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Aim to Never Stop Learning

Ashlee (she/her) on May 18, 2019

You will never know everything. There's too much information out there and not enough time to learn it all. What this means is, sometimes we're wro...
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Angela Whisnant

Really like "Getting Things Done" by David Allen. It's the single best book about productivity I've ever read. One of his assertions that sticks with me is this: "Your mind is for having ideas, not holding them." In other words, we need to write down our ideas, our schedules, etc...so our brain is available for what it is best at...thinking. I like that.

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Ashlee (she/her)

I love that quote! It’s so true. I bet writing things down also pushes us to get those things done more quickly too. I’m going to check this book out. Thanks for the recommendation! 😊

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Angela Whisnant

😁😁😁 You're Welcome!

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Laurie

Not books but websites! I’ve been learning some new CSS tricks and both the Mozilla docs and the site β€˜css tricks’ are wonderful resources.

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Ashlee (she/her)

This one?
css-tricks.com/

My favorite part of that site (other than the super interesting stuff to learn) is all of the beautiful gradients!!

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Laurie

Yes!

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Paul Isaris

For keeping up with software development, I highly recommend pluralsight.com. For other, general purpose classes and lifelong learning I recommend Coursera :)

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Ashlee (she/her)

These both look great! Had not heard of Pluralsight before, but have heard good things about Coursera.

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Paul Isaris • Edited

Coursera is suited for lifelong learners of any subject. You can find courses ranging from Computer Science to Arts and Biology. I would not recommend it to software professionals though since most courses are University level (except if you want to study a new area, like Machine Learning).
Pluralsight is the swiss army knife for professionals, it has courses aimed to software engineers ;)

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Ashlee (she/her)

Thanks for this elaboration! Makes total sense.

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Pascal Charbonneau

When it comes to web front-end I like Front-End Masters. They cover all the basics (JS/CSS) as well as the preominent frameworks. It is a different style of video courses with an actual class of students.

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Bennett Dungan

Since you asked about philosophy, I recommend Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. It's essentially the personal journal of the last good emperor of ancient Rome. It's full of little blurbs of how he dealt with events and encounters with people. It's extremely fun to read knowing you're peeking into a book never intended to be published for others to see.

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Ashlee (she/her)

Oooooo your last sentence makes this book sound extra juicy. I love me some juicy non-fiction. Memoirs are my favorite. 😈

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stereobooster

I like this one as 101 on philosophy carneades.org

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Ashlee (she/her)

Thank you! I might be hanging out on that site soon. 😁

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Ashlee (she/her)
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Bennett Dungan

Yeah that looks like one of the translations of it. Im not sure how these ancient text books really work, but I guess they read differently depending on who translates the text. This is the one I was recommended: amazon.com/dp/0812968255/ref=cm_sw...

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Michiel Hendriks • Edited

I am an ACM member which comes with a lot of cool privileges like their monthly Communications of the ACM. A lot of the ACM is geared towards academic level rather than practical stuff.

An other really awesome privilege is complete access to Safari Books Online. Which has a huge catalog of quality books, videos, etc. This normally costs something like $400/yr. An ACM membership is only $100/yr (or less if you are a student).

There are some requirements to ACM membership:

You must satisfy one of the qualifications below:

  • Bachelor's Degree (in any subject area); or
  • Equivalent Level of Education; or
  • Two years full-time employment in the IT field.

So if you quality I can really recommend joining to get access to a lot of great content.

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stereobooster

If you don't qualify you can use unpaywall.org/ and arxiv.org/

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Ashlee (she/her)

Had never heard of these before, thank you! 😁

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Ashlee (she/her)

Wow! I didn’t realize you got so much stuff with them. Definitely looks like a good resource for those who qualify.

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Ashlee (she/her)

Brain Pickings (brainpickings.org/) is one of my favorite sites for finding random inspiration. There are tonsss of sited resources thereβ€”new and old. One of the first posts I read over there was Joan Didion on Keeping a Notebook . Really great stuff.

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Michiel Hendriks

There is this cool new developer community which has a lot of cool content: dev.to

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Ashlee (she/her)

I’ll have to check it out! ;)

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lepinekong
  • You should start with "learn to learn" for example with the really excellent (free) course by Barbara Oakley - Coursera - Learning how to learn

  • You should take notes for everything you learn for example here's my notes (using mind mapping technique like personally grafcet diagram) for the first week of above course take course notes with grafcet.online

  • You should make a dev journal proof I do it mysef everyday
    create a journal with grafcet.online

By the way making a journal is a "secret" of 90% of very sucessfull people ;)

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Sujan Khadka • Edited

Off the field, I am presently reading "The subtle are of not giving a f*ck" by Mark Mansion. This book is about giving important to small things that matters to our life, that makes us happy not to big things that can ruin our life.

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Charith Rathnayake

I learned a lot about UI/UX from this Udemy course. I'd say its more theoretical than practical. Give it a try if you're interested.

udemy.com/course/ux-web-design-mas...

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Reader Expert

First off, I just want to say how much I enjoyed reading your article. It really hit the nail on the head – there's so much information out there, and it's practically impossible to know it all. Your words reminded me of those times when I've been unsure or mistaken about something, and you're absolutely right – it's totally fine to be wrong. In fact, it's part of the journey of growth and learning.

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Himanshu Bhatnagar

Hello here's a couple of book recommendations from some iconic people - medium.com/swlh/30-book-recommenda...

Have a nice day

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Anton

Anki. Helps you commit things to long term memory. Uses something called Spaced Repetition System.

It's a simple and at the same time very advanced software capable of many things.

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Martin Huter

HumbleBundle has sometimes nice book bundles for devs.(humblebundle.com/)