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So, where would I go to find developers? Or where have you gone that's been successful, supplying great developers? That's a good question. I remember when I was first becoming technical. I kind of opened my eyes to like a whole new world of developers that I didn't know before. And it was like man, if only I knew that these things existed before. And like, why doesn't everyone else do this? It seem like a unfair advantage. A lot of people go to tech meetups to try to find a technical person. They go around to events where there's a lot of other business people. Startup events, you know? Things like that. And then, there may be like hundred other people pitching ideas to like a handful of developers. And the odds just aren't good for you there. So, you kind of wanna go to where developers are actually hanging out. And that may not be obvious to you if you aren't a developer. So the places that I found were really useful are meetups and events designed specifically for development and around development. Developers love hanging out in groups and coding. So in New York City, there's tons of events and just about any major city, there are things like Hacker Hours is one example that our friend Ian runs. There are probably over a dozen other events like that here where every night of the week 10, 20 people get together. They're coding together. And what if you're not a coder? Can anyone come to this meeting? Like what would you do there? You can. I would be wary of just going and pitching. But if definitely helps to be interested. It's one thing to pitch and they'll ask someone for something. It's another to go and just genuinely like want to get help. And so, what I'd recommend and I think you guys are already on that path, is to like want to know about technology. Okay, so if you come and you're like maybe a few days or weeks into coding. You've taken one month, Rails. And then it's like handsome questions, or I need some help with this. All that kind of stuff. Not diving into, here's my idea, will you help me with that? but like, I'm running into this problem. Maybe you're doing Codecademy or maybe you're doing some coding exercise or just trying to set something up. And then you're initiating a conversation. People are very friendly. They love actually helping each other out. When it seems like here's a person who just really could use help. Because they remember what it was like to not know that stuff and how frustrating it was. Developers also love hanging out online. Tell me more. So there's like developer chat rooms like IRC, right? Yeah. You may get like a bristly reception depending on what you do there. But it's certainly like a place to go to find some of those. So, IRC's this like chat. You like, stalk them like in the wild. You're like, I found you. Yes but definitely, I made the mistake when I first went on IRC, to like message someone. Because it was like, I was like, I need help with this thing and he's like, okay I can help you. So I clicked his username and it was like private message. And he was just like, he called me out in the main chatroom. And he's like Matan, don't private message me. Don't ever private message me. And I didn't find out into later, that private messaging someone on IRC is like a very offensive thing to do. It's like touching a stripper. Yeah, it's like really, really bad. You don't do it. You don't do it unless they explicitly invite you to do it. It's like a whole world, this IRC thing. That mean there's a culture around. Just like if you wanna have a Reddit, or if you went on anywhere else, there's culture around it. But there's an option. Read more about front-end and back-end developers on our blog: https://learn.onemonth.com/front-end-... Or get more insight into how programming works with our One Month Programming for Non-Programmers course: https://onemonth.com/courses/programm...