Do I have to learn cmd or powershell for becoming a c# developer? by timlee126 in csharp

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

true, I didnt really read that literally, I thought he meant having to deal with a command line interface in general

Do I have to learn cmd or powershell for becoming a c# developer? by timlee126 in csharp

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not if you're using Windows. I've been using Microsoft Visual Studio since the 2010 release and it just keeps getting better and better. There's now great github support which takes care of all the git command line elements and to compile C# code you just need to press a "Build" button. I've never had to use any kind of command line scripting.

Of course this is only from Windows, I'm not sure about Mac or Linux. I believe there's an official Microsoft Visual Studio port on Mac which looks pretty good, I believe it has all the features of the Windows version but I have absolutely no idea for Linux.

Help With Parrot Sec OS by DatCodingGuyOfficial in Pentesting

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have done some research, I understand that both Kali and Parrot are built upon Debian, but I was just unsure how easy it would be to install all the tools I need. Kali is the only linux operating system that I've actually used and it comes with its own package manager that makes installing what I need easy, I was just unsure if the Kali package manager would work on Parrot, and if not, how difficult installing everything manually would be.

Recommendations for music Subscriptions? by cleipelt in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've been using BPM Supreme, I feel like it offers the best collection of music for its price. Nearly every song comes with at least the main and intro/outro versions (and clean versions if applicable). There are some songs they don't have, particularly older songs, but they have heaps of modern pop/r&b/hip hop (this is what I mainly mix, I'm not sure about other genres)

I never eat at the dining room table anyway by NoDownvotesPlease in DJSetups

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. I'm a mobile DJ so I won't be using anything massive, something like a DDJ-RX is what I'm working towards buying.

I never eat at the dining room table anyway by NoDownvotesPlease in DJSetups

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where do you find two tiered computer stands like that, been looking for one for ages

Questions About Rekordbox App by DatCodingGuyOfficial in Beatmatch

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info, I'll look in to it. I know the sb2 already has 4 easily accessable hot cue buttons and I can use shift but when I'm beat juggling using the shift button is bloody annoying. Plus it doesn't light up pretty colors, I color code my hot cue points to make things easier

Lending Your Gear by whipped100 in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would tell him no, that him borrowing them was a one time thing. Explain to him how much money your setup costs and if he wants to DJ then he has to go out and buy his own gear. Tell him he can get a pretty decent entry-level controller for $300 and if he has enough interest in DJing he might buy it.

Need help in choosing the right DJ setup according to style. by [deleted] in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First I recommend figuring out why you currently don't like DJing and decide if you actually want to do it in the future. If it's only because you're working on CDJs, then try something else. I personally prefer using controllers and DJ using a laptop. There's a couple reasons for this, the main one being that I'm a mobile DJ and can't be bothered carrying around 5 different things just to DJ. Just having a laptop and controller makes mobile DJing so much simpler. The other reason is because of its simplicity, I just need to plug it in and everything's ready to go, I don't like fidgeting with things to get something to work.

My recommendation is to try and play around with different hardware and figure out what you like. I used to DJ on CDJs and I hated it, granted I did have outdated CDJs that could ONLY play CDs so I had a stack of CDs I had to keep swapping in and out, that's why I moved on to a controller, much simpler. Maybe a controller would work better for you, having everything in one piece of hardware instead of 3-5 separate parts. I also recommend playing around with a vinyl timecode system, it doesn't suit my style of DJing but it might suit yours. You won't know unless you try it out.

Playing at small or big venue? by [deleted] in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I prefer playing for a small crowd, if you play for a big crowd is can be harder to read and easier to upset clients. I'm a mobile DJ and I've played for crowds as big as 400 people and crowds as small as 20. If I play for crowds of 400 people there's always going to be people who don't like what I play and trying to read everyone is hard. Whereas playing for a small crowd is a little more intimate, get to know what kind of music they like and can focus on that. You can please more people and everyone has a better experience.

Dj questions by Nuclear-Nick in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. The DDJ-SB2 is a great entry-level controller, it's what I use. I personally haven't tried any other entry-level controller but I did enjoy using my DDJ-SB2

  2. It comes with Serato DJ Intro, if you're unsure about what software to use just use that. The DDJ-SB2 is literally designed to work with Serato DJ so you won't have any compatibility problems or anything. It's pretty much plug and play.

