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In this episode, we get to speak with Arit Amana: Software Engineer, Founder, Writer, Mentor, and Conference Speaker. We discuss Arit’s day-to-day as a Software Engineer and her career journey. We also dive into Arit’s organization OurTimeForTech.org, a nonprofit online program that empowers early-career & career-changing Women in Tech!
Frederick Weiss: [00:00:00] I am Frederick Philip von Weiss.
[00:01:14] Welcome to the show.
[00:01:16] Arit Amana: [00:01:16] Thank you so
[00:01:23] Frederick Weiss: [00:01:23] I try
[00:01:36] Everybody’s yeah, it’s Saturday. And then Oh wait, I gotta do this
[00:01:44] Arit Amana: [00:01:44] It’s going
[00:01:52] Frederick Weiss: [00:01:52] Yeah, our
[00:02:14] Are you, do you
[00:02:15] Arit Amana: [00:02:15] feel safe?
[00:02:40] Not so much necessarily for me, but just to still send that message that I
[00:03:05] At the end of the day we have different types of people with different
[00:03:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:03:18] Yeah.
[00:03:23] I got a little bit of trepidation. I also have my I’m fully vaccinated
[00:03:42] So I’m just a little scared, but I want to see what happens. A month,
[00:03:51] Arit Amana: [00:03:51] off. Yeah.
[00:04:02] Like I think for me, that’s my mindset, let the fall come around and
[00:04:13] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:13] Yeah, I
[00:04:19] And at that point I’ll be very excited. I’m optimistic by the end
[00:04:28] Arit Amana: [00:04:28] nice. Yeah,
[00:04:31] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:31]
[00:04:33] Arit Amana: [00:04:33] I think we
[00:04:36] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:36] Yeah.
[00:04:45] Let’s talk about what you do. You are currently a Software Engineer
[00:05:04] Arit Amana: [00:05:04] at forum? Yes.
[00:05:10] And what that means is our code is completely a hundred percent open
[00:05:31] How are online communities that value data privacy and basically just
[00:05:58] So one of the, one of the tools in our store software are our moderation
[00:06:28] Yeah. So that’s day-to-day what I do.
[00:06:31] Frederick Weiss: [00:06:31] But now,
[00:06:48] Bingo. That’s a great example, but let’s roll with a pizza. Bingo.
[00:07:07] Arit Amana: [00:07:07] Excellent
[00:07:57] And have it be self hosted. We are going to make it very modular. And so
[00:08:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:08:18] Oh, I
[00:08:34] So yeah. Let’s talk about your career journey. You didn’t start
[00:08:56] And it just blossomed. And it went down that path. I know for you, at a
[00:09:08] Arit Amana: [00:09:08] in the house.
[00:09:15] Like part of his job was outfitting companies, banks and the like with
[00:09:37] Soles and the printers and we were always surrounded with technology. And
[00:09:59] And so that was yeah. That was my MD for all my Teddy bears and my dolls
[00:10:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:10:18] So, you
[00:10:21] Arit Amana: [00:10:21] that right?
[00:10:25] And for the most part, most of my life science came easy to me yet. I talk
[00:10:48] And so I’m taking all the Oracle and the microbiology and the physical
[00:11:21] And so that was one of my early earliest mistakes. Career-wise was
[00:11:39] And so I took it to me and, Oh, I don’t have what it takes to become a
[00:11:57] Cause I figured it’s still healthy, not as intense as medicine. I
[00:12:08] Frederick Weiss: [00:12:08]
[00:12:22] You could still make it through a lot of the things, what is it? The old
[00:12:43] So you, could have finished that in a degree in three years, you could
[00:12:49] Arit Amana: [00:12:49] right? Go
[00:13:04] No, it’s the reality. I think I was, I felt like I had this all or
[00:13:26] Yeah. It’s,
[00:13:27] Frederick Weiss: [00:13:27] amazing
[00:13:54] Some kind of a mentorship relationship, you’re getting that input or a
[00:14:04] Arit Amana: [00:14:04] things. Yes,
[00:14:08] Frederick Weiss: [00:14:08] So, then
[00:14:11] Arit Amana: [00:14:11] I’m saying
[00:14:12] So I got my master’s in public health and I worked as a public health
[00:14:43] So we would scour the literature, the scientific literature, and come up
[00:14:58] Frederick Weiss: [00:14:58] Wow.
