Category Archives: Learn to code

The five reasons we’re most excited about HackerYou Summer Academy 2013

We are thrilled to announce that, this summer, you can apply to join HackerYou’s first full-time program, HackerYou Summer Academy, which we’re hosting in Ottawa in partnership with Shopify. Come and learn Ruby on Rails, build applications and collaborate with some of the smartest up-and-comers around. You’ll learn directly from some of Shopify’s most talented software engineers, be mentored by Shopify employees, and participate in Shopify’s day-to-day activities so that you can see exactly what it takes to build an industry-leading startup from the ground up. To learn more about the program, click here.

(Also, thanks to Shopify, we have a number of scholarships and travel bursaries available for talented applicants to the Summer Academy program. Sign up to learn more: http://eepurl.com/xg4J1)

And now, here are the five reasons we’re most excited about HackerYou Summer Academy 2013:

1. We’re just getting started and so far, the applicants are awesome.

HackerYou always attracts awesome people. From designers to marketers to doctors to teachers to consultants to scientists to students to entrepreneurs to community managers, we’ve had them all. And more! Diversity is one of the things that makes HackerYou different, and great. We’re proud to be the most diverse programming bootcamp in the world.

It’s already clear that Summer Academy is going to be no different. Of the applications we’ve received so far, 75% are from outside Canada. And more than 50% consider themselves to be part of a group that is typically underrepresented in the technology industry. (Yes, we track that.)

We’re also collecting information from people who would like to be informed when we open up applications for scholarships and travel bursaries. That group is even more diverse. I just can’t wait to start interviewing everyone. It’s one of the best parts of my job at HackerYou.

(If you’d like to sign up to be informed when scholarship and bursary applications open, please click here: http://eepurl.com/xg4J1)

2. Ruby on Rails is awesome.

Summer Academy will be HackerYou’s second time offering a Ruby on Rails course. We have a three-month, part-time Ruby on Rails course happening right now in Toronto. Led by Ryan Brunner and Brad Robertson from Influitive, I can say for a matter of fact that the course is amazing. I know because I’ve been participating as a student. Partially because familiarity with our Ruby on Rails course content is going to make future HackerYou courses (like Summer Academy) better, and partially because, well, the whole reason I started Ladies Learning Code and HackerYou was because I wanted to learn to code.

Learning Ruby on Rails at HackerYou has been an incredible experience. I feel like I finally understand from both a theoretical and hands-on perspective how people create the software we all use every day. And even though I have miles to go, knowing how to create an application that will turn any idea I may have into reality is within reach. In fact, the rest of the participants and I are already doing it.

For example, as our final class project, fellow participant, Dan Kalmar and are building an app for booking meeting rooms in offices. Outside of class, participants Meredith Underell and Emily Gutierrez and I (under the expert guidance of HackerYou mentor Rebecca Putinski) are now rebuilding the Ladies Learning Code job board. Having the skills to build software to solve problems in your own life and beyond is incredibly rewarding and I can’t wait to have another awesome group of people realize and embrace this at HackerYou Summer Academy this year.

3. Shopify is awesome.

We are pumped to have Shopify on board as a partner for HackerYou’s first Summer Academy. They are awesome. Just take a look at their careers page and try to tell me that, even if you’re happily employed, a small part of you doesn’t want to work there. They’re an incredible company, an amazing Canadian startup success story, and their office is absolutely overflowing with talent. And HackerYou Summer Academy will be hosted right in the middle of it all – in Shopify’s community space. Developers, designers, product managers, business anaylsts, members of the Executive Team and many of the rest of Shopify’s 141 employees will be in and out of the space every day. You’ll feel the energy. Yes, nine weeks of full-time coding will be grueling, but doing it out of Shopify’s office, with guidance and support from some of Shopify’s best, is going to be pretty darn motivating.

4. We’re able to offer scholarships and travel bursaries for the first time.

Thanks to Shopify, we’re able to offer a number of scholarships and travel bursaries to successful applicants to Summer Academy.  It’s one of the coolest things about Summer Academy, and it was entirely Shopify’s idea. As a company, they really care. It’s ingrained in their culture. They support countless initiatives in Ottawa (including one of my own) and now they’re helping to make Summer Academy not only the most diverse programming bootcamp in the world, but also the most accessible. How cool is that?!

