yippii
25 y/o programmer from Germany
yippii
Yoo that’s pretty cool! Bottom-Up component management is definitely something I’ve wished for (and may or may not have implemented) several times when working with React haha
The only memory I have of my 3DS is being really into a game and playing for so long that I was really really hungry. Then I turned on the 3D slider to get motion sick and not hungry anymore to continue playing the game. Perfect problem solving skills here.
If Mobilism doesn’t have it, I search Google and try whatever sites come up. If that doesn’t find the right thing I just assume it doesn’t exist. Depending on what I want, I also try making the apk myself with Lucky Patcher.
Well why would you even need machines if a Mentat can describe images of cats to you instead
This thread randomly came across my timeline, so yeah why not!
Does anyone have any good resources on “general” cyber security information? Like total Cybersecurity 101 stuff, especially for mid to large sized company infrastructure? I’ve done a bit in school but I could totally use a refresher on all of the concepts.
Officially, I was put into the Role of “Cloud Security Engineer” at work. No one really knows what that means yet, the Roles were handed out last August. There are some AWS specific resources on that and they’re nice and all, but they kind of assume that general security knowledge already exists. I’m a bit in over my head I think lol
Related book recommendation!!
Kil’n People by David Brin - it’s a futuristic Murder Mystery Novel about a society where people copy their consciousnesses to temporary clay clones to do mundane tasks for them. Got some really interesting discussions about what constitutes personhood!
Yup, exactly! So a calculation-only module that doesn’t have a frontend would never have any TS Code in my case.
The classification of language -> task makes sense! I’m thinking of the weird college courses that wanted Java frontends lol
But how would you generalize that for a resume? Say you’ve used C# both for making backends and making frontends in separate projects. Would any sort of classification make sense in that case?
I’d love for someone more experienced to chime in, but on first glance the classification of JavaScript/Typescript as backend strikes me as weird.
That may just be because the team I work with uses a React/Typescript/Java/Postgres stack and we specifically classify the Typescript as part of the Frontend. Maybe it’s different in different companies?
I’m sure that a Typescript backend could work perfectly fine, it’s just semantics 🤷
My homeoffice setup is right next to a window, so it’s too bright for dark mode during the summer. So I work in light mode from about April-September and in dark mode for the rest of the year
JS is absolute chaos programming and I love that way too much. You can just feel all the caffeine ingested by the guy who had to pull long nights to ship JS within 10 days. That’s exactly the vibe I’m going for with my code.
You’re right! That’s actually a really cool point about Generator functions too, them having while(true) loops is very unproblematic :D
I’m correcting myself to:
function* sorry() { while(true){ yield "I'm sorry"; } }
I’ll do you one better
function* sorry() { yield "I'm sorry"; }
Call sorry.next().value as many times as you need to baby, hell you can even use it in a for-of loop because Generator functions are Iterable. I fucking love JavaScript
AI needs training data.
They already have a very advanced system to transfer actually valuable data (when/how much power needs to go to the grid, end user data, redispatch of solar panels etc etc). We’ve actually taken that complex and valid system and clipped its wings to do something way less useful :')
The German government has decided that starting on October 1st of this year, they don’t want energy providers who want to call up another energy provider to just google the other company and use that number. They want an entire new system of message exchange for the sake of transmitting data like a company’s address and phone number directly to all it’s market buddies.
I’m part of the team who had to build that shit within the last 4 months or so. It’s a neat project and everyone gained knowledge in AWS cloud stuff, but realistically, every one of our customers will use the system exactly once (as required by the government) and then never again.
Exclusively IntelliJ Ultimate, cause that’s what my work pays for. I try not to program outside of work.
Came here to say that exact same thing! Shorts are the bane of my existence, whenever I open my real Youtube App instead of Revanced (still need it to Cast to my Chromecast sometimes), there’s a solid 50/50 chance that I get sucked in by shorts and scroll them for hours. It’s ridiculous, they aren’t even interesting most of the time and I learn nothing from it, but it just keeps happening :/
In my experience, people who are annoyingly judgmental about Piracy irl are not the ones using Text-heavy social media.