Are there any actual good work from home jobs (30-50k), or are they all minimum wage tier?
>>1936861
Yea there's plenty of remote work that you can but the really good ones require you to put in time at a company to either earn it, or you had that arrangement from the get-go. You need skills though, no one is going to pay you to work remotely if it isn't feasible and you aren't in a position to bargain for it anyway (aka NEET with nothing to offer.)
>30-50k work from home jobs
Medical transcription or medical coding, you need certs though.
>>1936873
What's the difference?
Software jobs can pay very lucratively. On West Coast U.S., a citizen can earn six figures with little more than knowledge + experience of web or mobile phone applications.
Basically, to get a job like that, you need to have a solid skillset that you develop through actually building something. You can do it for yourself to learn, then you find gigs/jobs that want what you got.
This can all be done remotely. Set up Google and Skype accounts for communication, invest in good internet and hardware, and start looking for work that you can actually do. Earn more as you learn more.
These jobs tend to end up being little more than a self-made cubicle, as you may need to have constant contact with your coworkers. Coffee shops are nice places to go so you don't get cabin fever.
You can be wildly successful wearing pajamas... but you do have to work
>>1936932
Do you do anything like that? Does it matter which books/tutorials/languages you even choose at the beginning? It seems to me most are wildly similar, and I feel like I need to go through some to learn basics before building my own stuff, maybe just because I'm stupid. I also take it it's better to build everything from scratch rather than take those "99999 programming ideas" and choose one of those?