4 hours ago · Tech · 0 comments

I still remember the bookstore. I was holding a 600-page brick of a book on how to build Windows applications, trying to convince my mother that I really needed it. This was 1994 or 1995. A book was how you learned to program at that time. You took it home, you read it cover to cover, you typed the examples by hand, and somewhere along the way, the ideas sank in.From there, the tools for learning kept evolving. Printed books gave way to CD-ROMs and then to online documentation. Then came the explosion of blogs and RSS feeds. I started this blog at that time, and I still consider that era to be one of the best ones in terms of having amazing access to smart and knowledgeable people, freely sharing their insights and experiences.Google killed Google Reader (yes, I am still angry about that) and a lot of the new people learned via Stack Overflow. The world entered a strange equilibrium that lasted, honestly, more than a decade. If you learned to code any time between roughly 2010 and…

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