I have a twitter bot, that I've monetized through the sale of T-Shirts and I'm now working on a YouTube channel. Generates enough revenue to pay the rent so that's cool. https://twitter.com/schumannbot
Should be titled; "Most recommended programming books for non-programmers"
Not laid off but was just put on furlough
Seconding this. It's a fantastic book, a little outdated but easy to fill in the gaps. I think the best route is to read this, skip all of the books marketed to retail traders. Read the things the professionals read…
Check out hckrnews, It's Hacker News but sorted chronologically.
I bought an Alexa.
Just watched a MicroConf talk mentioned "1000 fan" theory.
Good as a primer for those that aren't naturally hackers but decided to become computer science majors and have little to no experience with a unix-like operating system. I learned Linux, the shell, basic scripting, and…
The website actually recommends using SICP accompanied by Brian Harvey's CS61A lectures. Highly recommended and then read The Little Schemer to get a strong grasp on recursion.
this is not how economics works
I've been obsessed with the Bloomberg terminal ever since I discovered my latent love for finance a few years back. I actually got to check one out, but didn't really get to play with it as much as I liked. One day I'll…
I feel like I'm way behind on fundamentals so mostly textbooks. I'm focused on CS, maths, and finance mainly, not sure I'll achieve this in a year, kind of my perpetual read this within 10 years list. I'm also…
LinkedIn is just about the one and only thing I have "because everyone else has one"
I'd love to use this data and create some sort of feudal economic simulator and/or build an RPG with these prices as opposed to arbitrary "gp" values.
From French médiéval (“middle”), from Latin medium (“middle”) + aevum (“age”).
I already see a trend building behind functional programming and LISP. Oh brother, right after I started reading SICP.
Beautiful article explaining the downsides of cloud infrastructure but as a sysadmin I'd never dare to think of replacing that sales lady's M$ Office suite with LibreOffice.
I have a twitter bot, that I've monetized through the sale of T-Shirts and I'm now working on a YouTube channel. Generates enough revenue to pay the rent so that's cool. https://twitter.com/schumannbot
Should be titled; "Most recommended programming books for non-programmers"
Not laid off but was just put on furlough
Seconding this. It's a fantastic book, a little outdated but easy to fill in the gaps. I think the best route is to read this, skip all of the books marketed to retail traders. Read the things the professionals read…
Check out hckrnews, It's Hacker News but sorted chronologically.
I bought an Alexa.
Just watched a MicroConf talk mentioned "1000 fan" theory.
Good as a primer for those that aren't naturally hackers but decided to become computer science majors and have little to no experience with a unix-like operating system. I learned Linux, the shell, basic scripting, and…
The website actually recommends using SICP accompanied by Brian Harvey's CS61A lectures. Highly recommended and then read The Little Schemer to get a strong grasp on recursion.
this is not how economics works
I've been obsessed with the Bloomberg terminal ever since I discovered my latent love for finance a few years back. I actually got to check one out, but didn't really get to play with it as much as I liked. One day I'll…
I feel like I'm way behind on fundamentals so mostly textbooks. I'm focused on CS, maths, and finance mainly, not sure I'll achieve this in a year, kind of my perpetual read this within 10 years list. I'm also…
LinkedIn is just about the one and only thing I have "because everyone else has one"
I'd love to use this data and create some sort of feudal economic simulator and/or build an RPG with these prices as opposed to arbitrary "gp" values.
From French médiéval (“middle”), from Latin medium (“middle”) + aevum (“age”).
I already see a trend building behind functional programming and LISP. Oh brother, right after I started reading SICP.
Beautiful article explaining the downsides of cloud infrastructure but as a sysadmin I'd never dare to think of replacing that sales lady's M$ Office suite with LibreOffice.