To be notified when scholarship applications open, please sign up here.

5. We’re turning things up a notch. Or ten.

In Toronto, we’ve had tons of success running part-time courses in Web Development and Ruby on Rails. People are getting new jobs, landing promotions, negotiating raises, taking on new responsibilities, and doing freelance work full-time or on the side, all because of the skills and confidence that they gained at HackerYou. Our part-time aren’t going anywhere. (In fact, we’re currently accepting applications to our next part-time Web Development course which starts this fall and will be led once again by Wes Bos.)

But we’re really excited to offer a full-time program for the first time. Mainly because we’ve seen what HackerYou graduates are able to do after participating in one our part-time programs – and in addition to the course, most of them are juggling full-time jobs and, in some cases, families!

Nine weeks dedicated to building your skills as a software developer, working on projects and collaborating with people just like you. It’s exactly what I’d love to do this summer. Which is why I’ll be moving to Ottawa to run – and participate in – the program. And boy, am I excited about it.

If you have any questions about the program this summer, please don’t hesitate to reach out. You can email me at heather [at] hackeryou.com, or tweet at me – I’m @heatherpayne.

Thanks to Tobi, Daniel, SerenaEdward, Cheryl and Nicole and the HackerYou team for their respective contributions to making HackerYou Summer Academy happen.

From a Student: My Experience at HackerYou

This is a guest post written by HackerYou Web Development course graduate, Amad Mian. Check out the responsive website he created during the course here, and find him on Twitter -he’s @amad.

Some things I learned at HackerYou:

  1. Going to class can be fun – no, really!
  2. There’s more to a website than text
  3. HTML 5 is ugly, but CSS3 will make anything sexy
  4. Having mentors helps
  5. Anyone can make an awesome website

In December, I graduated from HackerYou’s fall course in HTML 5, CSS3 and responsive design. Having had no previous knowledge of HTML or CSS, coding a beautiful responsive website seemed like an impossible task. Thankfully, the team behind HackerYou makes sure you don’t feel alone or lost in a spiral of HTML tags. Taking HackerYou’s web development and responsive design course was an amazing experience. The class is small, the people are great and the material is really advanced but still easy to follow. The skills we learn and the stuff we build is complex enough to wow your average person and even some veterans of the trade. Wes Bos, who leads the 12-week program, has created material that is easy to follow and up-to-date with the latest trends. He also gives us helpful insight and hints along the way while also pushing us to achieve more on our own. The balance of teaching and practical assignments gave us the right skill set to create really cool websites and taught us useful tricks of the trade.

HackerYou students also have the chance to attend all of HackerYou’s excellent workshops (for free!) as an added benefit of joining one of HackerYou’s three-month courses. During the three-month course, I attended quite a few unique and high quality workshops led by extremely talented people. Workshops have ranged from startup marketing with April Dunford of Rocketscope to learning UI/UX design with Ricardo Vasquez of 500px. There are usually multiple workshops scheduled per week!

Since “graduating” from HackerYou, I’ve started noticing aspects of websites that I would have previously be oblivious to. Mentally, I automatically start chopping websites into different sections like the body, wrapper, sidebar, header, footer and can also pick out different elements of CSS that would achieve certain design attributes. The course has changed my perspective in terms of the work that goes into building beautiful websites.

Taking this course was a great decision – there aren’t many places where you get to meet such amazing people and learn these invaluable skills in a hands-on way. I can now confidently create beautiful responsive websites. Heather and the team behind HackerYou have really put together an excellent course with a phenomenal instructor and mentors. I’d like to sincerely thank the team for bringing this course to life, it was exactly what I was looking for and more.

Hey there, designers: You’re the perfect fit for HackerYou

The question of whether or not designers should know how to code is an interesting one. For years, we’ve heard strong arguments from both sides. Keith Butters, co-founder of The Barbarian Group, described the back-and-forth argument succinctly in this .Net article: “You’re a designer, you do design, you let the coders code. Or alternatively, the manifestation of your work is code, so you should know how it’s done. Back. Forth.” Lots of people have written articles and blog posts on the topic. Like this one. And this one. And this one.

