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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • There are plenty of “Learn to code” courses online. Khan Academy has a course though it is focused on web development, and many users here will turn up there nose, but it’s as good a starting point as anything else

    If you are dedicated I’m sure you could learn how to write code in a language, learn how different parts of programming languages work and build a little project in 6 months.

    “Like literally a pro” depends on where you are looking to be hired by. With no experience or formal training, it will be rather difficult to land a FAANG job. But of you can demonstrate aptitude, and willingness to learn, a smaller operation meet give you a shot.

    Good luck, I hope you stick with it :D





  • I mean, an open and seemingly poorly censored market place of assets and “experiences” targetted at children sounds like a recipe for disaster to begin with. Many parents aren’t technologically adept enough to look past the website, seeing it’s marketed at children and going “must be fine”.

    This isn’t a defence, but the world gets more and more complicated every day and people are just asked to deal with it… Seems like many governments have just given up trying to regulate anything, and therefore there’s no incentive for trash companies like Roblox to put in any protections.












  • Yess, always love to see a fresh convert to the magic that is the Aeropress. Welcome to the club friend. My favourite thing to harp on about when anyone is getting into coffee. Try to buy from a local roaster, and buy a diverse range of coffee. I get so much joy from experiencing just how diverse coffee can be, and I feel a lot of people get locked into one blend from their local supermarket.

    Single origin is more expensive, but being able to taste the difference between a nutty smooth Brazilian coffee and a fruity fermenty Goji Natural Processed bean is wild.


  • Generally a regular issue is much less likely to get you hacked.
    Security issues often come with legal liability which is why a bad security department will act overly important and stomp around demanding changes be made right the fuck now.

    But I do get it, a good security team should be enabling their dev teams to solve issues in the least disruptive way possible, not just thrown them work and barking orders.

    In some places I have worked, the sec teans will find an issue and push PRs to fix them, explaining the security concern, and requesting only a review and merge.