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JavaScript Developer to AI Engineer in 2026 and the Exact Skills That Turn a $90K JS Job Into a $180K AI Role
David Koy Mar 12, 2026

JavaScript Developer to AI Engineer in 2026 and the Exact Skills That Turn a $90K JS Job Into a $180K AI Role

LinkedIn just named AI Engineer the fastest-growing job title of 2026. Not prompt engineer. Not ML researcher. AI Engineer. The role that sits exactly at the intersection of software development and artificial intelligence, the one that JavaScript developers are uniquely positioned to fill, and the one that's currently paying $150K to $200K at companies that were offering $90K for senior React developers eighteen months ago.

IBM Is Doubling Junior Developer Hiring in 2026 While Everyone Else Cuts and What This Tells You About the Real Future of AI in Software
David Koy Mar 9, 2026

IBM Is Doubling Junior Developer Hiring in 2026 While Everyone Else Cuts and What This Tells You About the Real Future of AI in Software

Entry-level tech job postings dropped 73% in one year. Block fired 40% of its engineers. Amazon replaced 2,847 Prime Video developers with AI and offshore teams. Oracle is planning 20,000 to 30,000 cuts to fund AI data centers. Every headline in March 2026 says the same thing: AI is killing developer jobs, starting with the juniors.

John Smith Feb 15, 2026

The One Person Engineering Team in 2026 and How Solo Developers Are Shipping What Used to Require Ten People

A developer named Marcus shipped a complete SaaS product in February 2026. User authentication, Stripe payment processing, a real time dashboard, an admin panel, email notifications, a landing page with SEO optimization, and automated deployment to production. The entire application handles paying customers, processes real money, and runs without a dedicated ops team.

The Layoff Proof Developer: Skills That Keep You Employed When Companies Cut 20% of Engineering
John Smith Jan 29, 2026

The Layoff Proof Developer: Skills That Keep You Employed When Companies Cut 20% of Engineering

Last week Amazon announced 16,000 corporate layoffs. This was their second wave in three months, bringing total cuts to roughly 10 percent of their corporate workforce. The same week, Intel confirmed 24,000 job cuts, representing 20 percent of their entire staff. Meta added another 1,500 to the pile, explicitly citing their pivot to AI as the reason.

Tech Layoffs Survival Guide: From Fired to Hired in 90 Days
John Smith Jan 26, 2026

Tech Layoffs Survival Guide: From Fired to Hired in 90 Days

The email arrived at 9:47 AM on a Tuesday. It was from HR, not my manager, and the subject line was simply "Meeting Request." I knew what it meant before I even opened it. Twenty minutes later, I was sitting in a conference room listening to words that felt like they were coming from underwater. "Position eliminated." "Business restructuring." "Not a reflection of your performance."

Startup vs Big Tech vs Agency and Where JavaScript Developers Actually Earn More and Grow Faster
John Smith Jan 24, 2026

Startup vs Big Tech vs Agency and Where JavaScript Developers Actually Earn More and Grow Faster

Every JavaScript developer faces this decision at some point. You have built up your skills in React, Node.js, TypeScript, and modern frameworks. You have shipped products and solved real problems. Now comes the question that keeps appearing in every career conversation, every salary negotiation, and every late night scroll through job boards.

The Burnout Proof Developer and How to Code for 20+ Years Without Losing Your Mind
John Smith Jan 22, 2026

The Burnout Proof Developer and How to Code for 20+ Years Without Losing Your Mind

A senior developer at a Fortune 500 company recently shared his story on a programming forum. He was 31 years old with a decade of experience, great performance reviews, and a salary most would envy. And he was about to quit programming entirely. Not because he couldn't code anymore. Not because the industry changed. Not because the money wasn't good enough.

How to Scale Your Freelance JavaScript Rates From 50 to 200 Dollars Per Hour in 2026
John Smith Jan 17, 2026

How to Scale Your Freelance JavaScript Rates From 50 to 200 Dollars Per Hour in 2026

The gap between freelance JavaScript developers earning $50 per hour and those commanding $200 per hour rarely reflects technical skill differences alone. Developers at both ends of this spectrum often possess similar coding abilities, know the same frameworks, and deliver comparable quality work. The dramatic rate difference comes from positioning, client selection, pricing psychology, and systematic business practices that separate hobbyist freelancers from professional consultants.

