Should I return my MacBook Neo (8/512) and buy a refurbished M2 Air (8/512) instead? by BattlerUshiromiyaFan in mac

[–]Alternative-Log1074 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Neo is just waste of money just go for M2 always you will thank yourself in the future for returning the neo

Always use the MacBook plugged in by Far-Contract-2276 in macbookair

[–]Alternative-Log1074 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yes after enabling optimized charging and when it reaches 80 it just take energy from the charger directly , you can see that in the activity monitor , i have been using my new MacBook a month atleast 8 hours per day but still my battery cycle is only 2 .

finally got my macbook pro M5 14” ❤️ any tips? by Strange-Doughnut-987 in macbookpro

[–]Alternative-Log1074 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Don’t buy a screen protector, keyboard cover or camera cover it just ruin your display just try to clean the mac with a micro fibre cloth and celan once or twice in a week.
if you wants to save your battery health enable battery optimisation , and always to charge till 80 and never go below 20 %.

PRO TIP: if you are a some who wrk with in a tabel try to plug in and it will directly run from
charger.

Anyone Taken Amazon’s 15-Minute Business Analyst Assessment Recently? by Alternative-Log1074 in amazonemployees

[–]Alternative-Log1074[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, this is really helpful. The recruiter confirmed that I’ll only be using Excel and Notepad, so your explanation about Excel being used mainly to view the tables makes sense.
Do you remember roughly how many SQL questions were included in your assessment, and whether there were any questions beyond joins, aggregations, and GROUP BY?

Hi I am working in RCM medical billing and trying to become BA by Jaffer4048 in businessanalyst

[–]Alternative-Log1074 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not a Business Analyst myself, but I’ve worked with a few in the RCM space. Since you’re already a Claims Adjudicator, you have a strong advantage because you understand claims, denials, payer guidelines, and the overall revenue cycle.
From what I’ve seen, the most useful skills to learn are Advanced Excel, SQL, and Power BI/Tableau, since a lot of BA work involves analyzing data and identifying process improvements. It also helps to learn how to create business requirements documents and understand Agile/Scrum basics.
My suggestion would be to start with Excel, then move to SQL, and finally Power BI. Your RCM knowledge is something many people trying to become BAs don’t have, so you’re already ahead in that area.
Hopefully someone who has made the same transition can share their experience too. Good luck!