@CharlesDeBarrosPh

Excellent advice as always. Specially because it comes from experience and not theory.

Thanks a lot, Cezar!

@kerbiljoe

This is excellent! I’ve been doing IT consulting for 3 years and have learned much of the lessons you discussed here. 

Your video inspires me to dare to take the chance and bet on myself. Thanks!

@rustam_tolipov

Thank you for your sharing! I really keep this in mind!

@AndyWangyorzi

Great video and it's inspiring. Thanks for sharing all of these content.

@ars-e1

I'm a 21 year old web developer with 2 years of experience with one in frontend and one in backend. I've been considering the idea of creating my own company and become a freelancer and this video really helped me to see an alternative way to my career. I'm currently applying for a job and they are using Ruby on Rails, I never heard or interacted with Ruby before but this past week I've been playing with it and thinking of how it could positively impact my career. I'm currently learning Rails and looking forward to see the power of it to utilize it as a tool in the future!

Thank you for your video.

@МаркШилин-в9в

Great video, tnx. I would name it differently because these secrets can be useful to any developer.

@kitti.crafts

It’s helped me a lot❤

@BraisonsCrece

Thanks for share. Very interesting

@veoquenoesunproblema

The photo at 4:20 is from Vietnam 😅😅😅 Netflix taught me that on Bad Unicorn 😅😅

@katoshir0

So... I came here to look for Ruby tips/lessons cuz I will need it. Obviously I clicked on the wrong video, but got very good lesson. :)

@pedro.lizarraga

Thank you for sharing!

@ScoseByte

Thank you very much for this !

@Nathan00at78Uuiu

I was curious to know what you think or if you could point me to a resource that goes over why to choose Rails over other frameworks that are just as quick for development like Django for Python and maybe Next.js for JavaScript.  Would it just come down to what language you enjoy using at that point? Because they seem to be structured the same or very similar to Rails but really only differ in the language you use to code in.  For me I think I would go with Rails just because I like Ruby way more than Python and JS. But if I was just thinking objectively about what is best for the customer/client, do you think SaaS products that you are aware of, would be best served with something other than Rails or would it be the same from that technical part so only dev. experience is going to be the difference?

@diegoiturra3134

Great video, thanks for inspiring

@dilipkumar-pu1yb

Expecting more videos like this  👏. Nice work!

@mxss.12313

There's bootcamp in tokyo called le wagon that teaches html, css, js, webpack + ruby and ruby on rails. Does it sound like it's worth it? 5 stars, best rating I have found so far. I keep hearing that ruby's and rails' demand is low and frankly I probably wouldn't be even considering this if I didn't want to study in japan so bad... Any advice? :(

@mukamasteven9658

Thank you I have just subscribed 👍

@jumprails

Great, simple tips. 👍

@gabrielmoreiraassuncaogass8044

If it's all true, great for you man. Let's go

@lucasavelar930

The only problem you have is this need to try to prove that your career style is the right way to go. Most Ruby on Rails programmers are in corporate jobs for an obvious reason: they pay well and have less headaches. I understand that your position was advantageous in the past, but today it doesn't make much sense. It might make sense again in the future, but now having a boss is not the hell you paint it. Learn Ruby and Rails, have a job, turn off your computer at the end of the day and enjoy life with reasonable money.