But really, no matter what side you’re on, it’s worth knowing that designers who do want to learn have options – even if what they’re looking for is an in-person classroom learning experience.

If you’re a designer based in the GTA who is interested in learning how to code, HackerYou’s Web Development course might be perfect for you. It’s an opportunity to learn HTML5 and CSS3 from the ground up, without ever having to leave your job (since our classes are part-time, in the evenings). The hands-on, project-based nature of the classes makes them really enjoyable, even after a long day at the office, and the 10:1 ratio of students to instructors ensures there’s always someone there to answer your questions, so the class moves fast (just how you like it). Plus, you get to learn from Wes Bos and some of Toronto’s most talented front-end developers – you’ll feel right at home.

Whether you decide to join the course because you want to make more informed web design decisions, begin presenting clients with mockups in the browser, take on more complex interaction design projects, communicate with front-end developers more effectively, or bring beautifully-designed personal or side projects to life on the web, HackerYou’s Web Development course will get you there. And, designers, we love having you!

But don’t take our word for it – here’s a list of a few of the designers who have attended HackerYou’s Web Development course led by Wes Bos, or will be joining the March 19th cohort:

Ryan Bannon | @rdbannon
Partner/Creative Director, Playground
http://playgroundinc.com

Adam Romano | @adamromano
Art Director, Playground
http://playgroundinc.com

Frank Maidens | @studiofunction
Founding Director, Studio Function
http://studiofunction.com

Marc Jenkinson | @MRCJNK
Graphic Designer, Navigator, Ltd.
http://navltd.com

Chris Gayle 
Designer, Hello SOS
http://hellosos.com

Tania Fitzpatrick | @red_dotdesign
Owner/Designer/Art Director, Red Dot Design
http://reddotdesign.ca

Andrea Saxe
Graphic Designer, Schoolhouse Products
http://schoolhouseproducts.com

…plus more!

Are you a designer who is ready to learn to code? Join us this spring for a learning experience you won’t regret. Learn more and then apply before February 15th for earlybird pricing.

What You Get When You Enroll in HackerYou

We launched HackerYou in June 2012 and, admittedly, we’ve been thrilled with the response. There’s been so much demand for this style of learning experience that all of the courses we’ve offered so far have sold out. Applicants include journalists, writers, marketers, doctors, scientists, product managers, editors, recent grads, designers, community managers, account managers, entrepreneurs, wantrepreneurs and more. And although this wasn’t an explicit goal, we’ve enjoyed a really nice balance of men and women at our courses: our Introduction to Web Development course in Fall 2012 was 83% female, and our current course, an Introduction to Ruby on Rails, is 44% female.

But these are just a few of the things that make HackerYou great. To be able to bring together a group of awesome, talented, forward-thinking people twice a week for three months so that they can build and hone an entirely new skill set – one that is going to come in handy for the rest of their professional lives – is a treat. But that’s what’s in it for me. What’s in it for you?

What do you really get when you enroll in HackerYou?

Allow me to elaborate, just in case this post has the potential to help you make the decision to apply to HackerYou before our next early bird deadline. Here’s what you’re in for if you decide to join us for a course:

1. 72 hours of in-class time (almost entirely dedicated to building stuff)

Whether you plan to do something entrepreneurial one day, want to stop paying other people to manage your personal or small business website, wish you could communicate more effectively with technical folks, or are looking to up your value as an employee…you should learn to code. And at HackerYou, that’s exactly what you’ll do. Each course is 72 hours long (price-wise, it’s just under $39 an hour) and you’ll spend almost all of that time actually writing code.

No matter what people say, making a time commitment (and a financial commitment) to learning a new skill can make a world of a difference. On your own, let’s say you can find an hour a week to dedicate to learning to code. At that rate, it will take you a year and five months to accomplish what will take you just three months to do at HackerYou. Plus, of course, at HackerYou, you’re guided by experts…but, more on that below.

