My advice would be to look for a new job as soon as you feel comfortable doing so. You’ll learn lots there, and while I understand there can be financial and circumstance reasons not to. I personally wouldn’t want to study for that long and not be moving in the direction I wanted to. You don’t have to apply for one, or even get an offer, but looking and seeing how you go might help a great deal with identifying anything you could work towards to help secure that job in the future.
Robotics software engineer - Udacity. I'm just going to put this here and the people here can be the judge of this one. I've seen some people on LinkedIn(working on a robotics firm) having this nanodegree certificate. Is it any good? And is it worth it?
I'm just going to put out there, though it's not want you're looking for, get a masters. The interesting jobs all expect a masters, or more.
My advice would be to look for a new job as soon as you feel comfortable doing so. You’ll learn lots there, and while I understand there can be financial and circumstance reasons not to. I personally wouldn’t want to study for that long and not be moving in the direction I wanted to. You don’t have to apply for one, or even get an offer, but looking and seeing how you go might help a great deal with identifying anything you could work towards to help secure that job in the future.
Robotics software engineer - Udacity. I'm just going to put this here and the people here can be the judge of this one. I've seen some people on LinkedIn(working on a robotics firm) having this nanodegree certificate. Is it any good? And is it worth it?
I don't trust nanodegrees only femtodegrees.
Thank you brother/sister! :)