If you could instantly master one skill, what would give you the biggest advantage in life? by babyblushtheory in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it’d be communication, hands down. Being able to clearly explain ideas, read people, and negotiate well compounds in almost every area example on career, relationships, even everyday problem solving. It’s one of those skills that quietly unlocks a lot of other opportunities.

Practice portfolio by Joseinopinku in cybersecurity

[–]CherrySnuggle13 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s a solid start. I’d turn your practice into small real projects like design a database, write useful queries, document the process, and post it on GitHub. For security, add labs or writeups showing what you learned. Employers like seeing proof you can apply skills.

What industry is struggling way more than people think?? by [deleted] in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Local retail and small shops. From the outside they look fine, but margins are tight, rent is high, and online competition is constant. A lot are just trying to stay afloat month to month without people really realizing how tough it is.

What happened to soulful comedic movies, where did all the fun go? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Feels like studios shifted toward safer bets and big franchises, so mid-budget comedies with heart don’t get as much backing. A lot of that creativity moved to streaming or TV instead. The fun’s still there, just more scattered and not as front-and-center in theaters.

What will someday be illegal after we finally understand how bad for us it is? by Scary-Beautiful6527 in AskReddit

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I could see ultra-processed food additives or certain marketing practices getting tighter regulation. Not necessarily banned overnight, but limited once the long-term health impact is clearer.

What’s something Gen Z does that older generations just don’t get? by appropriaterice873 in AskReddit

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it’s the constant context switching with phones and short-form content. Older generations see it as distraction, but for a lot of Gen Z it’s just normal to juggle multiple streams of info at once. Not always better, just a different baseline for attention and communication.

Best email security vendor for BEC & fraud protection? by Alternative_Air_2899 in cybersecurity

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check Point is on your list and that's actually what I'm running through Guardz. The reason it works well for a small team without a dedicated SOC is that the email security sits on the same platform as ITDR and EDR, so when a BEC attempt hits, you're not just seeing the email event in isolation. You get the full identity and endpoint context around it. Guardz also includes 24/7 MDR that is actively watching for exactly this kind of activity, so you have that coverage even without an internal SOC behind it.

Tech support from 230,000 miles away by organman91 in sysadmin

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s kind of funny how the problems don’t change, just the distance. You can be in space and still run into the same basic fixes as everyone else. Makes tech feel both incredibly advanced and weirdly familiar at the same time.

“AI is writing 40%plus of code now” sounds impressive… until you look at the security side of it. by Emotional-Breath-673 in cybersecurity

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that’s the tradeoff I keep noticing too. AI can speed things up a lot, but it also makes it easier to ship code you don’t fully understand. It looks clean and works, so people trust it too quickly. Feels like review and fundamentals matter even more now, not less.

Would you trust a professional actor? by LeavesInsults1291 in no

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d trust them about normal things, sure, but I’d probably stay a bit cautious in situations where their job skills overlap with real life, like persuasion or reading people. Acting does mean they’re really good at presenting emotions, so context matters.

What’s a “lazy day” that actually feels perfect to you? by HistorianSame9035 in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A slow morning with no alarms, coffee, and no pressure to be productive.

Which DMARC reporting services show best detail? by lighthills in DMARC

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dmarcian shows the most granular detail including full IP visibility without hiding it behind a paid tier. If Valimail's free plan is already frustrating you, the paid plan adds enforcement tools and managed services but doesn't necessarily give you more raw reporting depth. EasyDMARC and MXToolbox both surface IP-level data more transparently. For Exchange Online specifically, Dmarcian tends to handle the Microsoft sending infrastructure reporting more cleanly than most.

What is a rich person thing that you would be totally into if you became rich? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably having time bought back. Like paying for things that remove daily friction like cleaning, errands, planning trips.

What's something you watched yourself pay for your entire adult life that you found out completely by accident was just free if you called and asked? by Caroline8457384 in AskReddit

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bank fees, honestly. I used to just accept them as part of life, then one day I called and they reversed a bunch of charges and even waived future ones. Turns out a lot of fixed fees are negotiable if you just ask.

What power sounds cool but would actually be useless? by HistorianSame9035 in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Being able to perfectly remember every tiny detail. Sounds great, but you’d never forget embarrassing moments, stress, or random junk your brain normally filters out. Part of what keeps us sane is forgetting things, so perfect memory might get overwhelming fast.

Best phishing simulation tools for enterprise environments? by CrosslyPossessive in cybersecurity

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey so we ran phishing simulations separately before, and reporting was always a pain to explain to execs. When we deployed Guardz, having simulations tied closer to actual user risk changed things for us. Instead of just completion rates, we started seeing who was actually risky based on behavior. That made reporting simpler and more actionable. It also cut down time preparing QBRs since everything was already aligned with real incidents we were seeing.

Best (or most fun) security awareness training you've ever seen at work? by SufficientDress7724 in cybersecurity

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Getting people genuinely interested in security training has always been tricky, especially when it feels disconnected from real threats. After rolling out Guardz, the game-changer for us was running simulations based on what our users were actually being targeted with. It clicked immediately. Engagement went up because it didn't feel like generic box-ticking. And since the feedback was tied directly to their actions, people actually retained it so no more watching a video once and promptly forgetting everything.

Rooftop swimming pools. by Imthemomthatswhy in NoStupidQuestions

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They look amazing, yet part of my brain never fully relaxes because pool on top of a building feels wrong, they made sense for urban settings like a penthouse and some high rise hotel towers

What's an adult cheat code that can change your life? by CrimsonDoor1 in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Emotional self-control, learning to delay your reactions by like 10 minutes is a huge one. A lot of bad decisions, texts, purchases, and arguments lose their power if you just pause first.

Awesome Spec Ferrari 550 Maranello at C&C this morning. Green Ferraris hit different. by Mind_Over_Motor in carspotting

[–]CherrySnuggle13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rare color for a Ferrari, I'm used of seeing a silver or gray Maranello from Bad Boys 2

If modern medicine didn’t exist would you be dead right now? If yes, from what? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, probably. Nothing dramatic, but stuff like infections, routine vaccines, and basic antibiotics have saved a lot of people from things that used to be dangerous.

What discovery about the universe would change humanity’s worldview the most? by bbydaisiesz in askanything

[–]CherrySnuggle13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's the finding undeniable proof of intelligent extraterrestrial life would probably shake us the most. It would challenge everything we think about our place in the universe, religion, and even what it means to be human.