2. A 10:1 ratio of students to instructors

Through our work with Ladies Learning Code, we’ve discovered that a small student-to-instructor ratio is the key to a great technical learning experience. At HackerYou, there isa 10:1 student-to-instructor ratio (or better!) at every class. Since classes are dedicated to writing code, it’s important that there are people there to help you when you get stuck. Or, for more advanced students, the mentors are there to challenge you by suggesting ways that you can deepen your learning by adding more complex functionality to your site. But what happens if you have a question outside of class? Well…

3. Seven-days-a-week access to the HackerYou community

Have a question outside of class? Never fear – as a HackerYou student, you’ll have seven-days-a-week access to the HackerYou forum. Using Lore‘s beautiful and elegant course management software, this forum is a place for you to interact with HackerYou instructors and mentors, myself and my team, and the other HackerYou students. As needed, we’ll add other experts to the site so that it can be a truly valuable resource for HackerYou students. And it doesn’t stop there – we’ll be creating a HackerYou Alumnni community as well, which you’ll become part of. It will become more and more valuable over time.

4. Unlimited HackerYou Workshops

When you sign up for a HackerYou course, your learning doesn’t just stop there. For the duration of your course, you have access to all of the workshops offered by HackerYou for free. We launch new workshops every week – for a list of workshops that are currently live, visit http://hackeryou.com/workshops.

5. An Introduction to the Best of Toronto’s Tech & Startup Community

Love the idea of going to more of Toronto’s tech and startup events, but not sure which ones are best? Or does showing up alone make you nervous? HackerYou students won’t have that problem, because we’ll curate the best events in the city, and head out to them as a group (optionally, of course). And if you want to learn something, but can’t find an event that will give you what you need? Let us know, and we’ll organize it, either just for HackerYou students, or for the broader community. It’s all part of our commitment to making HackerYou an amazing in-person learning experience, and something truly unique. But what if you need to meet someone really specific…

6. Trying to build a network? We’ll help with that.

Thanks again to Ladies Learning Code, we have a huge network of Toronto’s brightest entrepreneurs, developers, designers, illustrators, and more. Looking for a designer to join you for a passion project? Or need to pick the brains of successful entrepreneurs as you begin to plan your transition from corporate to startup life? We know people. If you’re looking for an introduction to someone really specific, we might be able to help with that, too. Try us.

7. Job Shadowing, If You Want It

As I’ve been chatting with the people who have applied to HackerYou (I meet everyone who applies for coffee), I’ve been asking them what would make their HackerYou course over-the-top awesome for them. A few people have mentioned job shadowing as something they’d be really interested in. So, we’re adding it to the program. If you want to job shadow someone (or someone in a certain job or company), let us know and we’ll set it up.

And, if you have other ideas for what would make HackerYou an even better learning experience, let us know! We’re up for the challenge.

8. HackerYou Demo Day

HackerYou participants have the opportunity to participate in a Demo Day at the end of the course (optionally, of course). This is our chance to show the people who say that you can’t learn to code in three months that they’re wrong. It’s a celebration, but it’s also about inspiring people who think that learning to code isn’t for them. Learning to code is for everyone, whether you want to become a professional or not.

9. A Guaranteed Internship

Most people who come to HackerYou aren’t looking for a job – they already have one, and they want to learn to code in order to enhance their chosen career. There are always a few people in each course, though, that are looking to use the skills they learn at HackerYou to land a new job. We’ll help them find one, but if they’re not quite ready, we’re happy to offer a guaranteed internship with HackerYou to students who graduate from the program. We tailor the internship to the role they’re seeking, but for example, here are two projects created by HackerYou interns: http://hackeryou.com/students and http://ladieslearningcode.com/map.

It’s all of that, and more. 

If you’re ready to lean to code, and looking for the most comprehensive in-person learning experience around, you’re exactly who we’re looking for. Apply now.

Processing: HackerYou Interns Build a Site from the Ground Up, Part 2

This post was written by Emily Gutierrez and Steph Laba, former HackerYou Web Development students and current HackerYou web design and development interns.

This is the second post in a three-part series where we will document our progress as we design and develop a responsive web page. If you haven’t done so yet, feel free to check out our first post here.

This week we tackled the tablet-sized screen design for our responsive web page. Rather than creating a minified version of the desktop site  we designed a tablet -specific site. Even though this screen size is considerably smaller than the desktop counterpart the tablet-size bares it’s own unique set of challenges and considerations when developing and designing for it.

