[-] nekomusumeninaritai 13 points 1 year ago

I would've appreciated a trigger warning on the post since it uses a slur, but wow, it is amusing (I'm sure it'll be less amusing once I experience more overt transphobia).

14
Advice? (self.transprogrammer)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by nekomusumeninaritai to c/transprogrammer

Hi, I'm not sure if this is the right community to ask this, but I got yelled at by my mom today for not having a job and I thought it might be worthwhile asking what sort of strategy I should pursue from a community of people with skills I would like to develop. I graduated with a bachelor's degree in Computer Science from a mid-tier state university in the US before the pandemic, but didn't really do anything to develop my portfolio. I had good grades and got two interviews for software engineer positions, but didn't get the job in either case. I didn't really care too much. I was still an enby egg and everything felt off, so I never looked very hard. When the pandemic happened, it made finding a position out of the question because my parents are high risk. Unfortunately, I have had trouble developing a portfolio. I don't know if my education is lacking or I missed something or it is my ADHD or I am just not talented and got fooled into thinking I was okay by grade inflation, but I could never focus for long enough to figure out anyone's project and make a contribution. I did a bit of Cracking the Coding Interview, but got bored a chapter or two in and haven't gone back to it in a while. So I guess specifically my questions are:

  1. Am I correct in trusting the common advice to contribute to open source projects to build a portfolio?
  2. If so, how do you figure out how to gauge your skill level so that you pick the right projects to contribute to? 2a. How long does it take you to get up to speed on a new project before you feel comfortable contributing? How long did it take before your first job?
  3. Am I correct in thinking that any credit I get from employers from having a CS degree is strongly outweighed by 5 years of not having a job and no contributions?
  4. Should I consider looking into the resources I (and my mom) have heard about offering autistic people help getting into technical fields? I don't think my autism is that bad, and I'm not particularly talented either, so I'd dismissed these for the most part.
  5. How do I avoid positions that don't either build my skills or lead to a career?
  6. I am prescribed and taking medicine for ADHD. Is there anything I can do beyond that? My mom has talked about hiring a “life coach,” but it has always sounded like a good way to spend money for no benefit.
  7. How do I motivate myself when I'm probably mediocre and will be treated like shit if I “succeed?”
  8. Am I thinking about this all wrong somehow?
  9. What are the best resources for someone in my position? Despite how it may sound, I am willing to put a fair bit of effort into self-improvement, it has just been spread far too thin because of the ADHD.
[-] nekomusumeninaritai 11 points 1 year ago

Whoops, looks like someone forgot to make the base juice class abstract…

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 21 points 1 year ago

Financially, preorders without a “preorder bonus” are a zero interest loan to the developer. Preorders with the “preorder bonus” are a loan with the bonus as interest. Even if the game were guaranteed to be good, you could most likely be doing something better with the money until it comes out. Since the game is not guaranteed to be good, it is a risky loan as well. Without any of the protections you get when you make an actual loan.

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 7 points 1 year ago

It's also helpful to note that “shell builtins” don't typically have man pages (at least for BASH). You can find help on these commands by typing [builtin name] --help or looking in the shell's man page or info doc (no one told me when I was learning, so I got confused as to why some of the more common commands didn't have man pages)

53
cat /dev/null (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by nekomusumeninaritai to c/programmerhumor@lemmy.ml

Description: Cat illustration from Japanese fine print in void with cat /dev/null written below in a monospace font.

I guess you could say this meme is… a copycat.

Yes, normally you'd redirect it to do something useful. But I'm not editing it.

edit:remove duplicate photo

edit2: Silly me for thinking that Lemmy was smart enough to grab the first body photo as its thumbnail. Also set language.

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 14 points 1 year ago

Trivial exercise.

spider in the middle of a web Obtained at Wikimedia under license CC-BY-SA 4.0 International by wikimedia user Stephencdickson ∎

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 6 points 1 year ago

Just change all the boxes so they all read “Chat GPT-4.”

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 8 points 1 year ago

The comment with this comment's UID in Lemmy's comment database is not deducible from the Lemmy axioms. There! Out-nerded you 😜. (Please don't call me on the details. Please don't call me on the details. 🤞)

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 5 points 1 year ago

This is exactly why I feel nervous asking questions online. I feel like a lot of the time the answer is so obvious that a bot could answer it with very little context and then I'll look silly.

