I don't really, there are a few sites I sometimes visit with prehistoric Flash-only video players, but I generally just use Firefox for those Was just curious why Flash would instantly murder my browser every time I opened a site that had Flash in it, and eventually discovered it was due to WebRTC (or lack thereof)
WTF!!? Those big blocks on my "gaming" motherboard are actually crap!? We are paying premium just for the aesthetics & the stupid fad that is RGB, in place of affective cooling, hardware qquality & performance!? WTF!?
This post has been edited by hujan86: Jul 31 2017, 05:03
tiap/hzqr already said it once in this thread but i'll repeat: If you are looking for a job, never ever put Ruby on Rails or Django as the first technology in your CV, unless you are a rockstar expert in it.
These things have their own way of programming with a lot of stuff going under the hood. I am no expert on Django but I can break almost any dude coming for an interview with a CV written about Django.
P.S. Yes, today I'm more-or-less pissed 'cause i needed to reject a guy who, although may have been a decent programmer, simply could not figure out python webdev at all. Moral of the story: if you want to learn something in a new job don't place that at the beginning of your CV, that's basically the thing your interviewers will aim their questions at. Place what you know well at the front, and what the job actually requires in the middle.
P.S. Yes, today I'm more-or-less pissed 'cause i needed to reject a guy who, although may have been a decent programmer, simply could not figure out python webdev at all. Moral of the story: if you want to learn something in a new job don't place that at the beginning of your CV, that's basically the thing your interviewers will aim their questions at. Place what you know well at the front, and what the job actually requires in the middle.
Fuck thats my pet hate lately. So many people claim they are competent with software/technology/servers then when they start you realise they don't know shit and need you to hold their hands. At my work we have been talking about putting work samples or simulations in the interview as too many people come in and have no idea. I'm pretty nice but if its the third time I have to demonstrate something basic to someone I start to get annoyed.
tiap/hzqr already said it once in this thread but i'll repeat: If you are looking for a job, never ever put Ruby on Rails or Django as the first technology in your CV, unless you are a rockstar expert in it.
These things have their own way of programming with a lot of stuff going under the hood. I am no expert on Django but I can break almost any dude coming for an interview with a CV written about Django.
P.S. Yes, today I'm more-or-less pissed 'cause i needed to reject a guy who, although may have been a decent programmer, simply could not figure out python webdev at all. Moral of the story: if you want to learn something in a new job don't place that at the beginning of your CV, that's basically the thing your interviewers will aim their questions at. Place what you know well at the front, and what the job actually requires in the middle.
I would create a wheel instead of a list, that way you don't know what i'm most proficient at.
Should I be nice and tell this fellow member that his/her art is nice and I would like to see the completed version? would he even care? Why are they even posting incomplete work? for critique? To be honest though, I'd rather tell them to draw it all as fast as possible and complete it within the week, even without coloring. Nice art though, although I'm not gonna post in your thread to tell you that.
Why am I even here... this is a waste of much blessings.