Concept & Design:

As with any responsive tablet page there are several  design considerations one needs to take into account.  The layout needs to be simpler,  buttons must be large enough to “tap” rather than click and there are no “hover” states. Though the look of the tablet site would have to be simplified, we wanted to retain an interactive element. We felt the best way to achieve this was to carry over our existing “plus” signs and use them as buttons. By tapping these buttons users could expand and close our students’ testimonials. Not only were we able to retain a level of interaction but by using our existing assets we could relate our tablet design to our desktop design. Here are some of our progress shots:

Screenshot1Sketch of our tablet design concept.

Setting Up our Margins

Setting up our margins.

Adding in Names and Assets

Adding names and assets.

Screenshot4

Screenshot showing the active state of our mobile layout

Development:

Development definitely gave us a run for our money this week. To allow for our buttons to function the way we envisioned we employed the use of jQuery. We are both just beginning to learn jQuery. Needless to say our pal, Google was as invaluable as ever.

Another big challenge we faced concerned the positioning of our “plus” buttons.  We used a CSS sprite sheet to create the rotating effect of our buttons. (To learn more about  CSS Sprites click here.) Sprites can be a touchy. This week was no exception. As we mentioned we ran into a lot of issues when it came to positioning the sprites individually  as well as  relatively to other elements on the page.

Our solution: to break up our tablet views into slightly bigger and slightly smaller tablet screen sizes, to ensure that the symbols would remain in their correct location.Progress clip showing our work so far.

Clip showing the dropdown menu in action, still need to tweak the margin and padding!

Be sure to check out the blog next week for the third and final part our series, where we will be covering our design/development process for mobile screens.

- Steph and Emily

Here’s why you’re having trouble recruiting a technical co-founder

This post was originally published by Daniel Tenner on his blog, http://swombat.com, in June 2011. To us, it sounds like yet another great reason to learn to code…

Peter Robinett makes a pretty solid case for why even (or especially) when reaching out to cool, startup-friendly developers, “ideas people” won’t necessarily encounter that much success in recruiting them to work on their startup:

  • Ideas are easy, execution is hard.
  • People approaching developers often dramatically underestimate the amount of development work, or the complexity of it.
  • Proposing a revenue share means the developer has to take as much risk as the idea guy (for very low pay, given the point above), and trust that the business will receive the right amount of marketing/sales follow-through.
  • There’s an opportunity cost to working on someone else’s idea instead of for paying clients.
  • The idea being proposed is often very unrealistic (and the developer, having worked on a number of such ideas, can tell).
  • Developers have their own ideas to work in anyway.

These points will seem blindingly obvious if you’re a developer yourself, or if you have some experience in the field, but to new startup founders, this is not so obvious.

Learn more about HackerYou’s upcoming courses here.

Processing: HackerYou Interns Build a Site from the Ground Up, Part 1

This post was written by Emily Gutierrez and Steph Laba, former HackerYou Web Development students and current HackerYou web design and development interns.

This is the first post in a three-part series where we will document our progress as we design and develop a responsive web page. We wanted to chronicle our work from the point of conception to its launch. The page itself will be one part infographic, one part brochure and it will be entirely responsive (a dynamic web page that resizes depending upon the size of the screen it is being viewed on).

Each week, we’ll post shots, thoughts and reflections about our progress. We hope this will help inspire and enlighten others curious about web technology, especially potential HackerYou students (because the HackerYou Web Development course with Wes Bos will be back in March).

This week we focused on the design and development of the first portion of the site, the desktop screen. We collected screenshots and documented some of the challenges and successes we’ve had while creating this project so far.

The Concept & The Design:

The first step in this project was to come up with the idea. In addition to showing potential students what HackerYou is like, we also felt it was important to show what we learned from our Intro to the Web Development course, giving potential students an idea of what they will learn once they’ve completed the course. After some discussion we landed on our concept. We would use a candid class photo from our Web Development class with interactive speech bubbles incorporating testimonials from HackerYou alumni. This concept would effectively capture the lively, hands-on vibe of HackerYou and would also be an interesting way to demonstrate the skills we learned. Once we had our concept pinned down we turned to Photoshop to create a fully realized mockup. Here are some of the progress shots:

hackerYou_blog01_01

We started with some quick sketches of the layout as well as the assets we would be using.

hackerYou_blog01_00

hackerYou_blog01_03

We used a grid and ruler lines to keep everything aligned, giving the plus signs a scattered but neat look.

hackerYou_blog01_05

hackerYou_blog01_04

Development:

Once we completed our work with Photoshop we got started with the development side of things. We knew that the speech bubble would be the most difficult part, so we decided to tackle it first. Through our existing knowledge of CSS3 and with help from our pal, Google, we were able to effectively execute our intended concept.

