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Computer Science Fundamentals Bootcamp for Programmer Career

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Computer Science Fundamentals Bootcamp for Programmer Career

Software practitioners often get focused on niche topics and limit their growth. In addition, the interview process slows down the learning process even further.

Software = People + programs

Treating people like "resources" with predictable behavior is disrespectful. The tendency to automate human interactions in professional environments leads to an unfulfilling career. Often the blame is targeted toward technology, but the real culprit is ignorance.

There are more non-computer science-trained programmers in the industry than CS degree holders. The gap leads to unfair competition and often a conflict-prone career growth trajectory. In addition, software engineering brings the human element of the profession to the center stage. With all these variables in play simultaneously, getting overwhelmed is only human.

But that sounds like an excuse. Is it?

No. Unfortunately, the hyper-growth of online learning tools has created a false bubble around trends. If getting certified gets easier, getting a job with it becomes that much more difficult. The only solution is knowledge—diverse and relevant awareness.

Dealing with teams needs a broader perspective and understanding of fundamentals. Knowing computer science fundamentals takes time. Job changes disrupt the learning processes.

This course provides a lifelong learning roadmap and references you can keep following up on to build a solid foundation for your career. Long-lasting careers don't depend on a framework or a language; fundamentals forge them.

Following topics are provided as articles in the text to help faster completion. The videos are suggestions, observations, and opinions about the industry based on 16+ years of first-hand experience.

Course Topics

Engineering

Algorithms and Data Structures

Compiler Design

Computer Architecture

Programming Language Language

Databases

Distributed Systems

File Systems

Mathematics

Networking

Operating Systems

General Programming and Design patterns

Software Engineering

Security

Non-Engineering

Advertising and Marketing

Business Management

Economics

Finance and Behavioural Economics

People management, including introspection

Psychology

Evolution, History, and Philosophy