[00:15:08] And then there was I dunno if there was a pivot, but maybe there was a
[00:15:22] Arit Amana: [00:15:22] Exactly. So
[00:15:25] And I had just had my son. Son, my son was one plus and I had gotten into
[00:15:46] And that was something that I. Still dead on the side as I was a public
[00:16:08] Can you help me with that? And I had other friends who started asking me
[00:16:29] And it dovetailed quite nicely with also my desire to be home with my son.
[00:16:50] So that was my first taste of work from home. In a sense. And so
[00:17:07] So it was a win-win. Yeah.
[00:17:09] Frederick Weiss: [00:17:09] It’s
[00:17:33] But yeah, if you can and you have that opportunity, that’s amazing.
[00:17:54] How do I choose that? That the clients are coming to me. I don’t, I
[00:18:15] Th. This is too much for me. I can’t make it. I’m going to do
[00:18:37] Arit Amana: [00:18:37] Yeah. So for
[00:19:08] Literally like she had a date book and it was paper and pen and everything
[00:19:29] And so she was leaving a lot of money on the table. And so I was able to
[00:19:54] It was just she wasn’t, they weren’t falling through the cracks.
[00:20:10] It was, I see the value of what I’m doing. The money is good, but I
[00:20:34] And I. Couldn’t find those perfect combos of plugins and themes to do
[00:20:59] And see how this works under the hood.
[00:21:01] Frederick Weiss: [00:21:01] Yeah. Now
[00:21:18] Like you, you would go from seven to 11 at night. That was your time to
[00:21:44] Whoo. So yeah. Love to hear some of your insights on that.
[00:21:48] Arit Amana: [00:21:48] Absolutely.
[00:22:10] And so even though the free resources were great, I didn’t feel like I
[00:22:28] And so that’s when I looked into boot camps. And so I took a couple of
[00:22:48] And so they didn’t have this IAS. I S a thing, which is like all the
[00:23:06] And so you complete a module and module two opens up and you complete that
[00:23:24] What if at mybaby’s teasing and I’m not sleeping, and so I wanted
[00:23:48] He would not for three hours straight, but my daughter was more active.
[00:24:07] I’m going to sleep, train her. So I know she sleeps well during the
[00:24:33] She’s not going to stir. My son was with his dad and so I could, so I
[00:24:51] 24 seven. Seven days a week, basically.
[00:24:55] Frederick Weiss: [00:24:55] Yeah.
[00:25:13] You just have to roll with it. And a lot of these. Life happens. And a lot
[00:25:35] On the same token, that’s not for everybody and not everybody could
[00:25:53] So everybody’s different in that way, right? Yeah.
[00:25:56] Arit Amana: [00:25:56] Yeah. I think
[00:26:14] Like throughout the day. It just wasn’t an option for me. And I’m
[00:26:42] I’m still in touch with Jeremy today. Shout out Jeremy. He was
[00:26:57] Frederick Weiss: [00:26:57] I love
[00:27:09] What, what, exactly was that like? And how did you land your first tech
[00:27:13] Arit Amana: [00:27:13] It was, I
[00:27:29] But I don’t think because you can’t, no one can really prepare
[00:27:52] I started bootcamp, but I never really networked at any point in, even in
[00:28:13] And even to find my first tech job, I had no network. I was just hitting
[00:28:39] And so they got in touch. That’s how I got my first tech job. Yes. My
[00:28:57] And I think they remembered me from the last interview. And so they came
[00:29:06] Frederick Weiss: [00:29:06] Nice. And
[00:29:20] I, I. I see that you wrote that you were, you completed this bootcamp and
[00:29:41] Running on their golf carts, exercising on the moon, all this goofy stuff
[00:30:03] Arit Amana: [00:30:03] I think
[00:30:28] I know for me I wouldn’t say that I didn’t feel fear about age-ism
[00:30:54] But so I felt the disadvantage or I guess. I felt it, but I didn’t let
[00:31:15] And so I think that was my mindset. I didn’t let myself really sink
[00:31:43] And so I think that’s why I answered both. On the one hand, I
[00:32:06] Or else you, end up being limited, I think by these systems.