Progress clip showing our use of CSS3 animation work, so far.

Be sure to check out the blog next week for the second part our series, where we will be covering our design/development process for tablet-sized screens.

- Steph and Emily

Young people are screwed…here’s how to survive

This post was written by Brian Goldberg and was published on January 9, 2013 on Pandodaily.com. Learn more about Brian below.

Hey kids, you’ve all read “The Hunger Games,” right? Almost all young people have read the best-selling books or seen the Hollywood movie about Katniss Everdeen, a smart and ambitious young lady whose life prospects are diminished by historical events that predate her. What little hope she has is seemingly reduced to nil when a bunch of old people drop her into an arena and force her to fight with her fellow children in a battle royale to the death.

But that’s just fiction, right? Your loving parents and grandparents would never screw up their world and then throw you kids under the bus…or would they?

Actually, they already have.

Last week, the economics blog Calculated Risk ran a chart that tells a pretty compelling story. To an economist, this chart means that the magnitude and duration of the 2007 recession’s impact on unemployment outpaces that of any prior post-war recession. To young people, it simply means this…

You kids are screwed.

In fact, teenagers today probably aren’t old enough to remember the “Dot Bomb” recession of twelve years ago. But even at its peak, that really bad recession did not reach a level of unemployment that matched the one we are still currently experiencing. With the Federal Reserve losing its appetite for quantitative easing, the last bullet in their holster, and both political parties deciding to half-ass the fiscal policy debate, it’s safe to say that…

You kids are really screwed.

As mentioned in one of my recent articles, unemployment for young people is about double the national average. Student debt is now the single largest contributor to the nation’s credit delinquencies. And it’s one of the few debts that you can never expunge through bankruptcy. Stated differently…

You kids are so damn screwed.

Finally, young people need to understand how much their grandparents’ generation has ruined things for them. The average American retires with less than $70,000 in savings, but an elderly man and woman receive about $275,000 in medical care during that time — and you kids are paying for it by inheriting trillions upon trillions in Medicare bills that granny and grandpa never intended to pay and will be too dead to worry about soon. And you California kids can thank them for passing Proposition 13 and Proposition 30, which relieved them of having to pay taxes in favor of you having to pay even more taxes. In other words…

You kids are beyond screwed.

But there’s some good news in all of this. Some of us have already been through this “Hunger Games” melee, and we can serve as your Haymitch Abernathy — you know, the drunk, ranting mentor who teaches Katniss how to survive the great battle that awaits her.

So here are a few pieces of advice for how to navigate this terrifying world:

Lesson No. 1: In 2007, the first thing to go was the bullshit. So you better learn how to make something.

There’s a reason why unemployment is still very high, even though corporations are making record profits. It’s because after they were forced to cut about 10 percent of their workforces, many of them realized that, well, they never needed that many people to begin with.

Companies cut out the bullshit. And, unfortunately, many of the cerebral jobs that were going to ambitious young people were right in the thick of it. This included young lawyers, who pretty much can’t get jobs right now. This included young people in marketing and finance, two departments that do not bring in revenue or keep the factories running.

But guess what isn’t bullshit… making things. There are millions of unfilled jobs in America, and most of them are careers where you actually have to make and build stuff. If you grew up in an affluent environment, then you see your software engineer friends getting jobs easily. But it’s not just them. There are countless labor jobs — everything from HVAC to plumbing — that still pay big dollars. But rich kids don’t even know what those jobs entail.

My advice to young people is to figure out how to make something. That means either working with your hands, or learning how to type code with them.

Which brings me to the next lesson…

Lesson No. 2: No, education is not the answer.

If you can get into an ultra-top-tier college, then go ahead and do it. An Ivy League degree is worth getting, at least for undergrad. The value of a law or business degree is becoming more and more questionable each year.

But for the rest of you, it may be worth skipping college altogether.

