were the first in the world to come out with a digital nomad...
I'd really prefer a country in the shengen zone. I love to travel to other countries and the shengen zone opens a whole bunch of countries for easy traveling. But I have my eyes set on UK as it seems to be the easiest option to emigrate to