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Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? - Career (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralCareerCan These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? (16202 Views)

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Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by tonididdy(m): 5:59pm On May 20
ManLikeL:
What's your doubt by calling me fake life?? Is it that you don't believe I have the listed systems or that I can't have them and need helps on way to go?
I never said I've been jobless all my life... I said I'm currently without job... It could mean I've just lost a job and not ready to start all over again. No part of that lines means I've been jobless all my life. If I want to be fake, I'll list things that aren't tech related but I have as properties ranging from the kind of car I drive and phones I use but nah, I just need guidance. And those systems are in all honesty, the least of what life has blessed me with. Consider it a very humble brag.
You killed your own post when you answered those buffons because now this is what your post will b centered on.

Many persons think apc have bots on NL but they don't know there are persons who love to divert attention so much so it makes them look like a witch because then the topic becomes about them and their hate.

I'm disappointed and was really looking to learn a thing a two from your quest but now.....


Goodluck with that!
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Luckysbab: 6:01pm On May 20
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by tonididdy(m): 6:03pm On May 20
Galapagous:
I don't have all these setup sef, yet I work remotely from home without issue. The main thing is just how operation occur where you work. For me, 3 meeting from Mon - wed, the rest are just WhatsApp chat. So most of the power will be saved and use for work.

I just love the freedom and flexibility that come with working remotely. I can decide to sleep all day and do the task in the midnight, when noise is absolute zero.

Best of luck.
This isn't the information the OP seeks.
We did not need this your personal information.
We need your opinion on the topic at hand! Unless you're clueless bout what to say which will be very weird
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Pootle: 6:25pm On May 20
OloriDesire:
You have no jobs and you have these powerful laptops? undecided undecided

Who you dey lie give?

Oya continue with whatever fetched you the money to acquire those engines.

Nairaland and fake lives.
na old picker wey wan diversify grin
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Galapagous(m): 6:43pm On May 20
tonididdy:
This isn't the information the OP seeks.
We did not need this your personal information.
We need your opinion on the topic at hand! Unless you're clueless bout what to say which will be very weird
Okay, from what I said, "I don't have all these setup, but work fine" mean he is fine with what he has, upscaling will be determined by the type of work environment he find himself.


Pretty weird you didn't catch that part.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by CrownedPhoenix: 6:44pm On May 20
Stephen0mozzy:
Man... You have a beast of a laptop.
Wait to hear mine.. lol
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Bigsteppa: 6:44pm On May 20
Learn video editing the right way…
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by LOVEGINO(m): 6:46pm On May 20
TossTos:
You may visit Coursera , YouTube where you can learn some freely.. like
1) Building the visual parts of websites using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript
2) Data Analysis, Cyber security etc..as you say staying within your abode ..
all dis are outdated. Go for prompt engineer.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by JimD(m): 7:05pm On May 20
Just learn vibe coding and be very good at it. Then once you can build and deploy a real app, launch something unique that solves a problem you've faced. AI is coming for 85% of run-of-the-mill tech jobs. But it's also creating new opportunities.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Iseddy: 7:12pm On May 20
Even if you start learning anything on your own today there's a possibility you will never have a breakthrough in the field. My suggestion is to first know your strength and weakness, then go out to source for people in your area of interest and build a connection with one or two, make them your mentor and learn from them. Build projects and tasks with them. But if you say you want to do it on your own through online learning alone you will suffer and not really make headway
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Iyenogie30: 7:15pm On May 20
Please can you put me through on this
Galapagous:
I don't have all these setup sef, yet I work remotely from home without issue. The main thing is just how operation occur where you work. For me, 3 meeting from Mon - wed, the rest are just WhatsApp chat. So most of the power will be saved and use for work.

I just love the freedom and flexibility that come with working remotely. I can decide to sleep all day and do the task in the midnight, when noise is absolute zero.

Best of luck.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Iyenogie30: 7:18pm On May 20
Please i am interested how can i contact you for further discussion?
funnyDM:
How much are you going to pay me?

Learn:
1) Video ads editing and 2d animation
2) Learn digital marketing

Yes. We have AI but in the end, how many people would keep paying for AI pro subscriptions? Just be good at them and be patient, you'll earn money in USD both ways.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by teepain: 7:32pm On May 20
Stephen0mozzy:
Thank you Chief.

Your last paragraph actually just validated the stance I've always taken. I'm more of a builder guy than dependence on corporate jobs with the skills, I've just not had the discipline, i think, to complete any of my attempts at a startup (SaaS).

You're right about AI being a blessing too, but not so much for entry level guys as their own "tasks" are now being automated out and companies are not very keen of training new hires either.
Well, I may I have to disagree a bit with you with respect to AI not being a blessing to new hires. When I considered where I was some 25 years ago, I think this generation is blessed. For context, I became a certified java programmer in 2002 and for me debugging even some issues back then took too much of my time. Compare that to now when, you can easily use AI to trace your source of error.

These days it is easier for a junior developer to churn out standard grade code, if they know what they are doing. My advise generally is for developers to see themselves as solution providers. It is easier to attract money when you are solving people's problems.

I wish you all the best.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Ten06(m): 7:43pm On May 20
You are actually in a very strong position already.

You have:

Time

Patience

Stable electricity

Good hardware

Savings that remove desperation

A willingness to learn slowly


Those things matter more than many people realize.