The world doesn’t need any more girls with Spanish degrees from California State, Long Beach. Sorry, but it just doesn’t. We need you gals to learn how to build software in equal number with your male peers. They are no smarter than you, and they are definitely way less organized and far less attentive to detail. So go show them what you are made of.

But won’t a college degree pay for itself? It probably won’t. According to UC Berkeley’s website, a four year education will cost you $210,000 in tuition and living expenses, and a private education could run you way more. A part-time job at Starbucks will eat into very little of that sum, and you will be forgoing a real job during that same time. And — if I can convey just one point in this whole article, let it be this…saving money takes forever. Even if you do get that coveted six-figure job, you will find that it takes forever to save $210,000. Decades even.

Buy a few O’Reilly books — it will run you about 60 bucks. Go find a few software engineer friends and ask them to help you. Nerds are friendly and altruistic. And software code is no more boring and no more cryptic than learning how to conjugate your Spanish gerunds. Who knows, you may even have what it takes to start a company, but even if you don’t, you can get some valuable equity along the way.

Lesson No. 3: Your parents and grandparents don’t understand your world. You should probably ignore them.

Your parents and grandparents want what is best for you. But they do not understand your world in the slightest. You should probably ignore them.

They grew up in a world so unbelievably different from your own, that they couldn’t possibly understand what things are like for you. They don’t know what it is like to fight hard for an unpaid internship. They don’t know what it’s like to watch entire career paths suddenly disappear or become far less desirable: like Journalism, Medicine, and Law. In their day, getting a job in Medicine or Law was a ticket to prosperity. And newspapers actually hired people.

Parents and grandparents don’t understand the extent to which careers need to evolve in the modern day. No longer can you get a job at some company and expect to stay there for three decades. What you do for a living may not even exist in ten years.

Every young person is an entrepreneur now, in one way or another — they must forge their own unique career path, and they need to think five or 10 years ahead. There is no rulebook anymore for how to build a career. Certainly not the one your parents read in 1981.

In summary, the “conventional path” has become so narrow, that it hardly even exists. You can’t just go to grad school and “become” anything: a lawyer, a banker, a doctor, a journalist, a manager. Some of these jobs are on hiring freezes, and some of them are so fraught with frustration that they are best avoided. I don’t know a single doctor who thinks that Medicine is the best career path for their kids. And the same logic is applying to more and more professions. The well has been poisoned.

Lesson No. 4: Don’t worry about your network. Worry about your friends.    

If you have successful friends, you will be successful. It’s pretty much that simple. If you hang out with a bunch of losers, you too will adopt their loser ways and not achieve anything. Regardless of whether or not you go out and network, please make sure that your friends are ambitious and hard working people who you admire.

For some, this means that they will have to move on from their high school buddies. For others, it means that they will need to have friends who are older than they are. Some people will have to learn new skills in order to penetrate the friend groups that they would like to join.

But if you hang out with quality people, you won’t need to worry about networking. Your friends will be your network. The only reason you are reading this article is because Sarah Lacy has a lot of friends who are very high quality, and they not only supported her PandoDaily ambition, but also put money into it. And even though she is nobody, she does have quality friends.

It works. I’ve seen it work innumerable times. Your friends bring you up or pull you down. There’s no in-between. Make sure they are pulling you up.

[Illustrations by Hallie Bateman]

Bryan is an entrepreneur in San Francisco. He founded Bleacher Report, and currently advises several startups. Previously, he was a failed investment banker. You can follow him on Twitter.

Learn to Code in 2013: A List of Toronto’s In-Person Learning Opportunities

If you’ve decided that 2013 is the year you’re finally going to learn to code, you’re in luck! There have never been more resources available to people interested in picking up 21st century digital skills, whether you’re interested in front-end development, back-end development, design, or even something more specific.

But you’ve tried online tutorials. You’ve been to Meetup groups. You’ve watched video lessons. And for some reason, it’s just not working for you. Well, the good news is that – these days – there are lots of options for people looking to learn how to code via an in-person learning experience. And you won’t even have to move to San Francisco.

Here’s a list of places to learn to code in Toronto:

Should you have been included in this list? Email us at info [at] hackeryou.com with information about your organization and we’ll add you to the list.


