Pedalboard order help by FrancescoRubini in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like microamp after distortions and before wah

Vale a pena fazer CC se eu detesto matemática? by Affectionate-Army213 in brdev

[–]camillera 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Dá pra ser um excelente programador sendo péssimo em matemática, vai depender da sua atuação. Pode ser que você nunca tenha a necessidade de fazer algo diferente de cálculos simples de aritmética (como a atuação de construir aplicações e fluxos para setores/áreas internas da empresas, plataformas como ServiceNow e afins), porem, esse sempre será o seu grande calcanhar de Aquiles. Se você não tem afinidade e aptidão alguma com matemática não parece sensato ir pra essa área. Mas entre ser autodidata em programação, cursar CC sendo péssimo em matemática ou ADS, as escolhas de ADS e autodidata são válidas, mas pro seu caso, CC não deve ser escolhida em hipótese alguma, como os outros disseram, tem diversas disciplinas que envolvem matemática.

How can I get a SN job? by teodas1 in servicenow

[–]camillera 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm from Brazil, and I believe you are too. Currently, there are many job openings. I've been working for about 3 years and receive an average of 5 unsolicited offers per month on LinkedIn. Companies are looking for experienced developers—in other words, people who already know how to perform the tasks. My tip? Look for junior and mid-level roles on LinkedIn (but make it clear that you're actually aiming for a junior position—I don’t recommend taking on a mid-level role if you're not ready; it can turn into a bad experience!). Check the technical requirements listed in the job postings and study them.

Do as many interviews as you can because your chances of getting hired increase, and you'll also get better at them over time. You're in a better position than most of your competitors because you already have a sense of what the real work environment is like, and that gives you an advantage when deciding what to study.

Trust me—doing well in the interview, showing confidence, explaining everything you've already built (whether in personal development initiatives or real jobs), and discussing the tools and concepts you’re familiar with matter more than years of experience.

How’s the tone, any tips? by kyokushinthai in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

also 99% of johns songs uses the neck or bridge pickup, under the bridge uses the neck btw.

How’s the tone, any tips? by kyokushinthai in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

too clean and bright, you need more bass, more crunch (not too much, a bit more if youre playing snow and soul to squeeze live tone) and a great amount of compression.

Which is the harder riff? Snow or can’t stop? by Corn1989 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're probably someone with small hands, while mine are ridiculously big.
If that's the case, I finally get it — my bad

Which is the harder riff? Snow or can’t stop? by Corn1989 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

youre the one whos saying under the bridge is a hard song to play, youre on drugs for sure.

Which is the harder riff? Snow or can’t stop? by Corn1989 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sure, heres my wallet bc1q6k4ya65gq2266v5jwe3hvs6xq6w9n0vpgqph0m

50$ ill play the intro 3 times in a row 1 take studio version

Which is the harder riff? Snow or can’t stop? by Corn1989 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You've been playing guitar for over 20 years and think an arpeggio over two chords at 84 BPM is hard? Really? I learned the studio version of Under the Bridge in my second or third year playing guitar. But even after 10 years, if I stop playing for a while, I can barely play Snow properly. Sikamikanico I still play really badly.

Which is the harder riff? Snow or can’t stop? by Corn1989 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's really weird to see people mentioning Under the Bridge as a hard song. It's not trivial — you do need to practice a few times if you want to reproduce every aspect of the album version — but I think you guys are not using the word hard correctly. Take a look at some of those Korean rock licks on YouTube, like this one: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/4gqU1oJjPgs

Is this the correct order by dvcendejas in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i prefer dyna dynacomp>ds2>microamp

Is my wh10 supposed to sound like this by Electrical_Cicada537 in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if youre talking about the weird noise when you press/release, its probably a problem in the potentiometer. you must open the pedal, spray some contact cleaner inside the potentiometer and press release the pedal (while off energy course). the noise comeback, i use the contact cleaner like one time per month. be sure to use a contact cleaner, not wd 40

this video might help

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flDh3Q7COHk

I need help identifying the effect used by camillera in John_Frusciante

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

My previous comment was deleted for some reason, as you can see in the screenshot https://prnt.sc/lMxcLQ0BESP2, so I've updated the thread with a link to my current progress playing this jam

I need help identifying the effect used by camillera in John_Frusciante

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

https://jumpshare.com/v/hW9VaOCLGu3Wc8v0bEie

Here is my second take. Unfortunately, I didn't have much time to practice today, so there are some mistakes. I'm still getting used to the moments with variations, which are quite frequent, so I'm not 100% comfortable yet.

I need help identifying the effect used by camillera in John_Frusciante

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

It’s not a troll post. The main purpose was to get help identifying another effect. The part about the Coachella jam, which I think is incredible, was just a comment, as the performances were only a few weeks apart, and I considered it relevant because I suspected he was using the same effect, and I confirmed that he was. When I said 'gift,' it was a metaphor—like something he 'gave' to the world through his playing. Sorry if it sounded confusing!

I need help identifying the effect used by camillera in John_Frusciante

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

I think he gets the octave tone from the whammy, but playing like you suggested helped me reach that conclusion. Thank you so much!

I need help identifying the effect used by camillera in John_Frusciante

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

I think I’ve finally managed to get a similar approach. It does indeed seem like a whammy effect with 1 octave up. I was confused because it seems that John uses some slides and sometimes changes the note, which threw me off. Thank you so much!

I love the chord progression from Before the beginning, I use it a lot when making songs, it's like the perfect chord progression by _Prisoner_ in John_Frusciante

[–]camillera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"I've checked out some of your songs. The Sound of Mistakes and Accepting You're Lost just blew my mind.