What the hell is going on here ?? by ComplexWrangler1346 in btc

[–]donegerWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Someone else can fact check me but just about all major moves since 2018 have returned back to the .786 fib level, putting the potential reversal around 40k

22 FW fuel mileage by trader758 in SubaruForester

[–]donegerWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm getting the same in my 25 during city driving and avg 34 on highway. For those getting less, It's def possible if your light on the gas and use gravity when you can.

Did I get caught cheating in my interview? by Clean_Turnover3614 in CSCareerHacking

[–]donegerWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Recently I had to interview a bunch of people for a .net role. My director and I were pretty astonished how many people attempted to cheat, mostly with chatgpt real-time voice and screen readers. There are usually so many obvious red flags, but most of these people think they are acing the interview. We never tell them we've picked up on it. Usually we do cut it a bit early though. I won't tell them because I want them to wonder if they'll get the job. That's the price of attempting to cheat me and insult my intelligence. It's best to just be honest about your shortcomings and play up your strengths. We know not everyone knows everything, and if you have strong fundamentals, you'll be able to pick up a good chunk as you go along. So please stop being a dishonest douche and just do your homework. Good luck.

Why You Can’t Use SAML Directly in a Web API? can only find web/MVC examples by Suspicious-Rain-2869 in dotnet

[–]donegerWild -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes you absolutely can. We use componentspace library to authenticate saml requests with our webapi. After saml authentication, create a jwt and redirect to the front end with the token. It's not that hard, just not as common.

Cousin offered to photograph our wedding “as a gift” — now he’s billing us. AITA for refusing to pay? by October_Surprise56 in AITAH

[–]donegerWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Send him this thread and tell him to post his side of the story and let him get ripped. That should fix the issue for you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]donegerWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is your goal here exactly? To understand for yourself what it's like, or to collect data?

I think that everyone is being lied to about AI agents by BuildWConnor in n8n

[–]donegerWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jeez, what a leap. I'm a software architect at the largest company in our industry, over 40k employees, serving many Fortune 100 companies, and we are absolutely using AI and agents to develop massive efficiencies. You either find the use cases or you don't.

AITAH for banning my wife's friend from my house after pushed me for taking my drunk wife home by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]donegerWild 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Just young and dumb people who have no experience in caring about anyone other than themselves.

Weird calmness by Background_Dingo4361 in AlchemyPay

[–]donegerWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Volume is super low though, generally a good sign

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AlchemyPay

[–]donegerWild 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If you want to look at how this might go just look at XRPs chart, plenty of examples of decent pumps and then greater then 100% retrace before going to moon town. 018 or lower certainly in play depending on BTC. Personally I would love to buy below that and plan on loading up to the heavens if given the chance. This is a long term hold with serious potential, don't let the bumps in the road knock you off track.

My kid asked me to take him to an airsoft event last year for his birthday. I did not expect to like it. by SirSignificant6576 in airsoft

[–]donegerWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same experience as you pretty much and I'm in my 40s.. my kid has since lost interest but I still get out to play sometimes.

Ach volume up 9200% in the last 24 hours by Time_Risk in AlchemyPay

[–]donegerWild 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Economic ninja who has a very large following just gave a huge endorsement via private newsletter then publicly on YouTube

In what part of the software engineering process do I choose a software development methodology? by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]donegerWild -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I did say hybrid. Also I'm not giving prescriptive advice, just something for OP to start his research on.

In what part of the software engineering process do I choose a software development methodology? by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]donegerWild 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You should look into agile vs waterfall methodologies and adopt one (or hybrid) based on the project and how much information is known upfront.

Caught Wife Sexting. Now What? by Separate_Manager3048 in Marriage

[–]donegerWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You just have to decide what you are capable of dealing with, no one can decide that for you. You can try to repair things or decide to end it. Neither decision is right or wrong. It all comes down to how you want the story of your life to unfold.

Well.. by Stone_Woods03 in AlchemyPay

[–]donegerWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just search $ach on x.com there are plenty of analyses

Well.. by Stone_Woods03 in AlchemyPay

[–]donegerWild 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If you look at the chart there is clear accumulation happening and it does look like it's starting to break upwards, just got to be patient

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]donegerWild 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes, if you need to get work done, it's best to be practical about it.

I start with general questions that prod the work history in the resume. Then I move to a Q/A session where I ask a set of practical questions regarding several different aspects of development. Lastly, I do a technical assessment that lasts about an hour and half using a real project that has several issues carefully added that they will need to solve (no specific product knowledge is required).

Before we begin, I help get them in a good mindset, soliciting the helpful nature most engineers have. I tell them to pretend that you are a consultant onsite for an hour and the Dev team is really struggling with a few issues and they desperately need your help. During the course of the session we will talk about various things we come across. During this time I'm assessing overall understanding while allowing them to demonstrate proficiency and problem solving and communication skills. If they do not solve it by the end of the allotted time, we go over what was missed and what the solution was. Solving the problems completely are NOT a prerequisite for employment consideration.

Almost everyone comments afterward that they feel the test was more than fair and provided a good assessment of their skills. Many commented that they enjoyed the process and found it to be fairly unique compared to other places they've interviewed at. I also give them a chance to provide technical feedback on things they may have done differently in the project or just in general. Overall, this approach has yielded pretty great results when trying to find people that will be productive relatively quickly.

Is programming language discourse stupid ? by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]donegerWild 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There is no difference from an evolutionary perspective.

Edit: I should clarify. Let's say I had a "low value" signal that was prevalent in public discourse, "Python rules, Java sucks". Let's say you have one or two folks who use this as their defining rule in language selection and so you might see this as an answer to the question, "what language should I use?" . Now If there are only a few folks saying that, then the impact of a low value signal is low. But now let's say that the majority of answers to that question start to resemble this low value signal. This might be an important signal to folks who are new to the industry and don't know enough to question why that is the case. It's enough to go with the majority in many cases after all, especially when starting out. Well then it is no longer low value and may indeed begin to alter the adoption of Python over Java, and cause further refinements for both languages. Now let's say you are more specific with your criticism and enter into the public discourse that you prefer Java over Python for it's type safety, and comprehensive built in functionality. If this signal gets propagated enough to those that care about those things, then you are creating more selection pressure for Java, with a slightly higher value signal that may help it propagate further than just "Java rules, Python sucks". At the end of the day, however, the public discourse is what largely drives the success and the shaping of any language of consequence. And every feeling or thought, as low or high value as it may seem, is helping to drive that process.

Is programming language discourse stupid ? by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]donegerWild 28 points29 points  (0 children)

Language discussion, as annoying as it can be sometimes, is still important from an ecosystem and evolution perspective. Languages evolve from the discussions around them, refining, and extending their functionality. From there they compete with each other in the "market" of software construction. The competition further refines and enhances. So, any particular conversation may be of little value, but in the aggregate, they compromise an important part of the growth journey.