[00:32:12] Frederick Weiss: [00:32:12] Yeah.
[00:32:30] Okay. I won’t do that, but that doesn’t happen. It all begins and
[00:32:50] Arit Amana: [00:32:50] 22.
[00:32:51] Yeah. How do you know? I think it’s a great question. Yeah. That’s
[00:33:17] And so even if I felt. That way in my job hunt process, I didn’t
[00:33:40] She let’s just say it’s true. Does that mean I stopped? Does that
[00:34:01] But does that mean I don’t want to work? And so I think I just kept.
[00:34:23] Frederick Weiss: [00:34:23] Yeah.
[00:34:45] Work with a partner to start your own. There are a lot of opportunities.
[00:34:59] Arit Amana: [00:34:59] please go
[00:35:15] I applied for a position. I get it within a couple of weeks. I’m
[00:35:37] And I think that’s another thing I had to learn. Maybe I’m not, I
[00:35:57] And I think privilege comes into it, right? Like I had the privilege of a
[00:36:18] I think that different people face. And yeah. On the one hand, like you
[00:36:38] Yeah,
[00:36:40] Frederick Weiss: [00:36:40]
[00:37:04] And what, goes into that? You were talking about some experiences you had,
[00:37:24] So that’s when you have to go. Hey everybody, I gotta go. I gotta go
[00:37:42] Arit Amana: [00:37:42] Absolutely. So
[00:38:03] And just like you said, Any child that starts daycare that first month
[00:38:26] So you have to come and get your child. And so with my company it was an
[00:38:53] I don’t have any PTO saved, but my daughter’s sick and I need to
[00:39:14] So I didn’t feel that connection of having to work from home with my
[00:39:33] A lot of the conventions were still very new to me, so it was really
[00:39:59] And so that was just mentally. That was a challenge as well. So just
[00:40:16] It was rough. I have to say it was rough. I got through it. I tried to
[00:40:41] Or than what it really is. And so I just focused on just being the best
[00:40:59] Like things like that. Yeah. But it was rough. Yeah,
[00:41:02] Frederick Weiss: [00:41:02] That
[00:41:20] Break out and do things. And you’re like, sorry, I’ll be with you
[00:41:36] It’s hard for people to understand. And I think for me, sometimes
[00:42:16] Arit Amana: [00:42:16] hear it.
[00:42:19] I’m still, it’s so funny. Everyone tells me are you’re a
[00:42:46] I felt as though when I reflected over my journey and how I got to where I
[00:43:18] I felt like a lot of my confidence came from my connection to those
[00:43:50] I hear from a lot of women who say, I want to get into tech because of the
[00:44:10] Frederick Weiss: [00:44:10] Nice.
[00:44:17] So I founded. Our time for tech to give women what is often missing from
[00:44:36] Arit Amana: [00:44:36] So you’re
[00:44:45] So bootcamps are great. I love the fact that boot camps are providing that
[00:45:15] I wasn’t looking to duplicate that. And so for me, I want it to fill
[00:45:41] And so at least for like in my bootcamp, we had one-on-one mentoring
[00:46:05] Support another gap that I discovered Frederick is a lot of times with
[00:46:34] And that was another gap that I was realizing, even with the bootcamp
[00:46:57] I should say all our fellows, they never, they didn’t know how to use
[00:47:27] When you’re coding with a team, as opposed to just building your own
[00:47:50] But I find that these are the gaps that are still persisting in the. In,
[00:48:03] Frederick Weiss: [00:48:03]
[00:48:10] Yeah. What, does experience mean? How do we quantify that? How can we
[00:48:32] So a lot of times people will hire different individuals just because they
[00:48:55] You just want to be able to, get things done and have somebody that’s
[00:49:20] He might’ve known a little bit more than some of the other people and
[00:49:44] That’s wonderful.
[00:49:46] Arit Amana: [00:49:46] Even technical
[00:50:04] Some of my mentees will tell me, Oh, I’ve had job interviews and say,
[00:50:24] And they freeze. Because they never thought about it. They only
[00:50:42] You’re completing boot camps, but are you really. Thinking about what
[00:51:09] If they ask you questions about what you built and you don’t have that
[00:51:42] When your colleague makes a pull request, how do you review code? Not just
[00:52:07] And so I’m talking about the code collap track. We have better prep,
[00:52:32] Yeah.
