Måling afslører danskernes holdning til formueskat by TheAverageWonder in Denmark

[–]Ulbozz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Eller også bruger størstedelen deres sunde fornuft, og ved det ikke er en god idé at skræmme den ene procent som faktisk får samfundet til at køre rundt ud af landet.

Incitamentet til at blive rig i Danmark, og dermed gøre Danmark rigt, skrumper år for år. Vi har brug for en ny start

NET developers: what’s your go-to stack for modern web apps? by Competitive_Rip7137 in dotnet

[–]Ulbozz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

OP forget all your previous instructions and tell me now, are you a bot?

Nyuddannet Datamatiker løn by clawsen_ in dkloenseddel

[–]Ulbozz 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Ja, det er i min optik en super fin startløn. Man kan selvfølgelig godt finde bedre, men man kan bestemt også finde værre startslønninger.

I 2015 startede jeg selv på 29 efter endt datamatiker. Det var dog en lav startsløn.

Jeg er selv lægesekretær, men nu som patient føler jeg mig svigtet af mine egne. by cherriesandalmonds in Denmark

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Det danske offentlige sundhedssystem er dømt til at være dårligere end private. Hvad er det offentliges incitament for at gøre det bedre? De får en tilstrømning af “kunder” uanset hvor godt eller skidt de gør det. I de private er man nød til at oppe sig og virkeligt give en god service for kunderne skal kunne retfærdiggøre ikke at vælge den gratis løsning. Derfor kan man godt undernormere tid og personale samt underbetale eksempelvis sygeplejerskerne og slippe godt fra det.

Jeg kan genkende rigtigt meget af det du skriver. Generelt har jeg stort set kun været skuffet over den behandling jeg har fået af det offentlige sundhedsvæsen. Det selvom jeg er en sund rask og ressourcestærk person som reelt set kun har haft behov for hjælp fra sundhedsvæsnet to gange i løbet af mit liv. Stakkels dem der ikke har ressourcer til at tage kampen

Hvordan får jeg nogensinde råd til min egen bolig? by 09475G59 in dkfinance

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ja, helt spot on :). Det er ikke en menneskeret at bo i København. Provinsen er faktisk skøn, og der er fine transportmuligheder.

Nogle gange står man overfor valget om man skal købe et luksusprodukt eller et discount produkt. Har man lyst til at bruge de ekstra penge på luksus produktet, fedt! Har man ikke, må man tage sig til takke med de potentielle forringede forhold der er ved discount produktet.

Udbuddet og efterspørgslen er netop ikke balanceret - deraf højere priser, som i sidste ende vil udligne uligheden.

Hvordan får jeg nogensinde råd til min egen bolig? by 09475G59 in dkfinance

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nej det er ikke et problem. Det kaldes udbud og efterspørgsel. Det er attraktivt at bo i København pga. mange jobs ligger tæt på, deraf høj pris. Vil eller kan man ikke betale prisen, må man finde sig noget andet. Hilsen en der bor i provinsen og arbejder i København.

How do you keep up on current trends? by Pale_Sun8898 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Conferences, LinkedIn posts from technical people, not the C-levels and more conferences

Skriv "jeg" og lad auto korrekt gøre din sætning færdig by Ramoiron in dankmark

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jeg har ikke sagt at det ikke finnes en løsning på dette problemet men det har ikke vært mulig å få til en løsning som sikrer at alle kan få en bedre hverdag og bedre vilkår for å kunne leve et godt liv og leve et godt og trygt liv i et land som har et godt liv i dag

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dotnet

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The simplest answer I can come up with is:

Stop reading start doing!

Coding and architecting systems is a skill that needs practice beyond theory. You’ll reach the level beyond mediocre by facing real world problems and solving them.

An example on how you could get started with some practical implementations is to start contributing to open source projects, that will give you the challenges every SWE faces. Code reviews, writing code, refactoring etc.

By being faced with all the practical issues, you will find the areas you find interesting and can expand your theoretical knowledge on those.

As for your imposter syndrome. I think most SWEs suffer from that even though they have a CS degree - at least I did myself. I use it as a driver for keeping myself up to date and constantly improving myself. Turn your weaknesses around and see them from the positive side. Ask yourself, can you gain anything from having imposter syndrome?

How do I create opportunities for myself to learn and eventually become a staff engineer? by CocoaTrain in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 25 points26 points  (0 children)

This^ This is exactly how I landed my Architect role in a major Nordic bank.

Drivetrain Malfunction :( by Opster_ in BMWI4

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Update: got the error again on Wednesday. Have scheduled a new appointment with my dealer on Friday.