Your systems are more than enough for almost every remote tech career path. Your HP ZBook Fury 16 G9 alone can handle software development, cybersecurity labs, cloud work, AI tools, video editing, virtualization, and heavy multitasking.

The bigger question is not:

> “Can my system handle tech work?”



It is:

> “Which tech path fits my personality, patience level, and income goals?”



Since you specifically want:

remote work

sustainable income

international earning potential

long-term stability

legal work from home

gradual but dependable growth


…then I would advise you to avoid hype-driven areas and focus on fields that:

1. Have global demand


2. Can be learned from home


3. Can be freelanced remotely


4. Do not require university degrees to enter


5. Still pay well years later



Here’s the truth many people won’t tell beginners:

The tech industry is now divided into:

overcrowded “everyone is doing this” fields

and practical high-income fields where skilled people are still scarce.


You should aim for the second category.


---

The 5 Best Remote-Friendly Tech Paths For You

1. Software Development (Most Dependable Long-Term)

What it is

Building websites, apps, systems, and software.

Why it is powerful

This is still one of the strongest remote careers in the world.

A good developer in Nigeria can work for:

U.S. companies

European startups

remote agencies

freelance clients

SaaS companies


And earn in dollars.

Best part

You do not need to be a genius in mathematics.

Recommended route for you

Start with:

HTML

CSS

JavaScript


Then move into:

React

Node.js

Databases

APIs


Eventually:

Full-stack development


Income potential

Very high once skilled.

Difficulty

Medium.

Time before earning

6–18 months realistically.


---

2. Cybersecurity (Excellent For Your Personality)

This one stood out strongly while reading your message.

You sound like someone who may enjoy:

working quietly

learning deeply

staying indoors

technical investigation

structured systems


Cybersecurity fits that personality well.

What it involves

protecting systems

finding vulnerabilities

securing networks

ethical hacking

cloud security


Why it is valuable

Cyber threats never stop. Companies always need security people.

Remote opportunities

Very strong internationally.

Areas inside cybersecurity

SOC Analyst

Penetration Testing

Cloud Security

Governance/Risk/Compliance

Security Automation


Best beginner route

Start with:

Networking basics

Linux

Cybersecurity fundamentals

CompTIA Security+ concepts

TryHackMe labs

Wireshark

Basic Python


Income potential

Very high internationally.

Difficulty

Medium to high.

Time before earning

8–24 months.

But once established, it can become very stable.


---

3. Cloud Computing + DevOps (Massively Underrated)

This is one of the strongest remote career paths today.

What it is

Managing servers, applications, cloud infrastructure, automation, deployments.

Using platforms like:

Amazon Web Services

Google Cloud

Microsoft Azure


Why I like this path for you

You already have strong hardware. You seem patient and methodical.

Technologies involved

Linux

Docker

Kubernetes

Git

CI/CD

Cloud platforms

Scripting


Reality

This field is harder initially than web development.

But:

fewer people master it

competition is lower

salaries are often higher


Time before earning

1–2 years.

Long-term sustainability

Excellent.


---

4. Data Analytics / Data Engineering

Good if you like:

logic

organization

patterns

business insights


Tools

Excel

SQL

Python

Power BI

Tableau


Easier entry than software engineering

Yes.

High income ceiling?

Moderate to high.

Remote opportunities?

Good.

Recommended if:

You want something slightly less coding-heavy.


---

5. AI-Assisted Tech Work (Very Important Today)

Do not misunderstand this part.

I am NOT saying:

> “Become an AI prompt engineer.”



That hype is unstable.

What is valuable now is:

> combining AI tools with real technical skills.



For example:

Developers using AI become faster

Cybersecurity analysts using AI become more productive

Data analysts using AI work smarter


AI should become your assistant, not your profession.


---

What I Would Personally Recommend For YOU

Based on your tone, patience, setup, and desire for sustainability:

Strongest recommendation:

Cybersecurity + Cloud

OR

Full-Stack Development + AI tools

These combinations are powerful internationally.


---

Your Biggest Mistake Would Be…

Trying to learn:

everything at once

10 programming languages

6 career paths simultaneously


That destroys progress.


---

What You Should Do In The Next 12 Months

Phase 1 — First 2 Months

Learn computer fundamentals properly.

Topics:

How the internet works

Networking basics

Linux basics

Git/GitHub

Command line


This foundation is CRITICAL.


---

Phase 2 — Choose ONE Path Only

Do not branch around.

Pick:

software development OR

cybersecurity OR

cloud/devops OR

data analytics



---

Phase 3 — Daily Learning Routine

You need consistency more than intensity.

Even:

3 focused hours daily for 1 year can completely change your life.



---

Platforms I Strongly Recommend

For Learning

[freeCodeCamp](https://www.freecodecamp.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[The Odin Project](https://www.theodinproject.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[CS50 by Harvard](https://cs50.harvard.edu/x?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[TryHackMe](https://tryhackme.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[Coursera](https://www.coursera.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[roadmap.sh](https://roadmap.sh?utm_source=chatgpt.com)



---

Very Important Reality Check

Your first income may be painfully small.

Maybe:

$50

$100

$300


Do not panic.

Remote careers compound.

A skilled person earning in dollars from Nigeria can eventually build:

financial stability

location freedom

consulting income

freelance clients

remote employment

even tech businesses later


But the first stage is usually quiet and difficult.


---

Final Advice

You currently have something many people lack:

room to focus without immediate survival pressure


Use this season carefully.