[00:52:33] Frederick Weiss: [00:52:33] Yeah. W
[00:52:55] Yeah, I dunno it doesn’t sell it to the C levels. You can have some
[00:53:15] Your website is art.dev. Obviously our time for tech.org. And if you go to
[00:53:41] And I think a lot of people are just. Really afraid sometimes to one open
[00:54:01] Arit Amana: [00:54:01] right?
[00:54:02] Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I started a YouTube channel. It’s so funny.
[00:54:21] There’s just so many tutorials and videos. The more I got into it, the
[00:54:43] And really just, show that we’re out here doing this and you can too.
[00:54:48] Frederick Weiss: [00:54:48] Yeah.
[00:55:09] I could do that too. We, we all need role models and mentors and that,
[00:55:34] Which one of the things I know you said is. It’s taking your time and
[00:55:51] Arit Amana: [00:55:51] Yeah. What I
[00:56:22] And they make you feel like I can do this. But I think you really do
[00:56:45] What privilege. Do you enjoy that you can leverage? And what I mean by
[00:57:16] And I think when you slow down , you plan accordingly. I think when the
[00:57:41] And so it’s just as easy as following people. If their DMS is open,
[00:58:04] But for the most part, people are helpful. And so take advantage of that.
[00:58:23] Think if you manage your expectations, you will be better equipped to To
[00:58:34] Frederick Weiss: [00:58:34] I love
[00:58:44] Yeah. That’s that? That’s such great advice because if you
[00:59:03] It’s not the easiest thing for us, for everyone to do so really,
[00:59:07] Arit Amana: [00:59:07] appreciate it.
[00:59:30] So I want to recognize that you’re doing this and you’re doing it
[00:59:35] Frederick Weiss: [00:59:35] very
[00:59:43] Arit Amana: [00:59:43] all. Thanks everyone.
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In this episode, we get to speak with Arit Amana: Software Engineer, Founder, Writer, Mentor, and Conference Speaker. We discuss Arit’s day-to-day as a Software Engineer and her career journey. We also dive into Arit’s organization OurTimeForTech.org, a nonprofit online program that empowers early-career & career-changing Women in Tech!
Frederick Weiss: [00:00:00] I am Frederick Philip von Weiss.
[00:01:14] Welcome to the show.
[00:01:16] Arit Amana: [00:01:16] Thank you so
[00:01:23] Frederick Weiss: [00:01:23] I try
[00:01:36] Everybody’s yeah, it’s Saturday. And then Oh wait, I gotta do this
[00:01:44] Arit Amana: [00:01:44] It’s going
[00:01:52] Frederick Weiss: [00:01:52] Yeah, our
[00:02:14] Are you, do you
[00:02:15] Arit Amana: [00:02:15] feel safe?
[00:02:40] Not so much necessarily for me, but just to still send that message that I
[00:03:05] At the end of the day we have different types of people with different
[00:03:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:03:18] Yeah.
[00:03:23] I got a little bit of trepidation. I also have my I’m fully vaccinated
[00:03:42] So I’m just a little scared, but I want to see what happens. A month,
[00:03:51] Arit Amana: [00:03:51] off. Yeah.
[00:04:02] Like I think for me, that’s my mindset, let the fall come around and
[00:04:13] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:13] Yeah, I
[00:04:19] And at that point I’ll be very excited. I’m optimistic by the end
[00:04:28] Arit Amana: [00:04:28] nice. Yeah,
[00:04:31] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:31]
[00:04:33] Arit Amana: [00:04:33] I think we
[00:04:36] Frederick Weiss: [00:04:36] Yeah.
[00:04:45] Let’s talk about what you do. You are currently a Software Engineer
[00:05:04] Arit Amana: [00:05:04] at forum? Yes.
[00:05:10] And what that means is our code is completely a hundred percent open
[00:05:31] How are online communities that value data privacy and basically just
[00:05:58] So one of the, one of the tools in our store software are our moderation
[00:06:28] Yeah. So that’s day-to-day what I do.
