unquietwiki

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

Is the Secure Boot shim thing related to Windows breaking dual-boot setups of late? Are they all updating to avoid some kind of Secure Boot issue in general?

[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 weeks ago

I just found https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/ today. Structured course developed by Google for its Android devs.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 weeks ago

I found it completely by accident. Was looking at their GitHub repos for something, and saw this in there. I might even try to go through some of it (though I also want to get better at Nim).

 

If you look up my username on LinkedIn, you can get a good summary of my career. Most of my jobs have been go in, fix things, then on to the next thing; though the immediate COVID period was pretty bumpy in that regard (shorter-term gigs). I'm pretty sure I need another cert or two at this point, but have had some family issues distracting me the past few months from studying/focusing on what's next. I'm also working three different things right now (1 5-10hr/wk PT job + 2 intermittent gigs). I can't remember the job market being this bad or picky in my life; and I actively wonder how I'd be able to leave the field entirely. It feels like everyone wants a unicorn on the cheap these days.

Something with a "solid" 10-15/hrs a week would be an improvement over what I have going on right now; let alone full-time work. How do I even find such a thing on LinkedIn/Indeed/whatnot? Reddit's gotten me at least two jobs in the past, but the state of things there seems to be less promising these days. I figured I'd ask here to see if anyone else is in a similar situation, and how they're managing.

Thank you.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

Struggling a little with this too. The distance of time is my biggest grief: it's hard to apply for jobs, when my most relative experience for various roles is 5-10 years old. And the further along in my career, the less there is to show, or people to speak up for what I accomplished. "Did I really do that, at all"... worst case of imposter syndrome I can think of.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 11 months ago

I think that's been asked before. That'd be a massive undertaking, and they also support architectures that I don't think Rust does (yet).

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

A lot of commercial apps are built with it. And if you're not using Kotlin, you're probably using Java for Android dev.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

He went from a let-and-let-live, free-loving libertarian; to a more "kooky" libertarian. IMO, he was more palatable 20 years ago than now; though it's hard to top the fall-from-grace Stallman has had...

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

If any of you happen to still be on Reddit, I actually maintain a "catalog" of these newer languages, as they come across my radar. One of my more recent finds is MiniScript, which the author of that has been using to port a fair amount of classic BASIC games from that GitHub archive I posted about recently. I got sucked into Nim, which seems like a good synthesis of Python, Javascript, and C++; c/nim exists for anyone interested.

 

Saw this on Hacker News; it's an ongoing compendium of classic BASIC games, rewritten in up to 10 accepted programming languages; as well as space for "alternative" languages.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It looks like ceev.io is winding down, so may want to do something else instead. My current one is based on a Google Docs resume template, saved to an ODF file for LibreOffice: I find its editing and PDF export to be more reliable for this purpose. Scanning resumes, https://www.jobscan.co/ has come up in searches & I think I used it in the past; can't remember off-hand what it was I was using before.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (3 children)
  1. Unemployment will ask you to track your job applications and will usually demand documentation as well; I had to do this in Florida and California. Keep a log of your applications, and use it to follow up with places as you can. I have an example I posted for showing others.

  2. You may need to reformat your resume to ensure it can pass the ATS systems for acceptance into HR systems and/or auto-filling applications. Some resumes & CVs like to have you rank your skills: skip that; it's arbitrary & throws off the scanners. But you may need a keyword section, ugly as it is, highlighting what you have used in the past. Also, a friend gave me a tip to reformat some of my job summaries with the help of ChatGPT; this will have some trial-and-error, but it might be helpful.

  3. As you start looking for jobs, notice what people are asking for. There might be skill sets you are lacking that you can use this time to improve upon. I'm an IT generalist myself: I struggle to figure out what exactly I should be targeting, but cloud-systems (AWS & Azure especially) come up a lot in my searches.

  4. Actual job hunting... I've had luck with LinkedIn, GlassDoor/Indeed, Reddit, and even have looked on Craigslist. There might be other websites that folks have come up with to help laid-off folks find work; I see those posted to LinkedIn a fair bit.

  5. As was already said, don't forget to go over your budget & start figuring out the hard breakpoints between staying in your field, vs "I need work tomorrow". That being said, nobody's shared with me the secret to looking like you're not going to bail for something better / more-fitting; remember that they're hiring with basically the same criteria for their needs, as you will in your own field.

I hope this helps. Good luck out there.

 

I wrote this in Fall/Winter 2022/23 and got some use out of it for my own data archives. Haven't done much else with it since, but would be willing to add/revise some features on it, if there's interest.

 

I hadn't seen any posts here about Nim yet, and wanted to find one that was a good introduction to it. "Zen of Nim" from 2021 appears to describe the language fairly well, and is based on a presentation from the language's creator.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I saw some folks posting that they were doing Lemmy instances with cheap Vultr instances. Are you using something similar? And how's the bandwidth going with peering to other nodes? I've toyed around with the idea of starting my own node.

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