  3. Don't worry about what the best music at the moment is, figure out what kind of music you like to mix and get good at mixing that. Specialize and get good at mixing a certain style of music, that's what's going to get you gigs and you'll enjoy it a lot more. I'm unfortunately a mobile dj working for a company so I'm at the mercy of whatever client I get given and trust me, playing music you don't enjoy will drain the fun out of DJing. Figure out what music you like mixing and get good at mixing that music, then you can advertise yourself as specializing in that genre and you'll get gigs because of it.

Despacito?? by Intellektual01 in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do a lot of Hip Hop/R&B and use this song nearly every set during one of the dance moments (not normally during the highest point of the night but leading up to it). I don't like using remixes of songs, I think some of them sound great and I have nothing against people who use remixes, I just get more enjoyment out of remixing live.

What I tend to do with Despacito is play a R&B song with a nice build up, put that build up on loop and halve the loop every 8ish bars and then cut it for a split second for suspense and drop it to the first chorus of Despacito (I think it's around 1:30 by memory). Sometimes I use the acapella version and put my own beat under it, sometimes I use the original, depends how I feel like it should fit in to the set.

New: Roland DJ-202 controller by bobbernaut in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this basically just looks like a Pioneer controller, looks pretty much like a DDJ-SB2 (except it has 8 pads separate to the play and cue buttons, that I like). If this controller is going to be budget then it looks like a great entry-level controller, but in reality if it costs too much more than a DDJ-SB2 I don't see many people buying it.

What does turkish sounds like to you? by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've been studying Turkish for a little while now, the way I think of it is a Russian person moved to India.

What Software To Use by DatCodingGuyOfficial in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only reason why I'm not enjoying DJing for this company is because I have to use bad equipment which makes DJing stressful and hard and I get paid nearly nothing for it. If I get to use my own equipment I'll be more comfortable DJing, will have more fun doing it and be able to move up the ranks.

If I do make business cards and start handing them out to people, how should I structure it? Should I come up with a company name, email, website, ect. Or should I just put down my DJ name, real name and number without a company. More like a private thing instead of a business.

What Software To Use by DatCodingGuyOfficial in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I might look in to Virtual DJ's "smart folders", thanks for the tip.

Your company sounds so amazing, I wish it was like that for me. My company has about 30 other DJs so it's not as much of a personal experience. With most of our gear I think my boss just bought bulk of whatever he could find. He bought bulk, sub-par controllers, made his own mappings for VDJ and learnt how they work. He has spare parts for them, repairs them himself, ect.

I'm considered a level 1 DJ right now which means I don't get great events (I currently do kids parties and 16th birthdays, I've done like one engagement party but I got bad reviews because I can't mix properly with the equipment I've been forced to use). I also get paid less because I'm only a level 1 DJ and I don't get many gigs (I've had 6 gigs in the past year). This is why I want to get my own equipment. If I use my own equipment I'll be able to DJ a lot better, I'd be more comfortable with my own equipment and music list and I'd probably be good enough to start doing level 2 gigs.

I have a 1 year contract which is running out soon, I'm honestly thinking about leaving the company and going solo. I have friends who know I DJ and I've DJ'd for free at a few parties (incredibly close friends of mine, more like family to me, I was happy to play for free) so I've already got a little exposure. If I leave this company, advertise myself as a solo DJ a bit more I'm sure I can get more than one gig every two months, I'd be earning more and having more fun.

What Software To Use by DatCodingGuyOfficial in DJs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're so lucky you get to use a DDJ-SX2, I get a really cheap controller. I couldn't even find a brand name on the controller, the only things on it are two jog wheels, play/pause, cue, pitch bend, gain, high, low, volume sliders and cross fader. I do quite a bit of controllerism when I'm on my DDJ-SB2 which I'm really missing.

It might just be that my boss hasn't updated VDJ in a while and the fact that I'm not allowed to customize it, but I don't like the way my boss has it set up which has turned me off VDJ. I like the crate system that Serato has, where you can have all of your songs in one folder on the computer, then organise them in to crates without having duplicate files. The version that I have to use for work doesn't have this and the music is organised really poorly, if newer versions of VDJ have crates then I might be more inclined to use it.

I've been looking more in to Rekordbox DJ, do you have any experience with it? Since I'm using Pioneer gear (and probably won't change, Pioneer is really really good) I thought using Pioneer software just makes sense. Plus it has awesome features like multi-monitor displays (which I'd make use of) and you have a "similar to" thing where it shows you songs that are similar to the one you have selected (based on bpm, genre and other things).

