I went this route and now have a resume of inflated titles. I learned a lot and believe I can do some things in the top 10 percentile, just not the things many companies are currently hiring for (top 10 percentile in a narrow development skillset such as ML, or a specific language, or algorithms).
Im cynical and ultimately an rebuilding my dev career around a platform that will give me opportunities for entrepreneurship AND individual contributor work as an employee (Apple Ecosystem - iOS client development + product dev/mgn).
If I were to do it over again I 100% would've avoided startups early in my career when I could lean on junior positions to grow in a more mainstream manner. I'd have more money in my pocket, less stress, and less cynicism.
--
The problem is there is objectively zero way for fresh grads to learn these lessons. Even with prominent threads like these being available to some, the bearish attitude in every other thread will be more appealing to a fresh grad.
Im cynical and ultimately an rebuilding my dev career around a platform that will give me opportunities for entrepreneurship AND individual contributor work as an employee (Apple Ecosystem - iOS client development + product dev/mgn).
If I were to do it over again I 100% would've avoided startups early in my career when I could lean on junior positions to grow in a more mainstream manner. I'd have more money in my pocket, less stress, and less cynicism.
--
The problem is there is objectively zero way for fresh grads to learn these lessons. Even with prominent threads like these being available to some, the bearish attitude in every other thread will be more appealing to a fresh grad.