[00:06:31] Frederick Weiss: [00:06:31] But now,
[00:06:48] Bingo. That’s a great example, but let’s roll with a pizza. Bingo.
[00:07:07] Arit Amana: [00:07:07] Excellent
[00:07:57] And have it be self hosted. We are going to make it very modular. And so
[00:08:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:08:18] Oh, I
[00:08:34] So yeah. Let’s talk about your career journey. You didn’t start
[00:08:56] And it just blossomed. And it went down that path. I know for you, at a
[00:09:08] Arit Amana: [00:09:08] in the house.
[00:09:15] Like part of his job was outfitting companies, banks and the like with
[00:09:37] Soles and the printers and we were always surrounded with technology. And
[00:09:59] And so that was yeah. That was my MD for all my Teddy bears and my dolls
[00:10:18] Frederick Weiss: [00:10:18] So, you
[00:10:21] Arit Amana: [00:10:21] that right?
[00:10:25] And for the most part, most of my life science came easy to me yet. I talk
[00:10:48] And so I’m taking all the Oracle and the microbiology and the physical
[00:11:21] And so that was one of my early earliest mistakes. Career-wise was
[00:11:39] And so I took it to me and, Oh, I don’t have what it takes to become a
[00:11:57] Cause I figured it’s still healthy, not as intense as medicine. I
[00:12:08] Frederick Weiss: [00:12:08]
[00:12:22] You could still make it through a lot of the things, what is it? The old
[00:12:43] So you, could have finished that in a degree in three years, you could
[00:12:49] Arit Amana: [00:12:49] right? Go
[00:13:04] No, it’s the reality. I think I was, I felt like I had this all or
[00:13:26] Yeah. It’s,
[00:13:27] Frederick Weiss: [00:13:27] amazing
[00:13:54] Some kind of a mentorship relationship, you’re getting that input or a
[00:14:04] Arit Amana: [00:14:04] things. Yes,
[00:14:08] Frederick Weiss: [00:14:08] So, then
[00:14:11] Arit Amana: [00:14:11] I’m saying
[00:14:12] So I got my master’s in public health and I worked as a public health
[00:14:43] So we would scour the literature, the scientific literature, and come up
[00:14:58] Frederick Weiss: [00:14:58] Wow.
[00:15:08] And then there was I dunno if there was a pivot, but maybe there was a
[00:15:22] Arit Amana: [00:15:22] Exactly. So
[00:15:25] And I had just had my son. Son, my son was one plus and I had gotten into
[00:15:46] And that was something that I. Still dead on the side as I was a public
[00:16:08] Can you help me with that? And I had other friends who started asking me
[00:16:29] And it dovetailed quite nicely with also my desire to be home with my son.
[00:16:50] So that was my first taste of work from home. In a sense. And so
[00:17:07] So it was a win-win. Yeah.
[00:17:09] Frederick Weiss: [00:17:09] It’s
[00:17:33] But yeah, if you can and you have that opportunity, that’s amazing.
[00:17:54] How do I choose that? That the clients are coming to me. I don’t, I
[00:18:15] Th. This is too much for me. I can’t make it. I’m going to do
[00:18:37] Arit Amana: [00:18:37] Yeah. So for
[00:19:08] Literally like she had a date book and it was paper and pen and everything
[00:19:29] And so she was leaving a lot of money on the table. And so I was able to
[00:19:54] It was just she wasn’t, they weren’t falling through the cracks.
[00:20:10] It was, I see the value of what I’m doing. The money is good, but I
[00:20:34] And I. Couldn’t find those perfect combos of plugins and themes to do
[00:20:59] And see how this works under the hood.
[00:21:01] Frederick Weiss: [00:21:01] Yeah. Now
[00:21:18] Like you, you would go from seven to 11 at night. That was your time to
[00:21:44] Whoo. So yeah. Love to hear some of your insights on that.
[00:21:48] Arit Amana: [00:21:48] Absolutely.
