"I just got a offer from another squid game" had me dying
the cool thing is, the incompetent ceo actually knows how to code. that was quite impressive
-Who the heck writes code in assembly?! -Player one comlepted challenge -Right, old geezers
Bro predicted the 2025 tech job shortage
The fact that the old man completed it quickly cause assembly is an old langage, just like the games in the show, glorious !
Joma's reaction at the last few minutes literally sums up what happens to students in a coding exam.
The Joma Cinematic universe is wild.
One of the rare times a sponsor message looks actually like part of the script
Joma Tech shows the life of programmers in a cinematic format that i love.. I'm waiting for the part 2
As someone coding for 10+ years I can say it feels exactly like this when people watch over your shoulder judging you.
That was sick man! Hope this serie continues as soon as possible.
"Those who win all 6 games will receive... a JOB" haha
Honestly, I found his channel because I'm started to learn coding/ software engineer and I just wanna say that I just love Joma, he is so creative and his sense of humour will never get old for me. His girlfriend is so lucky to have him. ๐
Imagine making it to the last part and dying just because of a bug.......
This brought me back to college times when we had to submit our code before midnight :D (Fortunately not in Assembly). It was exactly the same feeling.
hi, just wanted to say that i failed many tests and online coding interviews but i still landed a great job in programming because i didn't quit. it seems dauntless but once you just start making your own projects, coding just makes sense because you were earnest in your learning. goodluck to you all on this grind.
3:57 this part is funny because the old man is used to coding in asm, because it was popular back then
The squid game recruiter even sends invitations via LinkedIn XD
Iโm an older dude, but some 40 years ago when I was writing code in COBOL or Fortran, this felt much the same with all the pressure not to have a โjobโ abend with a SOC 7 error, syntax error, etc and felt a shit ton of pressure to have clean code. Jobs were submitted using 80 column punch card machines where each line of code was created by me sitting at the machine and cranking out each card aka line of code , then having a librarian (that was also me ๐ ) load up the 6250 BPI tapes on the mainframe and then running in batch overnight and praying that the code would be OK. If you screwed up, you would have to wait for the next overnight batch to run, so one period instead of a comma in a massive deck of punchcards would mean waiting another 24 hours to run your job. See, things havenโt changed much from first gen mainframe computing days ๐ Funny part for me is that I am still in tech and still love it!
@jomakaze