HackerYou
72-hour part-time courses on Web Development, Ruby on Rails and more. Our next course begins on January 21st. Learn more here.
Cost: $2800 including HST (about $34 an hour!)
http://hackeryou.com | @thisishackeryou | fb.com/thisishackeryou


Bitmaker Labs
9-week full-time courses on Ruby on Rails. Deadline to apply for their Spring 2013 cohort is January 14th.
Cost: $7000
http://bitmakerlabs.com | @bitmakerlabs | fb.com/bitmakerlabs


Ladies Learning Code
One-day workshops designed for beginners who are looking for a social and collaborative learning experience.
Cost: $50 per one-day workshop (includes a catered lunch!)
http://ladieslearningcode.com | @llcodedotcom | fb.com/ladieslearningcode


The YMC
Pay-what-you-can and get hands on with HTML, CSS, JavaScript, PHP, WordPress and more at these 9-week courses.
Cost: Pay What You Can
http://theymc.com | @theYMC | fb.com/theYMC


Team Coding
Free sessions to help beginners get in groups to practice coding.
Cost: Free
http://meetup.com/teamcoding | @teamcoding


Camp Tech
Camp Tech offers one-day workshops on topics like WordPress, SEO, Photoshop, and email marketing.
Cost: $149
http://camptech.ca | @CampTechCo | fb.com/camptechcoco 


Learn Toronto
Not a course, but a listing of tech and startup related groups and events in Toronto. Perfect if you’re looking to learn on an ad hoc basis.
Cost: Most groups and Meetups are free
http://learntoronto.org | @LearnToronto


Have you decided to make 2013 the year you learn how to code? How are you going to do it?

My Journey to (and through) HackerYou

This post was contributed by Michelle Pomeroy – she’s one of the 30 students currently enrolled in our Web Development course! Learn more about her below!

It never fails to amaze me how one event in life leads to another and before you know it, you’re coding websites.  That’s the short version of my journey to HackerYou.  The longer version is that a Mozilla Hack Jam (designed for teachers) led to discussions about Ladies Learning Code, which lead to participating in workshops through Ladies Learning Code, at which point I discovered HackeYou’s Introduction to Web Development course.  I never thought life would lead me here, as it completely different from anything that I have done previously. However, I cannot help but think I’m exactly where I’m meant to be.

After working full-time as a teacher for a few years, I admit, it was a debate as to whether I should take a course in the evenings, particularly when I knew that I would be learning a plethora of new information that is not technically “in my field”.  I wondered if I could handle the extra hours required of me while working full-time, as well as keep up with all the new concepts.  My previous programs in university consisted of courses related to the social sciences and child development, with the expectation that you keep up on academic journals, write papers and study for multiple-choice exams.  I feel like these programs were something I did because I “fell into” them and they were a natural progression – not because I was necessarily passionate about them.  HackerYou opened up new doors for me – doors that were not necessarily closed before, but previously non-existent in my life.

There are times now that I’m up until 2 am working on an HTML/CSS project (I find myself unable to sleep until I’ve worked out the kinks, although I’ve heard it can be better to “sleep on it”) and yes, sometimes I have the urge to throw my computer against the wall in frustration; however, after being in school for twenty plus years, I can honestly say that I’ve finally found something I’m truly  passionate about.  I finally found something that I can see myself doing for years to come, whether it’s in the form of a full-time job or as a hobby.  Thank you, HackerYou, for giving me a second chance at my career and providing me with the skills needed to pursue my passion.  Can it be done if you work full-time?  Of course.  Can it be done if you’ve had no previous experience?  Absolutely.

[From Heather: Our next 3-month Web Development course begins on March 19th, 2013. Click here to learn more about the two parts: Intro to Web Development and Intro to Responsive Design. Ready to apply? Click here.]

ABOUT MICHELLE POMEROY

Michelle Pomeroy is currently a full-time Special Education teacher at a unique independent school in Mississauga, Ontario. In her spare time, she enjoys reading for hours on end, watching horror/science-fiction movies, listening to music, attending concerts, practicing Taekwondo and partaking in workshops on a variety of topics, including science-fiction writing, film direction and improvisation. She hopes to continue to take web development classes to one day become a web developer using the super-awesome skills she has obtained through Hacker You.

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