Do not chase:

crypto hype

fake forex mentors

“AI cashout” schemes

copy-paste online businesses


Build a real technical skill.

A real skill may take 2 years to mature… …but it can feed you for 20 years.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Stephen0mozzy: 7:43pm On May 20
teepain:
Well, I may I have to disagree a bit with you with respect to AI not being a blessing to new hires. When I considered where I was some 25 years ago, I think this generation is blessed. For context, I became a certified java programmer in 2002 and for me debugging even some issues back then took too much of my time. Compare that to now when, you can easily use AI to trace your source of error.

These days it is easier for a junior developer to churn out standard grade code, if they know what they are doing. My advise generally is for developers to see themselves as solution providers. It is easier to attract money when you are solving people's problems.

I wish you all the best.
Wow.... 2002. Respect Sir.

Thanks for your good wishes.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by RealityKings1: 7:58pm On May 20
Nice
Ten06:
You are actually in a very strong position already.

You have:

Time

Patience

Stable electricity

Good hardware

Savings that remove desperation

A willingness to learn slowly


Those things matter more than many people realize.

Your systems are more than enough for almost every remote tech career path. Your HP ZBook Fury 16 G9 alone can handle software development, cybersecurity labs, cloud work, AI tools, video editing, virtualization, and heavy multitasking.

The bigger question is not:

> “Can my system handle tech work?”



It is:

> “Which tech path fits my personality, patience level, and income goals?”



Since you specifically want:

remote work

sustainable income

international earning potential

long-term stability

legal work from home

gradual but dependable growth


…then I would advise you to avoid hype-driven areas and focus on fields that:

1. Have global demand


2. Can be learned from home


3. Can be freelanced remotely


4. Do not require university degrees to enter


5. Still pay well years later



Here’s the truth many people won’t tell beginners:

The tech industry is now divided into:

overcrowded “everyone is doing this” fields

and practical high-income fields where skilled people are still scarce.


You should aim for the second category.


---

The 5 Best Remote-Friendly Tech Paths For You

1. Software Development (Most Dependable Long-Term)

What it is

Building websites, apps, systems, and software.

Why it is powerful

This is still one of the strongest remote careers in the world.

A good developer in Nigeria can work for:

U.S. companies

European startups

remote agencies

freelance clients

SaaS companies


And earn in dollars.

Best part

You do not need to be a genius in mathematics.

Recommended route for you

Start with:

HTML

CSS

JavaScript


Then move into:

React

Node.js

Databases

APIs


Eventually:

Full-stack development


Income potential

Very high once skilled.

Difficulty

Medium.

Time before earning

6–18 months realistically.


---

2. Cybersecurity (Excellent For Your Personality)

This one stood out strongly while reading your message.

You sound like someone who may enjoy:

working quietly

learning deeply

staying indoors

technical investigation

structured systems


Cybersecurity fits that personality well.

What it involves

protecting systems

finding vulnerabilities

securing networks

ethical hacking

cloud security


Why it is valuable

Cyber threats never stop. Companies always need security people.

Remote opportunities

Very strong internationally.

Areas inside cybersecurity

SOC Analyst

Penetration Testing

Cloud Security

Governance/Risk/Compliance

Security Automation


Best beginner route

Start with:

Networking basics

Linux

Cybersecurity fundamentals

CompTIA Security+ concepts

TryHackMe labs

Wireshark

Basic Python


Income potential

Very high internationally.

Difficulty

Medium to high.

Time before earning

8–24 months.

But once established, it can become very stable.


---

3. Cloud Computing + DevOps (Massively Underrated)

This is one of the strongest remote career paths today.

What it is

Managing servers, applications, cloud infrastructure, automation, deployments.

Using platforms like:

Amazon Web Services

Google Cloud

Microsoft Azure


Why I like this path for you

You already have strong hardware. You seem patient and methodical.

Technologies involved

Linux

Docker

Kubernetes

Git

CI/CD

Cloud platforms

Scripting


Reality

This field is harder initially than web development.

But:

fewer people master it

competition is lower

salaries are often higher


Time before earning

1–2 years.

Long-term sustainability

Excellent.


---

4. Data Analytics / Data Engineering

Good if you like:

logic

organization

patterns

business insights


Tools

Excel

SQL

Python

Power BI

Tableau


Easier entry than software engineering

Yes.

High income ceiling?

Moderate to high.

Remote opportunities?

Good.

Recommended if:

You want something slightly less coding-heavy.


---

5. AI-Assisted Tech Work (Very Important Today)

Do not misunderstand this part.

I am NOT saying:

> “Become an AI prompt engineer.”



That hype is unstable.

What is valuable now is:

> combining AI tools with real technical skills.



For example:

Developers using AI become faster

Cybersecurity analysts using AI become more productive

Data analysts using AI work smarter


AI should become your assistant, not your profession.


---

What I Would Personally Recommend For YOU

Based on your tone, patience, setup, and desire for sustainability:

Strongest recommendation:

Cybersecurity + Cloud

OR

Full-Stack Development + AI tools

These combinations are powerful internationally.


---

Your Biggest Mistake Would Be…

Trying to learn:

everything at once

10 programming languages

6 career paths simultaneously


That destroys progress.


---

What You Should Do In The Next 12 Months

Phase 1 — First 2 Months

Learn computer fundamentals properly.

Topics:

How the internet works

Networking basics

Linux basics

Git/GitHub

Command line


This foundation is CRITICAL.