John Smith Jan 15, 2026

JavaScript Developer Salary Negotiation 2026: Scripts, Tactics, and Mistakes That Cost $50K+

Most JavaScript developers leave tens of thousands of dollars on the table by accepting first offers without negotiation. The reluctance to negotiate stems from discomfort with confrontation, fear of losing the offer, or simply not knowing how to approach the conversation. However, companies expect negotiation and build flexibility into initial offers specifically to accommodate counter-offers. The developer who accepts immediately signals either desperation or lack of market awareness.

Engineering Manager in 2026: The $400K Leadership Track (Complete Transition Guide)
John Smith Jan 10, 2026

Engineering Manager in 2026: The $400K Leadership Track (Complete Transition Guide)

The engineering manager role represents one of the most misunderstood career transitions in technology. Most senior developers imagine management as their current job plus some meetings and performance reviews. This fundamental misconception leads to painful surprises when talented engineers accept management positions and discover they've entered an entirely different profession.

John Smith Jan 6, 2026

The Developer Shortage Gets 40% Worse in 2026: $200K+ Opportunities From Hiring Crisis

The global developer shortage that companies hoped would resolve through economic corrections and layoffs instead intensified dramatically in 2026, creating a crisis 40% worse than 2025 according to multiple labor market analyses. The United States alone faces a 1.2 million software developer deficit by year end, while demand accelerates faster than new developers enter the workforce. Three converging forces created this perfect storm that's reshaping compensation and career trajectories: AI and machine learning expansion tripled demand for developers who can implement generative AI features and integrate language models into existing applications,

John Smith Jan 3, 2026

TypeScript Crossed 69%: Pure JavaScript Developers Are Officially Unemployable in 2026

Stack Overflow's 2025 Developer Survey of 49,000 developers documents the tipping point where TypeScript transformed from optional enhancement to mandatory requirement. Sixty-nine percent of developers now use TypeScript for large-scale web applications, representing a 15% annual growth rate that shows no signs of slowing. The adoption data tells a more dramatic story when you examine who's actually hiring: 97% of developers recommend TypeScript according to the survey, and GitHub data reveals TypeScript overtook both Python and JavaScript as the number one language by contributor count in August 2025.

John Smith Jan 3, 2026

Python Overtook JavaScript on GitHub: Why This Is Actually Good News for JS Developers

GitHub's Octoverse 2024 and 2025 reports document a historic shift that JavaScript developers need to understand correctly. Python briefly overtook JavaScript in late 2024 after a decade of JS dominance, driven by a 59% surge in AI and data science projects. But here's what the headlines miss: by August 2025, TypeScript, JavaScript's typed superset, reclaimed the number one position, surpassing both Python and JavaScript. This isn't JavaScript losing ground. This is JavaScript evolving and fragmenting its ecosystem in ways that make simple language rankings misleading. JavaScript still dominates code pushes, npm grew 15% year-over-year to over 2 million packages, and the combined JavaScript plus TypeScript ecosystem accounts for more total development activity than any other language family.

Living in Bali, Earning Silicon Valley Salary: The Developer's Geographic Arbitrage Guide
John Smith Dec 24, 2025

Living in Bali, Earning Silicon Valley Salary: The Developer's Geographic Arbitrage Guide

Geographic arbitrage isn't a travel hack, it's a wealth-building strategy that can accelerate your path to financial independence by seven to twelve years. Developers earning $120K in Silicon Valley salaries while living in Bali for $1,800 monthly are building wealth at rates that make traditional career advice look obsolete. Indonesia's new E33G Remote Worker Visa offers up to five years of tax-free living for foreign income earners, while Canggu has become the world's unofficial capital of digital nomadism with fiber optic internet and coworking spaces on every corner.

How to join an international team — even if you don’t speak English
John Smith May 24, 2025

How to join an international team — even if you don’t speak English

You no longer need perfect English to join an international team. Thanks to Google’s new real-time speech translation in Meet, language is no longer a barrier to working with global companies. Whether you're a senior JavaScript developer or just aiming to break into remote work, this breakthrough opens the door to international opportunities that were once out of reach.