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What's the most valuable skill to learn for a college student to earn money on the side?
bump for interest
larping
its not really a skill persay, but being a paperboy is always a comfy job if you don't mind working 7 days a week.
a combo of programming, web development and graphic design.
College is about the networking potential, consider activities that get you meeting lots of people with different background and put you in a leadership position.
If you don't do that, find something that puts you in contact with people older and wiser than you are.
Buy and flip bikes or scooters on Craigslist. Electronics might be good too.
If you're here, youre probably already in crypto or forex trading.
Basically, learn business skills and learn people skills. Whatever your major is should be flexible.
I can't look at that seat without thinking of the LINK cube
wtf is wrong with me
where to buy a good pair of kneepads
Chairlink
is that advisable for an extreme introvert that hates doing "people stuff"? My social skills are somewhat okay but I hate the act of socialising itself and would have to force myself to be in situations that annoy me.
Nothing!
Crypto trading.
unironically this
>What's the most valuable skill to learn for a college student?
Display being Alpha.
Introverted nerds will never get the real money because they aint no leaders.
t. introverted nerd
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never take advice from someone who doesn't walk the walk
Automotive is always a solid skill to have for your personal use, and is a very good money maker for side jobs
especially for you. i fucking hate speaking to and infront of alot of people. now I do it every day and its fine. not fun but I don't stutter or piss myself. and they give me money.
that sounds more like my kinda thing but it seems pretty overwhelming at first. I'm rather proficient at using computers. Can you actually teach it yourself using just the internet or is that more of a meme? And if so what is the best way to get started?
i tried being alpha and failed miserably. but i know that its the only way in 99.99% of the cases.
if you are introverted, you will never become boss unless you own the fucking thing. and even then its very risky because alphas will take over.
im not larping, im telling the truth that makes me sad.
A pair of kneepads and a good, strong neck
>Listen to these truisms
>I failed, therefore I know how to succeed
You sound like my alcoholic uncle who tried to "give me advice", so I wouldn't "repeat his mistakes".
absolutely shit lazy tier shop,fuck yourself and people like you
well, then find out yourself.
I can fix anything mechanical.
sucking dick
/thread
>a combo of programming, web development and graphic design.
>that sounds more like my kinda thing but it seems pretty overwhelming at first. I'm rather proficient at using computers. Can you actually teach it yourself using just the internet or is that more of a meme? And if so what is the best way to get started?
Read the w3school tutorials on html css and javascript. Play around with those for a while and once it starts to.click, follow some online courses on rest api's, OOP, react.js, node.js, redux for building front end user interfaces.
Php is also useful since wordpress uses php and like 60% of the web are wordpress sites.
Once you have an idea of all the concepts used, go read other peoples code on github and try to understand it. Everything you dont understand you look up on stackoverflow, just like actual programmers.
Its definitely doable to teach yourself webdev and get a comfy job. If it turns out you actually love promming, go teach yourself low level languages like java, c++ and c#. Real software engineers earn a lot more than webdevs.
No degrees are needed but you need passion to actually become a good programmer.
How to focus your attention and leave distractions such as your smartphone behind. Mediation will help you with this.
You are basically fucking yourself for life if you don't get to work on your people skills.
No matter where you go or what you do, being effective with others will be the most important factor in your success.
Yes, making $20 an hour doing webdev is nice while in college. But being able to ace an interview will be far more valuable in the long run.