show/hide this revision's text 2 Scott

I'm in the same boat; been a .Net developer for 6 years. While I do have a CS degree, I don't have any formal training in ASP.Net; I learn it on the job as projects come up.

I found the best way to figure out what to learn is to keep your eye on .Net developer blogs. Some I follow:

David Hayden http://www.davidhayden.com/blog.aspx CodingHorror.com (you might be familiar with it ;-) Scot Scott Hanselman http://www.hanselman.com/blog/

Usually from reading their blogs, I pick up on what the latest .Net solutions that are out there and point me in the direction of new tech I should look into further.

Overall though, I can only give you the advice I give junior devs at my company; realize you can't possibly be expected to know everything but always be eager to learn. Good luck!

show/hide this revision's text 1

I'm in the same boat; been a .Net developer for 6 years. While I do have a CS degree, I don't have any formal training in ASP.Net; I learn it on the job as projects come up.

I found the best way to figure out what to learn is to keep your eye on .Net developer blogs. Some I follow:

David Hayden http://www.davidhayden.com/blog.aspx CodingHorror.com (you might be familiar with it ;-) Scot Hanselman http://www.hanselman.com/blog/

Usually from reading their blogs, I pick up on what the latest .Net solutions that are out there and point me in the direction of new tech I should look into further.

Overall though, I can only give you the advice I give junior devs at my company; realize you can't possibly be expected to know everything but always be eager to learn. Good luck!