From a Tiny YouTube Channel to a Global Tech Movement
He still lives in London. He still codes every day. And every morning, before checking his revenue or subscriber count, he reads one comment from the previous day—a reminder of why he started. amigoscode
One rainy evening, he sat at his desk, set up a basic screen recorder, and created his first YouTube video. He didn’t have a fancy microphone or a professional studio. He had his terminal, a code editor, and an idea. He called his channel . From a Tiny YouTube Channel to a Global
In 2017, a soft-spoken software engineer living in London found himself frustrated. His name was Nelson, and he spent his days writing Java and Spring Boot code for a financial firm. He loved teaching his junior colleagues, breaking down complex concepts like dependency injection and REST APIs into simple, digestible pieces. But he felt limited to the walls of his office. One rainy evening, he sat at his desk,
He used real-world analogies. He drew diagrams by hand on a digital whiteboard. He laughed at his own mistakes on camera to show that errors are part of the process. The video was over 10 hours long, but it was free on YouTube.