[00:22:10] And so even though the free resources were great, I didn’t feel like I
[00:22:28] And so that’s when I looked into boot camps. And so I took a couple of
[00:22:48] And so they didn’t have this IAS. I S a thing, which is like all the
[00:23:06] And so you complete a module and module two opens up and you complete that
[00:23:24] What if at mybaby’s teasing and I’m not sleeping, and so I wanted
[00:23:48] He would not for three hours straight, but my daughter was more active.
[00:24:07] I’m going to sleep, train her. So I know she sleeps well during the
[00:24:33] She’s not going to stir. My son was with his dad and so I could, so I
[00:24:51] 24 seven. Seven days a week, basically.
[00:24:55] Frederick Weiss: [00:24:55] Yeah.
[00:25:13] You just have to roll with it. And a lot of these. Life happens. And a lot
[00:25:35] On the same token, that’s not for everybody and not everybody could
[00:25:53] So everybody’s different in that way, right? Yeah.
[00:25:56] Arit Amana: [00:25:56] Yeah. I think
[00:26:14] Like throughout the day. It just wasn’t an option for me. And I’m
[00:26:42] I’m still in touch with Jeremy today. Shout out Jeremy. He was
[00:26:57] Frederick Weiss: [00:26:57] I love
[00:27:09] What, what, exactly was that like? And how did you land your first tech
[00:27:13] Arit Amana: [00:27:13] It was, I
[00:27:29] But I don’t think because you can’t, no one can really prepare
[00:27:52] I started bootcamp, but I never really networked at any point in, even in
[00:28:13] And even to find my first tech job, I had no network. I was just hitting
[00:28:39] And so they got in touch. That’s how I got my first tech job. Yes. My
[00:28:57] And I think they remembered me from the last interview. And so they came
[00:29:06] Frederick Weiss: [00:29:06] Nice. And
[00:29:20] I, I. I see that you wrote that you were, you completed this bootcamp and
[00:29:41] Running on their golf carts, exercising on the moon, all this goofy stuff
[00:30:03] Arit Amana: [00:30:03] I think
[00:30:28] I know for me I wouldn’t say that I didn’t feel fear about age-ism
[00:30:54] But so I felt the disadvantage or I guess. I felt it, but I didn’t let
[00:31:15] And so I think that was my mindset. I didn’t let myself really sink
[00:31:43] And so I think that’s why I answered both. On the one hand, I
[00:32:06] Or else you, end up being limited, I think by these systems.
[00:32:12] Frederick Weiss: [00:32:12] Yeah.
[00:32:30] Okay. I won’t do that, but that doesn’t happen. It all begins and
[00:32:50] Arit Amana: [00:32:50] 22.
[00:32:51] Yeah. How do you know? I think it’s a great question. Yeah. That’s
[00:33:17] And so even if I felt. That way in my job hunt process, I didn’t
[00:33:40] She let’s just say it’s true. Does that mean I stopped? Does that
[00:34:01] But does that mean I don’t want to work? And so I think I just kept.
[00:34:23] Frederick Weiss: [00:34:23] Yeah.
[00:34:45] Work with a partner to start your own. There are a lot of opportunities.
[00:34:59] Arit Amana: [00:34:59] please go
[00:35:15] I applied for a position. I get it within a couple of weeks. I’m
[00:35:37] And I think that’s another thing I had to learn. Maybe I’m not, I
[00:35:57] And I think privilege comes into it, right? Like I had the privilege of a
[00:36:18] I think that different people face. And yeah. On the one hand, like you
[00:36:38] Yeah,
[00:36:40] Frederick Weiss: [00:36:40]
[00:37:04] And what, goes into that? You were talking about some experiences you had,
[00:37:24] So that’s when you have to go. Hey everybody, I gotta go. I gotta go
[00:37:42] Arit Amana: [00:37:42] Absolutely. So
[00:38:03] And just like you said, Any child that starts daycare that first month
[00:38:26] So you have to come and get your child. And so with my company it was an
[00:38:53] I don’t have any PTO saved, but my daughter’s sick and I need to
[00:39:14] So I didn’t feel that connection of having to work from home with my
[00:39:33] A lot of the conventions were still very new to me, so it was really
[00:39:59] And so that was just mentally. That was a challenge as well. So just
[00:40:16] It was rough. I have to say it was rough. I got through it. I tried to
[00:40:41] Or than what it really is. And so I just focused on just being the best
[00:40:59] Like things like that. Yeah. But it was rough. Yeah,
[00:41:02] Frederick Weiss: [00:41:02] That
[00:41:20] Break out and do things. And you’re like, sorry, I’ll be with you
[00:41:36] It’s hard for people to understand. And I think for me, sometimes
[00:42:16] Arit Amana: [00:42:16] hear it.
