Throw enough shit at the wall and some of it will stick.
At least there will be no shortage of easy work for security analysts if people keep encouraging morons to think they should be developing web applications.
Even if I dont know the book, the site shows that the author failed when 'his first web app' got some minimal traffic, of 1200 visitors (estimated by 12 points) in one hour.
If you don't have programming skills and just want to validate your idea it might be wise to hire a reliable software house to build MVP for you. Once you gain traction you can start building your own team or reworking the MVP on your own. <shameless plug>This is how we work with founders from the UK and US at codedose.com</shameless plug>
If you need something not too intensive you could go with Treehouse (http://teamtreehouse.com/) which has really good topic-specific videos and interactive quizzes.
If you can afford the money and time then go with something more intensive such as a bootcamp - I recommend Flatiron School (http://flatironschool.com/). You'll learn a whole lot in 3 months.
There's also Thinkful (http://www.thinkful.com/) which has curated content, 1-1 mentorship and uses a project-based approach.
Once you have the foundation (and overcome the many frustrations and roadblocks you'll face as a beginner) you'll be way on your way, with a new and valuable skill.
Did you read the cached version? (the site is now back up too)
As the author mentions: "Interested in learning to code and building web apps but don’t know where to begin? Look no further..... I’ve put together this step-by-step guide that will help you through creating your very own first web app."
No, see that's the problem. Way too many resources. I LOVE the idea of one book that takes me from start to finish, with no flab or wasted time learning something that isn't 100% relevant to making an app.
Alex, you are on to something HUGE. Resist with all your might the urge to bury people in "resources" to follow up on. There's too much information out there. Reign it in, filter it down and focus only on the bare minimum that must be done to get the app finished.
Not everyone wants to be a programming guru. Myself included.
Maybe you shouldn't be building an app, or programming, especially if you don't care enough or have the patience to learn things that aren't directly in support of (what you think is) your MVP.
* I LOVE the idea of one book that takes me from start to finish, with no flab or wasted time learning something that isn't 100% relevant to making an app.*
These do not appears to be the words of a patient person, or somebody who cares about programming.
I suggest that the impatient and uncaring should not be making apps.
I strongly, strongly disagree. You can approach programming as a craft, and immerse yield in tools, techniques, concepts and so on. Or you can approach it as a means to an end, which is creating an app, website, service, etc, and just look for the shortest path to get results. You don't have any basis for saying one approach is more valid than the other.
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[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 30.0 ms ] threadAt least there will be no shortage of easy work for security analysts if people keep encouraging morons to think they should be developing web applications.
Select the text-only version on the top right
Couple options:
If you need something not too intensive you could go with Treehouse (http://teamtreehouse.com/) which has really good topic-specific videos and interactive quizzes.
If you can afford the money and time then go with something more intensive such as a bootcamp - I recommend Flatiron School (http://flatironschool.com/). You'll learn a whole lot in 3 months.
There's also Thinkful (http://www.thinkful.com/) which has curated content, 1-1 mentorship and uses a project-based approach.
Once you have the foundation (and overcome the many frustrations and roadblocks you'll face as a beginner) you'll be way on your way, with a new and valuable skill.
Full disclaimer: I work at Thinkful
I mean, sure this is possible - but this is not the way to produce a successful outcome (built idea/funded tech company) in either case!
As the author mentions: "Interested in learning to code and building web apps but don’t know where to begin? Look no further..... I’ve put together this step-by-step guide that will help you through creating your very own first web app."
ONLINE VIDEO LECTURES
Let's Code Test Driven JavaScript: http://www.letscodejavascript.com/
One Month Rails: https://onemonthrails.com/
Learnable: https://learnable.com/
Code School: http://www.codeschool.com/
Treehouse: http://teamtreehouse.com/
CodeHS: http://codehs.com/ - "Computer science class in a box" for k-12 schools
Learn Street: http://www.learnstreet.com/
CODE CHALLENGES
Top Coders: http://www.topcoder.com/
Hacker Rank: https://www.hackerrank.com/
Interview Street: https://www.interviewstreet.com/
OTHER
CodeCombat: http://codecombat.com - online game that teaches Javascript
Codecademy: http://codecademy.com/
CodeAvengers: http://www.codeavengers.com/ - Pay-per-module coding game
Hakitzu: http://www.kuatostudios.com/games/hakitzu/ - Paid iPad game that teaches coding
Kodable: http://www.surfscore.com/ - iPad game that teaches coding
Full disclosure, I run CodeCombat.
PS: Love what you're doing at CodeCombat!
Alex, you are on to something HUGE. Resist with all your might the urge to bury people in "resources" to follow up on. There's too much information out there. Reign it in, filter it down and focus only on the bare minimum that must be done to get the app finished.
Not everyone wants to be a programming guru. Myself included.
These do not appears to be the words of a patient person, or somebody who cares about programming.
I suggest that the impatient and uncaring should not be making apps.
Page is back up now!
Flagged, especially because it doesn't really describe what the book covers, how it covers it, or anything much beyond "Sign up here!"