Details
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AboutMy goal is to make skynet come sooner. I'm tired of having freedom.
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Skillsc#, js, sql, html, css
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LocationNew York
Joined devRant on 11/11/2016
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@amahlaka I got it as a daily Alexa deal for 180 USD. 250 normally I think. And yes it replaces the thumb switch side of your deadbolt
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@amahlaka
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@alyx
To be fair. If they have forced open my window that far I don't see them having any scruples about busting it open more. That same window is big enough for someone to crawl through. So if they got that far they can get in anyway. I didn't because it would involve damaging the window.
Also. I can put a voice password on my smart lock interaction. Might do that. -
I don't want to die.
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I may be opening a big can of worms. I'm not primarily a web developer. But... What's wrong with Ajax? If you're using a frontend framework that has a better way of doing it sure. But for simple stuff like you said. Why...Not? It's incredibly simple.
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@DataWrecker Another great story.
He popped his head in when he got let go and looked at me and just said. "I just got canned. Nice working with you guys."
Then proceeded to look out my window for a solid 30 seconds as if he was saying goodbye. -
@schnjess I've been using it for over a decade. I don't have any idea where I first heard it.
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@Voxera I'm sure there was/is a logical reason. I had a feeling it has something to do with file name limits.
But. I don't give a flying fuck. My rage is still righteous. -
@Letmecode GP is great plains. A Microsoft product that handles enterprise accounting.
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Hey. I see them at Panera sometimes too.
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I was just promoted to head of development and I don't have one. It can open doors but any company worth working for knows it's not all that important. :)
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Your PM would be so proud. I think that tells you how you should feel. :)
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Insert joke about underscore.js
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@ridecar2 I used those for a bit. But if I turned on the vacuum cleaner my internet went out. So I dropped $100 on cable. And 50 on the ends and crimper. And ran 2 lines to living room. 2 to bedroom. And 2 to office. I have a switch mounted on a beam in my basement if I ever want to expand
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You mean you don't have 100ft of cat6 and a crimper just laying around? I had a just because I can moment a while ago where I ran a few hundred feet throughout my entire house.
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I normally use zurb foundation. I've tried bootstrap and I have done a few things with Office Fabric but foundation is just super easy to me. And I'm not a designer, so making it look half way decent is an achievement for me.
As for why I use it. It's just simple. I can only download the parts i want. It supports SASS. It has a community big enough to get my answers easily. Their grid system just makes sense to me. -
@setyadi I think if you ask the author permission first. And then provide the translated tutorials for FREE. And then charge for being led THROUGH them, you should be fine. But don't quote me on that. Might get you started though.
As for tutorials. If you're just doing basic front-end stuff there's obviously the infamous w3schools which in my opinion has gotten better over the last few years. I am primarily a Microsoft guy so I tend to send people to mva.Microsoft.com but that would be difficult to adjust to your format.
Codeacademy and tutorialpoint work too. -
Have you considered doing some translations of pretty basic tutorials? I would imagine that would be a good place to start. No reason to reinvent the wheel. Just translate it :).
You could then just walk the students through the tutorials. I would make the translated tutorials available for free and then charge (or not) for the instructor led walkthroughs. Obviously i would get in touch with the tutorials creator and get their OK. But as long as you provide them with the translated version for their use I cannot imagine them getting upset as long as you got permission first.
After the basics. You could go through the process of setting up a simple environment and then making an html hello world, etc. Depends how long you want the curriculum to take. -
Company policy. :(
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God damnit got me too
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@devoverflow What languages are you proficient in?
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@jckimble I actually got it and another firefly one from a comic con here in Buffalo. But I imagine you can find it online.
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Right when you walk into my living room!
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Personally If I was interviewing you I probably wouldn't think much of it either way. Good or bad. If you did any custom work that wix did not do out of the box i would emphasize that. That being said I can see some hiring managers being more wary of it then I am.
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Never tried out ormlite. Used dapper for a project. Was nice but you can't customize matching column names to properties without writing a whole converter. I contemplated adding that myself but then I got lazy.
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Big fan of vscode so far too! I use it for everything that visual studio is overkill for.
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Duplicate. See http://totallyirrelevantquestion.com/...
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@gmnxx depends what your client side is implemented in. Winforms for example you can find to a binding source which binds it directly to the object and there's no converting. But I realize Winforms is rare nowadays.
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@FitzSuperUser My point is that I have never seen a correlation between server choice or stack and code quality. I am not talking visual. You're also ignoring the fact that the developer of The website may have nothing to do with the server. At 3/4 of my last jobs the developer of the website had nothing to do with the server beyond telling the server team if it needed any special settings.
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@fbomb
Wow. You're my hero.