---

Phase 2 — Choose ONE Path Only

Do not branch around.

Pick:

software development OR

cybersecurity OR

cloud/devops OR

data analytics



---

Phase 3 — Daily Learning Routine

You need consistency more than intensity.

Even:

3 focused hours daily for 1 year can completely change your life.



---

Platforms I Strongly Recommend

For Learning

[freeCodeCamp](https://www.freecodecamp.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[The Odin Project](https://www.theodinproject.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[CS50 by Harvard](https://cs50.harvard.edu/x?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[TryHackMe](https://tryhackme.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[Coursera](https://www.coursera.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[roadmap.sh](https://roadmap.sh?utm_source=chatgpt.com)



---

Very Important Reality Check

Your first income may be painfully small.

Maybe:

$50

$100

$300


Do not panic.

Remote careers compound.

A skilled person earning in dollars from Nigeria can eventually build:

financial stability

location freedom

consulting income

freelance clients

remote employment

even tech businesses later


But the first stage is usually quiet and difficult.


---

Final Advice

You currently have something many people lack:

room to focus without immediate survival pressure


Use this season carefully.

Do not chase:

crypto hype

fake forex mentors

“AI cashout” schemes

copy-paste online businesses


Build a real technical skill.

A real skill may take 2 years to mature… …but it can feed you for 20 years.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by ManLikeL(op): 8:00pm On May 20
Ten06:
You are actually in a very strong position already.

You have:

Time

Patience

Stable electricity

Good hardware

Savings that remove desperation

A willingness to learn slowly


Those things matter more than many people realize.

Your systems are more than enough for almost every remote tech career path. Your HP ZBook Fury 16 G9 alone can handle software development, cybersecurity labs, cloud work, AI tools, video editing, virtualization, and heavy multitasking.

The bigger question is not:

> “Can my system handle tech work?”



It is:

> “Which tech path fits my personality, patience level, and income goals?”



Since you specifically want:

remote work

sustainable income

international earning potential

long-term stability

legal work from home

gradual but dependable growth


…then I would advise you to avoid hype-driven areas and focus on fields that:

1. Have global demand


2. Can be learned from home


3. Can be freelanced remotely


4. Do not require university degrees to enter


5. Still pay well years later



Here’s the truth many people won’t tell beginners:

The tech industry is now divided into:

overcrowded “everyone is doing this” fields

and practical high-income fields where skilled people are still scarce.


You should aim for the second category.


---

The 5 Best Remote-Friendly Tech Paths For You

1. Software Development (Most Dependable Long-Term)

What it is

Building websites, apps, systems, and software.

Why it is powerful

This is still one of the strongest remote careers in the world.

A good developer in Nigeria can work for:

U.S. companies

European startups

remote agencies

freelance clients

SaaS companies


And earn in dollars.

Best part

You do not need to be a genius in mathematics.

Recommended route for you

Start with:

HTML

CSS

JavaScript


Then move into:

React

Node.js

Databases

APIs


Eventually:

Full-stack development


Income potential

Very high once skilled.

Difficulty

Medium.

Time before earning

6–18 months realistically.


---

2. Cybersecurity (Excellent For Your Personality)

This one stood out strongly while reading your message.

You sound like someone who may enjoy:

working quietly

learning deeply

staying indoors

technical investigation

structured systems


Cybersecurity fits that personality well.

What it involves

protecting systems

finding vulnerabilities

securing networks

ethical hacking

cloud security


Why it is valuable

Cyber threats never stop. Companies always need security people.

Remote opportunities

Very strong internationally.

Areas inside cybersecurity

SOC Analyst

Penetration Testing

Cloud Security

Governance/Risk/Compliance

Security Automation


Best beginner route

Start with:

Networking basics

Linux

Cybersecurity fundamentals

CompTIA Security+ concepts

TryHackMe labs

Wireshark

Basic Python


Income potential

Very high internationally.

Difficulty

Medium to high.

Time before earning

8–24 months.

But once established, it can become very stable.


---

3. Cloud Computing + DevOps (Massively Underrated)

This is one of the strongest remote career paths today.

What it is

Managing servers, applications, cloud infrastructure, automation, deployments.

Using platforms like:

Amazon Web Services

Google Cloud

Microsoft Azure


Why I like this path for you

You already have strong hardware. You seem patient and methodical.

Technologies involved

Linux

Docker

Kubernetes

Git

CI/CD

Cloud platforms

Scripting


Reality

This field is harder initially than web development.

But:

fewer people master it

competition is lower

salaries are often higher


Time before earning

1–2 years.

Long-term sustainability

Excellent.


---

4. Data Analytics / Data Engineering

Good if you like:

logic

organization

patterns

business insights


Tools

Excel

SQL

Python

Power BI

Tableau


Easier entry than software engineering

Yes.

High income ceiling?

Moderate to high.

Remote opportunities?

Good.

Recommended if:

You want something slightly less coding-heavy.


---

5. AI-Assisted Tech Work (Very Important Today)

Do not misunderstand this part.

I am NOT saying:

> “Become an AI prompt engineer.”



That hype is unstable.

What is valuable now is:

> combining AI tools with real technical skills.



For example:

Developers using AI become faster

Cybersecurity analysts using AI become more productive

Data analysts using AI work smarter


AI should become your assistant, not your profession.


