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@LashaPython
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Python + Pandas → Data Manipulation
Python + Scikit-learn → ML Engineering
Python + TensorFlow → Deep Learning
Python + Matplotlib → Data Visualization
Python + Seaborn → Advanced Charts
Python + BeautifulSoup → Web Scraping
Python + Selenium → Browser Auto.
Python + FastAPI → Performance APIs
Python + SQLAlchemy → DB Access
Python + Flask → Lightweight Apps
Python + Django → Scalable Platforms
Python + OpenCV → Computer Vision
Python + Pygame → Game Development
One language. Infinite leverage.

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Entry-level hiring at big tech is down roughly 50% compared to pre-pandemic levels. Junior roles are getting absorbed into smaller, more senior teams.
Here's my take 👇
The job market is really harder right now.
If you've been applying and hearing nothing back — you're not imagining it.
But it doesn't mean that the opportunity has disappeared. It has simply shifted.
The reason companies are hiring fewer engineers, is NOT because they need less done. They're hiring fewer engineers because they need more from each one.
The times of getting paid to tick off a task list are ending. What they actually need — and can't find enough of — are engineers who understand systems deeply, take ownership, and make real decisions.
A quick note on DevOps specifically:
DevOps is not an entry-level path. Most job postings implicitly target mid-level or senior people — because a strong DevOps skillset means you already understand software development, operations, cloud, K8s, CI/CD, and observability.
In many companies, DevOps isn't even a separate role. It's just what a senior engineer looks like.
Now about AI. Because I know everyone's thinking it.
Nobody actually knows what it means for jobs in 5 years. Not me. Not the LinkedIn thought leaders. Not the tech CEOs doing podcast rounds about it.
Both extremes are wrong:
"AI will replace all engineers" — wrong.
"AI won't affect engineering at all" — also wrong.
The roles that are under real pressure the most are ones doing narrow, siloed work — low-context, repetitive. AI is very good at those tasks. Including some of the specific DevOps automation stuff actually.
The engineers I believe aren't going anywhere?
The ones who can connect code, infrastructure, security, and business outcomes. And who can look at what AI produces and say "that's wrong — here's why" or "that's correct - and here's why"
So what do you actually do right now?
Not this → wait and see how it all turns out.
Not this → skip fundamentals and just learn AI tools, hoping that's enough.
Both lead nowhere good.
My honest take:
Broaden your skillset. Understand how the full system works — not just your piece of it.
Cloud, CI/CD, K8s, observability, security — these keep showing up in job postings for a reason.
And here's something people keep forgetting: every AI model you use runs on infrastructure that needs to be deployed, scaled, and maintained — that's Cloud and DevOps.
Don't learn these things just enough to copy-paste from a tutorial. Learn them properly, to the point where you can design, debug, and explain what's going on.
And yes — learn AI tools too.
🟢 Powerful when you know what you're doing.
🔴 Dangerous shortcuts when you don't.
The best thing you can do in an uncertain market is become more skilled than the people around you.
But skill alone isn't enough anymore.
You could be the best engineer in the room. If nobody knows you exist, it doesn't matter.
Visibility is part of the job now. That's what LinkedIn is actually for — and it matters more than ever right now.
Bottom line is: the door hasn't closed. But it became higher and more competitive.
What's your take?

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