Scholarships
At Operation Code, we partner with both code schools and industry leaders to make transitioning to software development less painful and accessible for our nation's finest and their families.
At Operation Code, we partner with both code schools and industry leaders to make transitioning to software development less painful and accessible for our nation's finest and their families.
Former Air National Guard soldier, Nuatu Tseggai benefited from one of our scholarships to attend Ruby on Ales. An Epicodus alumn, Nuatu is a site reliability engineer at New Relic.
We are proud to partner with Ruby on Ales and GitHub, respectively, to introduce more transitioning military, citizen-soldiers, veterans and their families to software development through conferences. To apply, send our Scholarship Chair, Nell Shamrell-Harrington, a direct message on Slack with 2-3 sentences on your interest. Upcoming 2016 software conferences:
Open Source & Feelings, Seattle, WA, July 22-23, 2016
Node Summit, San Francisco, CA, July 27-28, 2016
Code on the Beach, Atlantic Beach, FL, August 12-14, 2016
360iDev, August 21-24, 2016
CodeConf, Los Angeles, June 27-29, 2016
GitMerge, New York City, April 5, 2016
Ruby on Ales, March 31 & April 1, 2016
By David Molina
At Operation Code, we go beyond just saying, "support our veterans, troops, and their families," we execute on it by providing the operating environment to become software developers. One company that is always shipping and enables Operation Code to fulfill our mission of getting more military veterans and their families coding is GitHub...[Read more]
By Jesse James
For some veterans learning to code, the idea of going to a technical conference is a daunting task. You don’t know the jargon that well, you don’t know all the big names or faces, and you often times don’t know anyone else at the event. It’s a veritable mix of excitement to start getting into the community and the fear that you won’t or don’t belong. That’s exactly how I felt...[Read more]
By Nell Shamrell-Harrington
One of the best ways to learn, network, and find job opportunities in the IT industry is through attending conferences. My very first tech conference was Cascadia Ruby 2011 where I was amazed at the variety of talks (many covering technologies and techniques I was immediately able to apply in my work), the interesting conversations in the "hallway track", and the joy of talking with others working with the same technologies I was learning...[Read more]