| See the above? This is what codecamps do to innocent people. They prey on the weak, act authoritative, and take advantage of their hopes of getting jobs. You should demand your money back, every penny. > I can only look to my choice of bootcamp Bootcamps are not gatekeepers. They portray themselves as such to take your money. There's no such thing as an elite bootcamp. It's a lie to pray on your naïveté of the industry. It's just ruby and javascript. It's web development. Nothing magic. Nothing elite here. You could teach it in a community college setting for 2k a semester. But every town needs electricians, plumbers, doctors, etc.
It's just frankly, we're pouring out more junior programmers desperate for jobs than there are positions to fill. Every time a cohort finishes, it's 30 more people on top of the thousands of others seeking a handful of positions. They end up creating junior level programmers, and cherrypicking success stories from people who have already coded before. > that crushed my dream of working in tech. Nothing's stopping you from: - installing Linux (https://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop) - downloading Atom (https://atom.io) Using these resources: - https://github.com/prakhar1989/awesome-courses - https://github.com/EbookFoundation/free-programming-books/bl... - https://github.com/ripienaar/free-for-dev Maybe you would be a good programmer if you continued studying, maybe it's not your path. I don't know you, but don't be fooled into thinking that any institution or person is a gatekeeper from you coding and getting a job in it. These code camps want you to believe that so they can justify their existence. |