when seeing all this new devs doing challenges and creating projects day in and day out, it makes me wish for the obsession I once had for programming. I really didn't feel tired and I would take on any projects I might find interesting. Before AI and all the vibe coding jazz, I had to lookup for a solution on different blogs, books, videos and any resource accessible. If a solution seemed too naive, I would erase everything and implement the feature in a simple yet maintainable way. There was this project I had to keep track of object visibility and fire up an event every time the object is being focused or loses its focus. I wasn't happy with the solution at the time, and I ended up implementing everything in Section Observer API from scratch. It was basically my mini library for scroll events at the time. Apart from my toy programming language hahu, I tried recreating a 2d game engine, tried implementing a load balancer, and literally I was upto everything. If you ask me now, this is bad. You need to have a clear goal and tackle one thing at a time.
tl;dr
New devs progressing everyday, you're doing good and keep it up. You guys inspire a lot. I might even get back to programming lol
tl;dr
New devs progressing everyday, you're doing good and keep it up. You guys inspire a lot. I might even get back to programming lol
❤6👍1
i was also doing the 100days coding challenge thing back then when starting out. I also had a Javascript logo as a pfp lmao. How time flies
❤9
where it all began even though three cryptographers from the British signals intelligence agency have tried to show how public-key cryptography could be achieved in 1969. Diffie was a former chief security officer of Sun Microsystems (now Oracle), and Hellman was a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. Both won the Turing award in 2015 for their contribution in public-key cryptography and digital signatures
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffie%E2%80%93Hellman_key_exchange?wprov=sfla1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffie%E2%80%93Hellman_key_exchange?wprov=sfla1
Wikipedia
Diffie–Hellman key exchange
Diffie–Hellman (DH) key exchange is a mathematical method of securely generating a symmetric cryptographic key over a public channel and was one of the first protocols as conceived by Ralph Merkle and named after Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman. DH is…
👍2
Mira
where it all began even though three cryptographers from the British signals intelligence agency have tried to show how public-key cryptography could be achieved in 1969. Diffie was a former chief security officer of Sun Microsystems (now Oracle), and Hellman…
YouTube
The Simple Brilliance of Modern Encryption
Support me on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/PurpleMindCS
If you'd like to aid the success of this channel, this is the best way to do it! Every contribution is sincerely, greatly, appreciated.
Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange is the first ever public-key…
If you'd like to aid the success of this channel, this is the best way to do it! Every contribution is sincerely, greatly, appreciated.
Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange is the first ever public-key…
TIL Mr Bean has a BSc in electronic and electrical engineering and MSc in electrical engineering. he was a PhD student at Oxford until he dropped out to pursue his acting career
https://www.thecourieronline.co.uk/student-success-stories-mr-bean/
https://www.thecourieronline.co.uk/student-success-stories-mr-bean/
The Courier
Student Success Stories: Rowan Atkinson (Mr. Bean)
Learn more about one of our most famous alumni at Newcastle University
🔥6
vx-underground
I will personally take the L that it was a stretch to classify this as zero day when this is the result of users not following the Bubble best practices guide. It does not impact Bubble in totality.
takes maturity to back down when you're wrong. slowly developing that character. ggs smelly
vx-underground
They also called us an embarrassment
they called them a group of pandas.
nothing harmful
nothing harmful
Forwarded from vx-underground
We've seen a bunch of dorks on Twitter use this meme format to insert mathematics and physics stuff into the Chad thought bubble.
Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but if you've ever actually spent your day doing something "intellectual intensive", your brain requires brain rot. You physically cannot brain science non-stop everyday. Do gym bros stay in the gym 24/7? Do athletes train 24/7? No. You need down time. The brain is (in some capacity) a muscle too which requires training.
The only people we've seen brain science hardcore non-stop are one of the following (sometimes multiple):
1. Autistic nerds (not memeing), some autistic people have God levels of focus
2. ADHD nerds, if you get them on that weird hyper-focus stuff they'll lock in for like, 4 days and not bathe or eat
3. Nerds on drugs, more common than you'd think, but the nerds abusing amphetamines (or nootropics in general) lock in pretty hard too, until they crash out and they're worthless slabs of meat for like, a week or more
Anyway, the entire point of this micro-rant is to tell some of you to not be brain washed by pseudo-intellectual grifters on social media. The entire part of braining is to have fun, explore, and learn. It isn't a competition, it isn't a "lOoK hOw SmaRt i Am" competition, it isn't a race to who can do the newest and coolest research.
When you're bored of a video game do you force yourself to like it? Same as brain stuff — you might try to force yourself through the boring parts, but eventually you'll be like, "this shit is lame", and move onto something you like more.
Look at cat pictures, laugh at edgy memes, understand there is time for braining and there is time for brain rot.
Okay, talk to you later, love you, mwah kissies kissies
-smelly smellington
Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but if you've ever actually spent your day doing something "intellectual intensive", your brain requires brain rot. You physically cannot brain science non-stop everyday. Do gym bros stay in the gym 24/7? Do athletes train 24/7? No. You need down time. The brain is (in some capacity) a muscle too which requires training.
The only people we've seen brain science hardcore non-stop are one of the following (sometimes multiple):
1. Autistic nerds (not memeing), some autistic people have God levels of focus
2. ADHD nerds, if you get them on that weird hyper-focus stuff they'll lock in for like, 4 days and not bathe or eat
3. Nerds on drugs, more common than you'd think, but the nerds abusing amphetamines (or nootropics in general) lock in pretty hard too, until they crash out and they're worthless slabs of meat for like, a week or more
Anyway, the entire point of this micro-rant is to tell some of you to not be brain washed by pseudo-intellectual grifters on social media. The entire part of braining is to have fun, explore, and learn. It isn't a competition, it isn't a "lOoK hOw SmaRt i Am" competition, it isn't a race to who can do the newest and coolest research.
When you're bored of a video game do you force yourself to like it? Same as brain stuff — you might try to force yourself through the boring parts, but eventually you'll be like, "this shit is lame", and move onto something you like more.
Look at cat pictures, laugh at edgy memes, understand there is time for braining and there is time for brain rot.
Okay, talk to you later, love you, mwah kissies kissies
-smelly smellington
⚡5
declared war on the food.
spam forecast: coming with an ultra sonic speed. buckle up
spam forecast: coming with an ultra sonic speed. buckle up
😁4❤1
Forwarded from የAnna ማስታወሻ
I call it "Silent yet a Loud Night"
How's yall's Holiday going?
Here's mine😁
How's yall's Holiday going?
Here's mine😁
🔥5❤1
throwing an ad hominem on someone while arguing must be one of the dumbest techniques. saw people doing that and it is not cool
❤4😢1
A man's whole life is a succession of moment after moment. If you let the moment drift away by grief, anger or unnecessary ego, there will be less things you're happy of reminiscing. The present moment is more important than you might've thought of
💯6👍2