▲ | gethly a day ago | |
Coding has nothing to do with degrees. It's actually a huge waste of time. Unless you are studying to be a doctor or a lawyer, school is waste of time and money and has huge opportunity costs. So definitely do not even think about masters. I have started fiddling with HTML around 2000, PHP in 2004, then Go in 2018-ish. I always worked with websites, though thanks to Go, nowadays it is mostly backend related and lower level stuff. Anyway, I say this as I have seen the market develop for quarter of a century. And what you are experiencing is simply saturated market. Everyone thinks they can write code nowadays and so there is too much supply. Then add the the "AI" crap and you find yourself very quickly being obsolete. The real economy is tanking, despite fake numbers propping up the stock market, one just needs to glance at massive tech layoffs since 2022 to realise the time is up. So not a good time to be a newbie in this field. But is that really so? No, absolutely not. My whole "career", I worked in niches and that always paid my bills. And I always recommend the same. Don't be a generalist, specialise on something unique where there is little competition and sufficient demand and stability. It can be absolutely anything imaginable, just make sure you become an expert in this niche. This will then allow you to easily filter out job advertisements so you can focus on jobs where you will have high chance of being a fit for and also experience little competition, comparatively to the rest of the job market. Last tip, focus on the east, not on the dying west. The future is in China when it comes to tech. There is competition, but again, keyword is "niche". And the job market is there and will be there. As you are in Iraq, that poses quite a problem, even for remote work. So you might be forced to look for middle eastern countries with tech jobs. I guess UAE would be my pick as from what I hear the salaries are great and supply is low, mostly because nobody wants to move there. Also you would have no time zone issues for remote work. Either way, you have to think in the context of your situation in general and make decisions based on your capabilities and options. |