---

What I Would Personally Recommend For YOU

Based on your tone, patience, setup, and desire for sustainability:

Strongest recommendation:

Cybersecurity + Cloud

OR

Full-Stack Development + AI tools

These combinations are powerful internationally.


---

Your Biggest Mistake Would Be…

Trying to learn:

everything at once

10 programming languages

6 career paths simultaneously


That destroys progress.


---

What You Should Do In The Next 12 Months

Phase 1 — First 2 Months

Learn computer fundamentals properly.

Topics:

How the internet works

Networking basics

Linux basics

Git/GitHub

Command line


This foundation is CRITICAL.


---

Phase 2 — Choose ONE Path Only

Do not branch around.

Pick:

software development OR

cybersecurity OR

cloud/devops OR

data analytics



---

Phase 3 — Daily Learning Routine

You need consistency more than intensity.

Even:

3 focused hours daily for 1 year can completely change your life.



---

Platforms I Strongly Recommend

For Learning

[freeCodeCamp](https://www.freecodecamp.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[The Odin Project](https://www.theodinproject.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[CS50 by Harvard](https://cs50.harvard.edu/x?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[TryHackMe](https://tryhackme.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[Coursera](https://www.coursera.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[roadmap.sh](https://roadmap.sh?utm_source=chatgpt.com)



---

Very Important Reality Check

Your first income may be painfully small.

Maybe:

$50

$100

$300


Do not panic.

Remote careers compound.

A skilled person earning in dollars from Nigeria can eventually build:

financial stability

location freedom

consulting income

freelance clients

remote employment

even tech businesses later


But the first stage is usually quiet and difficult.


---

Final Advice

You currently have something many people lack:

room to focus without immediate survival pressure


Use this season carefully.

Do not chase:

crypto hype

fake forex mentors

“AI cashout” schemes

copy-paste online businesses


Build a real technical skill.

A real skill may take 2 years to mature… …but it can feed you for 20 years.
You've put all my yearnings to rest.
I'm deeply grateful.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by teepain: 8:02pm On May 20
Stephen0mozzy:
Wow.... 2002. Respect Sir.

Thanks for your good wishes.
UW sir. May God bless your handwork and I hope to see you at the top soon.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by goshee: 8:45pm On May 20
Stephen0mozzy:
I usually shy away from giving EXACT skills that a person should learn when it comes to tech... Not because it's hard, but because I might be biased towards recommending what I am passionate about (yes, passion is actually important, because you have to actually want to learn the skill and find it interesting enough to keep going) - instead I'll give some recommendations and you do the research and pursue one.

There are many roles in tech, which you can either break into, or use domain knowledge to decide (e.g someone who has had experience as a Personal Assistant or Secretary may find it easier to go for Virtual Assistant training).

1. If you've been into marketing/sales, you can actually learn about digital marketing, wirh focus on lead generation, paid ads and influencer marketing.

2. If you've been into finance or accounting, then you can learn things like Data Analytics or Data Science.

You get the idea.

Now about where to learn:
It's still up to you - the only time I went to an actual school to learn any of my current skills, was in 2010 when I went to computer school to learn basic computer application - since then, all my learning have been YOUTUBE, UDEMY or free online bootcamp (ALX when it was free).

But if you have the money and time for a physical location, just find around your location.
Thanks. Can I speak to you on phone? 08038090072 is my number. Please let’s talk. I have a few things to inquire from you.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by davillian(m): 9:07pm On May 20
When I heard 20hrs light I just know say na mainland
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Goddyrichie(m): 9:20pm On May 20
Kingpele:
Well I wanted to tell u to start bombing but since u want to go legal graphic design or programming will be OK especially as u said u are willing to wait it out
baba pls 🙏show me sure update dating don hard due to hw fb and titkok take dey
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by WhizdomXX(m): 9:41pm On May 20
ManLikeL:
Good morning everyone.

I have no idea where to post this but I need massive recommendations and guidance.

Consider this question the yearning of a technical layman so your suggestions pieced into bits could be earnestly appreciated and understood.

I want to go into tech and specifically I want to be a remote worker.
Nothing outside of my home interests me and the idea of earning in naira seems a bit un-enough at the moment.
What kind of skills should I acquire in the tech world?

Trust me, I can be patient enough to wait it out till it starts yielding so believe me, I'm not expecting a quick money making scheme kind of impactation. I'm ok with slow and steady, but I want it to be dependable enough that when it picks, then it peaks and will be sustainable.
At the moment, my estate has 20-hour power supply at the minimum. I have; 1) HP ZBook Fury16 G9-Intel Core I7, 16GB Ram and 1T SSD.
2) HP EliteBook 840 G9 16GB Intel Core i7 SSD 512GB.
3) I have a well upgraded HP mini Prodesk cpu (16/512GB).
And a mini power station to keep these running for a few hours if there is ever an outage.


I want to believe these systems should be able to handle any kind of tech duties.

I'm without a job currently and I don't want to even start searching for jobs although I have a few savings to sustain me for a few years since I'm single.
I want to make money legally from the shores of my abode.

Please assist a brother
I'm following you
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by nat8an(m): 11:55pm On May 20
Stephen0mozzy:
Man... You have a beast of a laptop.

Now when it comes to skills, there are three types of people.

1. The creative
2. The analytical
3. The Seller

If you are on the creative spectrum, I'll recommend you go for motion graphics and a pinch of 3d - specifically for building product demos using After Effects and maybe Cinema4D.

