How Two Frustrated Developers Started a Movement
Back in 2019, Elena and Marcus were watching talented people struggle with outdated web design courses that taught theory but skipped the practical skills employers actually wanted. After months of mentoring friends who'd wasted money on expensive bootcamps, they decided to build something different.
Our first cohort was just eight students meeting in a borrowed conference room. But something magical happened when we focused on real projects instead of theoretical exercises. Students weren't just learning code—they were building actual websites that solved real problems.
That small experiment grew into OnLogicByte, and we've never lost sight of what made those early days special: learning by doing, not by memorizing.