[00:42:19] I’m still, it’s so funny. Everyone tells me are you’re a
[00:42:46] I felt as though when I reflected over my journey and how I got to where I
[00:43:18] I felt like a lot of my confidence came from my connection to those
[00:43:50] I hear from a lot of women who say, I want to get into tech because of the
[00:44:10] Frederick Weiss: [00:44:10] Nice.
[00:44:17] So I founded. Our time for tech to give women what is often missing from
[00:44:36] Arit Amana: [00:44:36] So you’re
[00:44:45] So bootcamps are great. I love the fact that boot camps are providing that
[00:45:15] I wasn’t looking to duplicate that. And so for me, I want it to fill
[00:45:41] And so at least for like in my bootcamp, we had one-on-one mentoring
[00:46:05] Support another gap that I discovered Frederick is a lot of times with
[00:46:34] And that was another gap that I was realizing, even with the bootcamp
[00:46:57] I should say all our fellows, they never, they didn’t know how to use
[00:47:27] When you’re coding with a team, as opposed to just building your own
[00:47:50] But I find that these are the gaps that are still persisting in the. In,
[00:48:03] Frederick Weiss: [00:48:03]
[00:48:10] Yeah. What, does experience mean? How do we quantify that? How can we
[00:48:32] So a lot of times people will hire different individuals just because they
[00:48:55] You just want to be able to, get things done and have somebody that’s
[00:49:20] He might’ve known a little bit more than some of the other people and
[00:49:44] That’s wonderful.
[00:49:46] Arit Amana: [00:49:46] Even technical
[00:50:04] Some of my mentees will tell me, Oh, I’ve had job interviews and say,
[00:50:24] And they freeze. Because they never thought about it. They only
[00:50:42] You’re completing boot camps, but are you really. Thinking about what
[00:51:09] If they ask you questions about what you built and you don’t have that
[00:51:42] When your colleague makes a pull request, how do you review code? Not just
[00:52:07] And so I’m talking about the code collap track. We have better prep,
[00:52:32] Yeah.
[00:52:33] Frederick Weiss: [00:52:33] Yeah. W
[00:52:55] Yeah, I dunno it doesn’t sell it to the C levels. You can have some
[00:53:15] Your website is art.dev. Obviously our time for tech.org. And if you go to
[00:53:41] And I think a lot of people are just. Really afraid sometimes to one open
[00:54:01] Arit Amana: [00:54:01] right?
[00:54:02] Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I started a YouTube channel. It’s so funny.
[00:54:21] There’s just so many tutorials and videos. The more I got into it, the
[00:54:43] And really just, show that we’re out here doing this and you can too.
[00:54:48] Frederick Weiss: [00:54:48] Yeah.
[00:55:09] I could do that too. We, we all need role models and mentors and that,
[00:55:34] Which one of the things I know you said is. It’s taking your time and
[00:55:51] Arit Amana: [00:55:51] Yeah. What I
[00:56:22] And they make you feel like I can do this. But I think you really do
[00:56:45] What privilege. Do you enjoy that you can leverage? And what I mean by
[00:57:16] And I think when you slow down , you plan accordingly. I think when the
[00:57:41] And so it’s just as easy as following people. If their DMS is open,
[00:58:04] But for the most part, people are helpful. And so take advantage of that.
[00:58:23] Think if you manage your expectations, you will be better equipped to To
[00:58:34] Frederick Weiss: [00:58:34] I love
[00:58:44] Yeah. That’s that? That’s such great advice because if you
[00:59:03] It’s not the easiest thing for us, for everyone to do so really,
[00:59:07] Arit Amana: [00:59:07] appreciate it.
[00:59:30] So I want to recognize that you’re doing this and you’re doing it
[00:59:35] Frederick Weiss: [00:59:35] very
[00:59:43] Arit Amana: [00:59:43] all. Thanks everyone.