If you're more on the analytical and number crunching side... I'm probably going to err on the side of caution and suggest Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning or start from Data Analysis for Financial/Business Analytics.

If you're the seller personality, I'd suggest you master how to use and help people manage CRM Software - Case in point GoHighLevel - you can actually charge people good money in dollars to help them set up their CRM, Automation Workflow, Funnels and Landing page, there's a ton of them - especially now that everybody is a founder or coach selling one thing or the other.


Personally, when I took this kind of decision about 4 years ago, I went into Programming (Became a MERN Developer); but the programming world is very volatile now and not very promising, especially for entry level.

Wishing you the best.... And while you're flexible in how long you want to spend in learning and waiting till it pays, it helps to tie the goal to a timeline too.
My advice would be to first think of the long term, how relevant would be the chosen skill you want to learn be in the next 5-10years from now .
That being said here are my 3 suggestions for you

1. Data Engineering & Pipeline Management
While AI models (like ChatGPT) get all the fame, they are completely useless without clean, structured data. AI cannot "think" if it is fed garbage data.

Why this is bulletproof: Companies are drowning in raw data. They need human experts to build pipelines that collect, clean, transport, and store this data securely.
The 5-10Years Outlook: Deeply sustainable. As long as businesses generate data, they will need Data Engineers. AI cannot automate the structural design of a massive corporate data pipeline.
Key skills to learn: SQL, Python, and cloud data warehouses like Snowflake or Google BigQuery.

2. Cloud Architecture, DevOps & Platform Engineering
Every app, AI tool, website, and database on Earth runs on a cloud server. DevOps and Cloud Engineers are the digital plumbers and structural architects of the internet.

Zero To Mastery
Why it is bulletproof: If a website crashes or an API goes down, a company loses millions every hour. Tech companies can lay off recruiters or designers, but they never lay off the engineers who keep their systems running.
The 5-10-Years Outlook: AI needs massive cloud power to function. The demand for experts who can manage cloud costs, automate systems, and coordinate server infrastructure will skyrocket.
Key skills to learn: Linux, Docker, Kubernetes, and cloud platforms like AWS or Microsoft Azure.

3. Cybersecurity & Digital Risk Management
As systems become automated and integrated with AI, hacking and data breaches are becoming incredibly sophisticated.

Why this is bulletproof: Governments legally mandate that companies protect user data. Insurance companies refuse to cover businesses without strict cybersecurity teams. It is a compliance requirement, not an optional expense.
The 10-Year Outlook: Utterly untouchable by AI. In fact, AI makes cyberattacks worse, meaning companies will need human security analysts to deploy AI-driven defense mechanisms.
Key skills to learn: Network security, cloud security, and compliance frameworks.
Now the question is
Are you the kind of person who prefer the idea of organizing massive flows of information (Data Engineering)
Or managing the invisible engines that keep apps running (Cloud/DevOps)
Or protecting systems from digital threats (Cybersecurity)?

When you have made up your mind and chosen the skill you want to learn, look for a community and join, you would definitely need a mentor. Also if you pick cybersecurity or cloud architecture, I have a community you can join for free and get guidance also relate with like minds.

Then finally, get yourself a YouTube channel and document your learning process and post it there. People who are in same position as you are will easily identify and relate with you, and as the numbers grow, you can now monetize the channel and begin to make money from the channel even before your first remote job.
I hope this helps you. Take care brother and welcome to the Tech club bro wink
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by DoYoung1: 7:10am On May 21
Galapagous:
I don't have all these setup sef, yet I work remotely from home without issue. The main thing is just how operation occur where you work. For me, 3 meeting from Mon - wed, the rest are just WhatsApp chat. So most of the power will be saved and use for work.

I just love the freedom and flexibility that come with working remotely. I can decide to sleep all day and do the task in the midnight, when noise is absolute zero.

Best of luck.
involve me boss
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Kevvdom: 8:40am On May 21
Go into forex business.
Learn it well before you venture into it, it can mare you and as well make you big.
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by Mexivice(m): 9:50am On May 21
Do you have the skills to build Apps?

I believe you already have some tools to start up with and as you said you can wait the long haul but i think rather than just work for a company, why not create something of yours or collaborate with someone or some people that has a vision for something you can work on together and in a year(s) or less you start earning from it?

I have a vision to build an App that would be nationally used here in Nigeria and Africa eventually especially for countries like Nigeria that hasn't fully developed in a whole lot of techie stuffs and my vision has everything to do with Insecurity but you can Pchat me or request for my Phone number lets talk and we move from there.

Wish you all the best bro...
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by THRecovery: 10:34am On May 21
Kevvdom:
Go into forex business.
Learn it well before you venture into it, it can mare you and as well make you big.
Have you actually started making money from forex trading?
Re: Can These Be Enough For Me To Survive As A Remote Worker? by THRecovery: 10:46am On May 21
Stephen0mozzy:
Thank you my good Sir, that would be greatly appreciated.

I think, evidenced by the current shake up in the TECH industry - layoffs and stuff, with some new startups that would often spring up to absorb skilled developers backpedalling due to the uncertainty about AI's disruption - the demand has dropped big time, and the competition is even worse than it has ever been.

Not to even talk about the phantom jobs, 7 rounds of interviews that ends with automated rejection mails.
Mexivice:
Do you have the skills to build Apps?

