@KevinNaughtonJr

FAANG interview prep: https://thedailybyte.dev/?ref=kevin

@musicplaylist6909

Finally a story from a student who wasnt a coding prodigy, or a maths genius blitzing through his major like butter. Ive seen so many of these other stories which have people speedrun to internships and somehow graduate flawlessly with a 4.0 all while making their own semi-professional full stack app. Glad theres a realistic experience of the average compsci student on display now. I think your story is alot more encouraging than those prodigies who 90percent of us cant even relate to. At least students who look at this know that its ok not to be hyper successful at first. Understanding the struggles that come with learning leaves you much more well off to deal with tougher challenges in the future. All the best!!

@jackyFreeFire

Lesson 1: Just start
Lesson 2: Work hard to learn code
Lesson 3: Concepts and topics build on one another so take your required classes as fast as possible, and back to back
Lesson 4:Work smarter, not harder
Lesson 5: Master the basics (math and compiter science) 
Lesson 6: Things worth having don't come easily
Lesson 7: Come to your own conclusion 
Lesson 8: Doing is the way to learn

@filyboy7

dude your story telling abilities are lowkey really good. like i was dead focused the entire time and really enjoyed listening to your coding journey. 👍

@gateremark

Fr fr this is super inspirational

@S1seer

In my second year of CS right now and I’m feeling the heat with discrete, logic in programming, circuits, and c/c++/prolog/scheme class. It’s tough right now but this video reminded me to not give up. Thanks for sharing your journey.

@itskika.t

I just graduated from a CS major, and after 5 long years (bachelors + masters) I couldn’t relate more to your video. Your academic path is scarily equal to mine, and you just unlocked trauma that I thought I had buried deep down! I wish I had seen a video like this 5 years ago, as it was extremely inspiring. Thanks for your honesty, and best of luck!

@spicyjuan1499

This is really inspiring honestly, I really appreciate the segment where you tell us about coming to our own conclusions since it's what worries me and stresses me out about taking this path

@dan_rad

For anyone that is curious it's "nought" not "not".  We don't use it to replace zero all the time. Common usage is "noughts and crosses" or tic tac toe as you call it and nought to 60 when talking about MPH speed. 

For scores we typically use "nil" in replace of 0.

@g0nk_droid

I'm about to go back at 30 to get my BS in Software Dev and this is really nice to hear. I'm no tech prodigy but I know a thing or two and learning to code seems really daunting but also interesting and exciting. Glad to see the perspective of a more typical person I can relate to without having done coding and such from the age of 12

@dreamer03__

Dec'24:
My takeaways: 
- Just start🙌
- Work hard to learn code✨
- Work smarter, not harder
- Master the basics (math and computer science)
- Things worth having don't come easilyđź«¶
- Doing is the best way to learnđź«¶ 

This video is a gem, got inspired so much from this. Thank you!

@salemthibodeaux884

Thank you so much for this video! I was considering going back to school for computer science and you helped me to see it's not so bad and I shouldn't be scared.

@purplespaceduck5837

Even if I'm not planning on majoring in CS this has been super helpful to see. So thanks for making this video.

@tarantelfaser4772

I'm currently doing my bachelor degree in Computer Science and I plan to do a masters degree after that (3 + 2 years in total).
This summer semester has been absolute hell, no classes with coding at all! The most interesting part was the course operating systems, the math course, theoretical computer science and introduction to AI have been stressful and also not too great. But hey, I am very interested in most things comp sci has to offer and I'm not planning on giving up :D

I knew a little bit of programming when I first started studying, that was super helpful, but I always had mad respect for everyone who didn't code beforehand. The introduction lecture wasn't helpful at all lol

@harrydavis797

I wrote my first line of code at 48. Cheers!

@g77222

As much as I love this, I HATE math so I switched from Design and Marketing to FRONT END UX/UI  DEV and I love it. Now i'll be able to use my design skills along with learning functionality of an website or app. I have so many ideas. Great video tho!

@RafaelSouza-uq9dw

man, I am a brazilian student who wants to go to usa and work with IB. I don't know why, but I loved this video and somehow I identified myself with you, probably because I've taken a few olympic math classes and I know the feeling of not understanding shit. The professors there gave me classes about discrete math in the 12th grade. Thank you man, you inspired me to continue studying!

@robertjr8205

Man, my first programming course sucked. 

All these dudes were saying how they were already familiar with lower level languages and all that crap. We we learning c++. Some were saying “yea I been coding since I was 10 and already made my own games and google extensions” all that crap. It was demoralizing and made me feel like I shouldn’t even be there. 
Also my professor was a complete POS. My code worked but if he didn’t like it, he would tell you the worst way he possibly can while remaining  under school guidelines. 

Hated him and he made me feel like I shouldn’t to computer science. Now I’m over here debating to go CS or EE.

Also, what I like about this video is that you showed you struggled. I’m not happy you struggled haha but relieved knowing that I’m not the only one who will. I see a lot of similar videos out here where others were thriving in their cs classes and getting straight As and saying it wasn’t too difficult.
it gives me hope since I’m currently prepping myself over summer to take discrete structures and data structures which are the only classes I need for transfer!

@justmatt_992

I need advice. I’m a psychology student that graduated from community college with my Associates degree. But now that I’m finally going to a four year college I’m realizing that psychology doesn’t really pay too well. Which is making me more and more interested in the prospect of switching to computer science. Before fall semester 2023 begins, what do you think I should do?

@daniellaavila6930

Im so thankful there is finally someone I can relate to in terms of the type of student I am. (Not necessarily great at math and had a bit of difficulties with coding) As I'm hitting my senior year soon I've started doing my own projects like developing websites and making apps because unfortunately my college isn't the best for computer science but its all I can really afford. Because of this video I definitely feel like I can continue (Especially because my data mining class is extremely confusing point because I didn't understand anything in my differential equations class)