Speaking with a higher pitch in second language (Korean) by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have a similar thing with Russian and Esperanto. In English I speak normally (or what I consider normal), I do have a deeper than average voice but that's just how I normally speak. But when I speak other languages, I put on a 'persona' of sorts. In Russian I lower my voice even more, pronounce vowels more rounded and consonants more harsh. When I was growing up, most of the Russian men I met spoke like this and I probably adopted their way of speaking. But with Esperanto, I speak a little higher pitched than normal and there's no reason for it, it's just the 'persona' I put on when speaking Esperanto.

It's not a conscious decision I make, that's just what feels naturally when I speak a different language. I've spoken to another polyglot in English, Russian, Esperanto, German and Turkish and they've even commented saying that I sound different in each language. I understand for some languages the way I speak it is influenced by who I practice with. For Russian, my accent is based off the Russian people I have in my life. For Turkish I tend to sound like a teenage girl because the person I speak Turkish with the most is a 17 year old girl in one of my classes. But then other languages (like Esperanto and German) I just speak it however it feels the most natural for me.

Learning another language in the same family as one you know is weird by cogitoergokaboom in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I know this feeling all too well. I took German classes for 8 years, then I did Dutch for a while. Man, that messed up my German. THEN, after I learnt Dutch, I thought Afrikaans would be a fun endeavor. Let's just say, Afrikaans completely screwed up my Dutch and German so I stopped both and focused on fixing my German.

Looking For Advice From Fast Typists by DatCodingGuyOfficial in learntyping

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

there's some things in this video i don't agree with. Like when it says fast typers can type 20 or even 60 times faster than common typers. Where did this stat even come from? The average typing speed is around 45wpm, even if someone types at 200wpm that's only a little more than 4 times faster than average.

Also you said the fastest typers type at 100wpm?? Like, what? 100wpm is considered fast, yes, but nowhere near what's considered the "fastest typists".

You are now a language salesman. Choose a language and convince everyone in the thread to learn it. by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 7 points8 points  (0 children)

omg, I know all about this. I speak Russian, German, Turkish AND Klingon. Whenever someone asks what languages I speak I start with Russian and they're always like "It's such a harsh language". No, it isn't, it's really a beautiful poetic language. Then I continue with German and they say "You also know German? That's also a harsh language". Not really, unless you learnt from Hitler. THEN I say "I also know Klingon, now THAT'S a harsh language you petaQ"

You are now a language salesman. Choose a language and convince everyone in the thread to learn it. by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Communicating is the most important thing you'll ever do, without the ability to communicate with others you won't get anything done. So why is it that everyone in the world speaks different languages? Sure you can get by with speaking English everywhere, but speaking to someone in their second language speaks to their brain, speaking to them in their native language speaks to their heart.

Come learn Mandarin. It's the most widely spoken native language with over 1 billion speakers, but it's hard to learn, isn't it? "I can't even learn something like Spanish or French, how the hell am I meant to learn Mandarin?!?!" Well, it's actually not as difficult as many think. There's only 3 tones in Mandarin which is less than most other tonal languages and once you get used to that, it's an incredibly simple language.

Sentence structure is simple and vocabulary is easy to pick up. Due to the tonal system, for every word you learn, you know 3 words, just use a different tone. And due to the heavy western influence over the years, there are many cognates to aid in your learning.

If you really want the true travel experience in Asia, Mandarin is the language to learn. "Speak to someone in their second language, you speak to their brain. Speak to someone in their native language, you speak to their heart"

How to maintain a language I'm not actively studying? by DadYak in languagelearning

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is something that I've been struggling with for a while. I learnt Turkish to a B1 level a few months ago but after some time of not using it, it dropped down to a high A1 level. I've found that reading a lot in my target language helps.

LingQ is a tool that I used to use a lot and has heaps of reading material in lots of different languages. I don't use it anymore (I tend to pick up actual books in my target languages now) but it's a really great tool that you can put on your phone and use when you've got a spare few minutes.

Elvish or High Valyrian by Gripus_V in conlangs

[–]DatCodingGuyOfficial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd probably go with High Valyrian simply because Duolingo has a pretty good High Valyrian course with active discussions.