I believe you already have some tools to start up with and as you said you can wait the long haul but i think rather than just work for a company, why not create something of yours or collaborate with someone or some people that has a vision for something you can work on together and in a year(s) or less you start earning from it?

I have a vision to build an App that would be nationally used here in Nigeria and Africa eventually especially for countries like Nigeria that hasn't fully developed in a whole lot of techie stuffs and my vision has everything to do with Insecurity but you can Pchat me or request for my Phone number lets talk and we move from there.

Wish you all the best bro...
Mexivice:
Do you have the skills to build Apps?

I believe you already have some tools to start up with and as you said you can wait the long haul but i think rather than just work for a company, why not create something of yours or collaborate with someone or some people that has a vision for something you can work on together and in a year(s) or less you start earning from it?

I have a vision to build an App that would be nationally used here in Nigeria and Africa eventually especially for countries like Nigeria that hasn't fully developed in a whole lot of techie stuffs and my vision has everything to do with Insecurity but you can Pchat me or request for my Phone number lets talk and we move from there.

Wish you all the best bro...
nat8an:
My advice would be to first think of the long term, how relevant would be the chosen skill you want to learn be in the next 5-10years from now .
That being said here are my 3 suggestions for you

1. Data Engineering & Pipeline Management
While AI models (like ChatGPT) get all the fame, they are completely useless without clean, structured data. AI cannot "think" if it is fed garbage data.

Why this is bulletproof: Companies are drowning in raw data. They need human experts to build pipelines that collect, clean, transport, and store this data securely.
The 5-10Years Outlook: Deeply sustainable. As long as businesses generate data, they will need Data Engineers. AI cannot automate the structural design of a massive corporate data pipeline.
Key skills to learn: SQL, Python, and cloud data warehouses like Snowflake or Google BigQuery.

2. Cloud Architecture, DevOps & Platform Engineering
Every app, AI tool, website, and database on Earth runs on a cloud server. DevOps and Cloud Engineers are the digital plumbers and structural architects of the internet.

Zero To Mastery
Why it is bulletproof: If a website crashes or an API goes down, a company loses millions every hour. Tech companies can lay off recruiters or designers, but they never lay off the engineers who keep their systems running.
The 5-10-Years Outlook: AI needs massive cloud power to function. The demand for experts who can manage cloud costs, automate systems, and coordinate server infrastructure will skyrocket.
Key skills to learn: Linux, Docker, Kubernetes, and cloud platforms like AWS or Microsoft Azure.

3. Cybersecurity & Digital Risk Management
As systems become automated and integrated with AI, hacking and data breaches are becoming incredibly sophisticated.

Why this is bulletproof: Governments legally mandate that companies protect user data. Insurance companies refuse to cover businesses without strict cybersecurity teams. It is a compliance requirement, not an optional expense.
The 10-Year Outlook: Utterly untouchable by AI. In fact, AI makes cyberattacks worse, meaning companies will need human security analysts to deploy AI-driven defense mechanisms.
Key skills to learn: Network security, cloud security, and compliance frameworks.
Now the question is
Are you the kind of person who prefer the idea of organizing massive flows of information (Data Engineering)
Or managing the invisible engines that keep apps running (Cloud/DevOps)
Or protecting systems from digital threats (Cybersecurity)?

When you have made up your mind and chosen the skill you want to learn, look for a community and join, you would definitely need a mentor. Also if you pick cybersecurity or cloud architecture, I have a community you can join for free and get guidance also relate with like minds.

Then finally, get yourself a YouTube channel and document your learning process and post it there. People who are in same position as you are will easily identify and relate with you, and as the numbers grow, you can now monetize the channel and begin to make money from the channel even before your first remote job.
I hope this helps you. Take care brother and welcome to the Tech club bro wink
Ten06:
You are actually in a very strong position already.

You have:

Time

Patience

Stable electricity

Good hardware

Savings that remove desperation

A willingness to learn slowly


Those things matter more than many people realize.

Your systems are more than enough for almost every remote tech career path. Your HP ZBook Fury 16 G9 alone can handle software development, cybersecurity labs, cloud work, AI tools, video editing, virtualization, and heavy multitasking.

The bigger question is not:

> “Can my system handle tech work?”



It is:

> “Which tech path fits my personality, patience level, and income goals?”



Since you specifically want:

remote work

sustainable income

international earning potential

long-term stability

legal work from home

gradual but dependable growth


…then I would advise you to avoid hype-driven areas and focus on fields that:

1. Have global demand


2. Can be learned from home


3. Can be freelanced remotely


4. Do not require university degrees to enter


5. Still pay well years later



Here’s the truth many people won’t tell beginners:

The tech industry is now divided into:

overcrowded “everyone is doing this” fields

and practical high-income fields where skilled people are still scarce.


You should aim for the second category.


---

The 5 Best Remote-Friendly Tech Paths For You

1. Software Development (Most Dependable Long-Term)

What it is

Building websites, apps, systems, and software.

Why it is powerful

This is still one of the strongest remote careers in the world.

A good developer in Nigeria can work for:

U.S. companies

European startups

remote agencies

freelance clients

SaaS companies


And earn in dollars.

Best part

You do not need to be a genius in mathematics.

Recommended route for you

Start with:

HTML

CSS

JavaScript


Then move into:

React

Node.js

Databases

APIs


Eventually:

Full-stack development


Income potential

Very high once skilled.

Difficulty

Medium.