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 9 points 1 year ago

Ooh, cool.

{X|X∉X}∈{X|X∉X}⇐⇒{X|X∉X}∉{X|X∉X} (1)

{X|X∉X}∈{X|X∉X}∧¬{X|X∉X}∈{X|X∉X} (2)

Thence G(me) (2,explosion)

where G(x): x has 1,000,000 bars of gold

Thanks for the gold

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 5 points 1 year ago

I can confirm this works for the mobile website with the browser Firefox Nightly for Android (there's no reason to think it wouldn't work for other mobile browsers) too. Thanks

3
submitted 1 year ago by nekomusumeninaritai to c/atheism@lemmy.world

Decision matrix for options “believe in god” and “don't believe in god” and outcomes “god exists” and “god doesn't exist” with equal probability, and with finite values in every cell except for the cell corresponding to the option “believe in god” and the outcome “god exists.” An additional column shows the expected value to be positively infinite for belief in god and finite for disbelief in god. Scrawled in the upper lefthand corner is “My wager, Blaise Pascal” in a playful light blue cursive meme font. In a red impact meme font, a teacher wrote “INCOMPLETE SEE ME AFTER CLASS” and below the teacher has written a third column corresponding to outcome “Anti-God Exists” with 0.000001% probability, with a negatively infinite utility assigned to “believe in god,” and a positively infinite utility assigned to “don't believe in god” and a corrected Expected Value column showing an indeterminite utility for the first option and a negatively infinite utility for the second. I was just was reading the CC-BY-NC licenced textbook “Learning from Arguments” by Daniel Korman and remembered an old episode of the 80,000 Hours podcast (yes, the show that infamously gave the softball interview to SBF) discussing the problems with allowing infinite utility and figured it would be useful to spread this idea since not all refutations of Pascal's Wagerare as definitive. The argument defeats itself because even if the probability of an anti-god reversing utilities that god assigns is infimitessimal, Pascal's Wager shows that it too must be taken seriously. You can only believe in god if you somehow assign a 0 probability to anti-god but not to god or reject Pascal's argument.

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 11 points 1 year ago

I like it, too but there must be so many more posts there than any other community bc it is almost the only thing on my timeline.

11
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by nekomusumeninaritai to c/programmerhumor@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/97118

Accessibility text :Pictured is a slide from a presentation at a hacker conference with a bullet point reading “We can smash the stack” highlighted and the presenter wearing cat ears and holding a plushie fox. Added to the screenshot of the presentation is the aforementiomed highlighting as well as the warning “KEEP YOUR MEMCPY SIZES VALIDATED OR CATGIRLS WILL SMASH THE STACK, NYA” written in a pink all-caps impact-style font clone.

Edit: Meme photo wasn't visible when the link to the actual talk was in the url field, so I'm moving it here: https://media.ccc.de/v/gpn21-16-breaking-the-black-box-security-coprocessor-in-the-nintendo-switch-a-story-of-vulnerability-after-vulnerability

Edit 2: It still wasn't visible, so I had to add the photo url. I'm new 😁

27
Catgirls, smash the stack (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by nekomusumeninaritai to c/traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns@lemmy.ca

Accessibility text :Pictured is a slide from a presentation at a hacker conference with a bullet point reading “We can smash the stack” highlighted and the presenter wearing cat ears and holding a plushie fox. Added to the screenshot of the presentation is the aforementiomed highlighting as well as the warning “KEEP YOUR MEMCPY SIZES VALIDATED OR CATGIRLS WILL SMASH THE STACK, NYA” written in a pink all-caps impact-style font clone.

Edit: Meme photo wasn’t visible when the link to the actual talk was in the url field, so I’m moving it here: https://media.ccc.de/v/gpn21-16-breaking-the-black-box-security-coprocessor-in-the-nintendo-switch-a-story-of-vulnerability-after-vulnerability

[-] nekomusumeninaritai 5 points 1 year ago

Ah, but where do you find the training set of all of the human-written good commit messages? 😃

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nekomusumeninaritai

joined 1 year ago