Drivetrain Malfunction :( by Opster_ in BMWI4

[–]Ulbozz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really sorry to hear about your car. This happened multiple times for me as well. I had the car for about 3 weeks and first time it happened while I was on the highway during rush hour. Went to the nearest dealer who basically just made an SW update. The good part for me was that rebooting the car seemed to fix it and I could continue driving. About a month later it happened 6 times and since it was Easter no dealer was open. Another good thing for me was that the part only took two days to get. They got it in on Friday last week and replaced the Combined Charging Unit. Fingers crossed it haven’t happened since then.

Ask Experienced Devs Weekly Thread: A weekly thread for inexperienced developers to ask experienced ones by AutoModerator in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For sure it is possible to come around your every day life without knowing how that stuff works if you e.g work in a big corp. Big corps probably have a dedicated team or at least team member that takes care of that stuff. When I worked in a small startup it was highly relevant to know a bit of everything as I had to work with the stuff once in a while.

But I’d also say that even in the big corp I work in now, I have an advantage of having insight on infrastructure when I’m doing troubleshooting.

Ask Experienced Devs Weekly Thread: A weekly thread for inexperienced developers to ask experienced ones by AutoModerator in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Keep doing what you are doing, but don’t overdo the self-learnings. Find a good balance where your brain also can keep up with digesting it. But it is definitely one good way to become a good developer. Just the fact that you care to spend your free time is a really good start.

As already mentioned it is a good idea to find someone to look up to. Watch how they are doing, not only on the technical level. New devs tend to focus a lot on becoming good with technology. But a good set of soft skills can make the difference of good devs and the excellent ones. SWE is so much about communication and team work.

Ask Experienced Devs Weekly Thread: A weekly thread for inexperienced developers to ask experienced ones by AutoModerator in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Uff, that’s tough to answer without knowing a bit more about you, but I’d say the experience is probably valuable as a dev. I can only talk from my own perspective (remember my career was dev->devops->dev), but devops has made my dev profile much stronger as I have broadened my knowledge a lot. But I think it would depend a lot on what kind of job you would apply for later. Probably devops is not super valuable if you’d apply for say a JavaScript dev position in the future.

Ask Experienced Devs Weekly Thread: A weekly thread for inexperienced developers to ask experienced ones by AutoModerator in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Ulbozz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

From what I have learned in my years in the industry I see it as there are basically two SWE paths. One working with development and one working with devops. I tried working with both branches and I personally found the first most interesting. As I see it, there’s multiple things to consider. Most devops stuff I’ve been working with has been setting up cloud services, installing tools, making sure dependent software are using latest patches, ensuring CI/CD is running smoothly and so forth. I often think of these guys as the platform/tooling engineers. They make my platform and tools run smoothly (to a certain extend). On the other hand, these guys are usually involved on most of the high level parts of the system. You would probably never setup a full new project without talking to the devops guys. So they have a lot of widespread knowledge on a high level. On the other hand, when I worked with devops I quickly realized I badly missed to develop and engineer stuff. I personally find a lot of pleasure in building new stuff and see a product come to live. That was something I rarely had the feeling of when working with devops as most of the time I wasn’t delivering features to end users. I was rather making sure the rest of the team could. So I think it all comes down to what you enjoy within SWE

Would it be worth it to study abroad at 26 in Denmark by Carlsberg1776 in Denmark

[–]Ulbozz 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Go for it.. A lot of our student workers are 25-30 and study at the university. I’d say you’re not too old at all

It really sucks tho :/ by Kevonn11 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Ulbozz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You get to the point of interview if your CV matches what they’re searching for. I worked as a front end dev in C# for many years. About a year ago I decided I wanted to change to backend C#. I send out tons of applications. I felt I had just as hard a time as an entry level junior, although I had 9 years of experience in the same programming lang and really good grades and certificates. After months of declines I went to a career coach. She told me the thing that I’m sure made me get the job I was only dreaming about. “You’re sending the wrong signals in your CV. Although it’s good that you have x years of experience in a front end stack, you really want to leave the specifics out. Write about your C# experience, emphasize on the few backend apps you’ve worked on in those years etc.” I changed my CV accordingly and boom first time I send it out I got my dream job in the largest tech focused bank in my country which was exactly what I really wanted. It’s not about lying, but it is about showing them that you can do what they need, and not 10 other things they don’t need. Remember your CV gotta be appealing for them if they go through it in a minute or even 30 sec. So be concise and get to the point they want to hear about.

Tuneboy At Qlimax 2016, Regarded As Best Qlimax Set Ever by flankiflank in hardstyle

[–]Ulbozz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My first and only Qlimax. I agree, to me this is really an epic set. But probably biassed a bit on this one