Time before earning

6–18 months realistically.


---

2. Cybersecurity (Excellent For Your Personality)

This one stood out strongly while reading your message.

You sound like someone who may enjoy:

working quietly

learning deeply

staying indoors

technical investigation

structured systems


Cybersecurity fits that personality well.

What it involves

protecting systems

finding vulnerabilities

securing networks

ethical hacking

cloud security


Why it is valuable

Cyber threats never stop. Companies always need security people.

Remote opportunities

Very strong internationally.

Areas inside cybersecurity

SOC Analyst

Penetration Testing

Cloud Security

Governance/Risk/Compliance

Security Automation


Best beginner route

Start with:

Networking basics

Linux

Cybersecurity fundamentals

CompTIA Security+ concepts

TryHackMe labs

Wireshark

Basic Python


Income potential

Very high internationally.

Difficulty

Medium to high.

Time before earning

8–24 months.

But once established, it can become very stable.


---

3. Cloud Computing + DevOps (Massively Underrated)

This is one of the strongest remote career paths today.

What it is

Managing servers, applications, cloud infrastructure, automation, deployments.

Using platforms like:

Amazon Web Services

Google Cloud

Microsoft Azure


Why I like this path for you

You already have strong hardware. You seem patient and methodical.

Technologies involved

Linux

Docker

Kubernetes

Git

CI/CD

Cloud platforms

Scripting


Reality

This field is harder initially than web development.

But:

fewer people master it

competition is lower

salaries are often higher


Time before earning

1–2 years.

Long-term sustainability

Excellent.


---

4. Data Analytics / Data Engineering

Good if you like:

logic

organization

patterns

business insights


Tools

Excel

SQL

Python

Power BI

Tableau


Easier entry than software engineering

Yes.

High income ceiling?

Moderate to high.

Remote opportunities?

Good.

Recommended if:

You want something slightly less coding-heavy.


---

5. AI-Assisted Tech Work (Very Important Today)

Do not misunderstand this part.

I am NOT saying:

> “Become an AI prompt engineer.”



That hype is unstable.

What is valuable now is:

> combining AI tools with real technical skills.



For example:

Developers using AI become faster

Cybersecurity analysts using AI become more productive

Data analysts using AI work smarter


AI should become your assistant, not your profession.


---

What I Would Personally Recommend For YOU

Based on your tone, patience, setup, and desire for sustainability:

Strongest recommendation:

Cybersecurity + Cloud

OR

Full-Stack Development + AI tools

These combinations are powerful internationally.


---

Your Biggest Mistake Would Be…

Trying to learn:

everything at once

10 programming languages

6 career paths simultaneously


That destroys progress.


---

What You Should Do In The Next 12 Months

Phase 1 — First 2 Months

Learn computer fundamentals properly.

Topics:

How the internet works

Networking basics

Linux basics

Git/GitHub

Command line


This foundation is CRITICAL.


---

Phase 2 — Choose ONE Path Only

Do not branch around.

Pick:

software development OR

cybersecurity OR

cloud/devops OR

data analytics



---

Phase 3 — Daily Learning Routine

You need consistency more than intensity.

Even:

3 focused hours daily for 1 year can completely change your life.



---

Platforms I Strongly Recommend

For Learning

[freeCodeCamp](https://www.freecodecamp.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[The Odin Project](https://www.theodinproject.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[CS50 by Harvard](https://cs50.harvard.edu/x?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[TryHackMe](https://tryhackme.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[Coursera](https://www.coursera.org?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

[roadmap.sh](https://roadmap.sh?utm_source=chatgpt.com)



---

Very Important Reality Check

Your first income may be painfully small.

Maybe:

$50

$100

$300


Do not panic.

Remote careers compound.

A skilled person earning in dollars from Nigeria can eventually build:

financial stability

location freedom

consulting income

freelance clients

remote employment

even tech businesses later


But the first stage is usually quiet and difficult.


---

Final Advice

You currently have something many people lack:

room to focus without immediate survival pressure


Use this season carefully.

Do not chase:

crypto hype

fake forex mentors

“AI cashout” schemes

copy-paste online businesses


Build a real technical skill.

A real skill may take 2 years to mature… …but it can feed you for 20 years.
teepain:
Well, I may I have to disagree a bit with you with respect to AI not being a blessing to new hires. When I considered where I was some 25 years ago, I think this generation is blessed. For context, I became a certified java programmer in 2002 and for me debugging even some issues back then took too much of my time. Compare that to now when, you can easily use AI to trace your source of error.

These days it is easier for a junior developer to churn out standard grade code, if they know what they are doing. My advise generally is for developers to see themselves as solution providers. It is easier to attract money when you are solving people's problems.

I wish you all the best.
JimD:
Just learn vibe coding and be very good at it. Then once you can build and deploy a real app, launch something unique that solves a problem you've faced. AI is coming for 85% of run-of-the-mill tech jobs. But it's also creating new opportunities.
JimD:
Just learn vibe coding and be very good at it. Then once you can build and deploy a real app, launch something unique that solves a problem you've faced. AI is coming for 85% of run-of-the-mill tech jobs. But it's also creating new opportunities.
Galapagous:
Okay, from what I said, "I don't have all these setup, but work fine" mean he is fine with what he has, upscaling will be determined by the type of work environment he find himself.


Pretty weird you didn't catch that part.
Are there online job opportunities for people who have skills and experience in Finance and Accounting?
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