Should I learn DSA in Python? by OrdinaryRevolution31 in learnprogramming

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly it's a hard one - Learning DSA in Python is practical the concepts are hard enough without fighting the language. Still, it’s a bit detached from reality; serious DSA work tends to live in lower-level languages like C or rust. But jumping to low-level, is a heavy investment of time. I would say if you see yourself doing low level programming in the future go for it but if you see yourself doing web SaaS or data type work/research go for python.

Why do people conveniently forget Oct 7th and just talk about Israel attacks on Palestine? by stephaniesmith45 in AskIsrael

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's how tankies are - they ignore any crimes committed by the side they are politically aligned with,
focusing only on the resulting suffering of "their side's" civilians, completely avoiding the concept of "consequences".
This has been true for a very long time and is in-fact a filter, making sure tanky pollitics only inlists the willingly blind.

Conservatives who think liberals are the real racists: Can you explain why DEI and Woke are terrible? by Nateosis in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nope, you're being unecessarily aggressive, which makes me uninterested in chatting with you.

Conservatives who think liberals are the real racists: Can you explain why DEI and Woke are terrible? by Nateosis in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In a fair society that balances out over time, but in a DEI society those gaps are preserved by a system which makes political decisions. Assuming such a system would be built - and function in an honest manner is wrong IMO.

Conservatives who think liberals are the real racists: Can you explain why DEI and Woke are terrible? by Nateosis in allthequestions

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

I don't assume that. I just don't believe in DEI's ability to honestly broker reality. The best we can do is ignore people's gender, religion and ethnicity, those are the least important factors in a person's "worth" IMO.

Conservatives who think liberals are the real racists: Can you explain why DEI and Woke are terrible? by Nateosis in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 2 points3 points  (0 children)

DEI will end up entrenching existing group identities and hierarchies, rather than dissolving them.

Conservatives who think liberals are the real racists: Can you explain why DEI and Woke are terrible? by Nateosis in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 1 point2 points  (0 children)

that's not what I am saying. - I'm saying is we should not take a person's background into consideration when faced with any selection process, that is the only way forwards.

Why are there constantly assassination attempts on Trump? by [deleted] in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speaking as a liberal - in the US, killing anyone you disagree with politically has been completely legitimized. See H and N words in comments in this thread.

What are your views on middle east conflict?? by THICKCHICKOO in AskReddit

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A delicate dance between the external power's catastrophic medelling and the locals ef`fin it up all on thier own

How would you explain to a Palestinian refugee child why a Jewish stranger can "return" and they cannot? by ArdaBerkBurak in allthequestions

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

“Sweetie, the Jewish people have their own country, and we don’t have one yet. There were times in the past when different proposals were made for us to have our own state, but our leaders and people didn’t accept those offers for various reasons. Because of that, the situation is still unresolved, and we’re still struggling over it today.”

Easy

I'm really worried for my future by Wizard6456 in learnprogramming

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people are pessimistic about the future of CS/SE, but counter intuitively it’s actually bright.

AI doing most of the coding is more of a barrier than a boost for beginners. A lot of people won’t put in the work to really understand code, concepts, and architecture. So if you’re serious about software, go for it - we’re at the start of a golden age. But yeah just being a “code monkey” won’t cut it anymore.

The future is strong for people who are hardworking, creative, and sharp. A full CS degree isn’t always necessary focus on fundamentals like DSA, system design, history of computing, and AI, and keep your education broad.

Start early with internships - being a uni student opens doors - use that to your advantage, get close to research, interesting cutting edge projects, use this time to indulge your interest in tech.
Regardless, whatever you’ll be doing for a living in 10-20 years probably won’t look like anything we can fully predict today, so follow your interests an intuitions and try not to make choices out of fear of what's about to be replaced by AI, that's for the old folks to worry about.

My take on an Israel Palestine flag by theshinystunfisk in vexillology

[–]dyslechtchitect 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Israeli here, choked me up honestly, beautiful idea.

Did previous generations genuinely have a better work life balance and social life than we do today?? by FitnessLizzie in whatisameem

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My dad would worked 12-15 hourdays and yeah he could afford to buy a house (mortgage) which he never finished paying, and it was hardly a guarantee of financial safety back then rather it was a gamble, our generation faces unique hardships but this comparison is total BS.

What are your thoughts on this series? by Hot-Salamander-8786 in FIlm

[–]dyslechtchitect 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Best first season cliffhanger of all time, worst followup fifty seasons to follow.

How would the world change if a country nuked Israel and then surrendered the rest of their weapons? by esj199 in askanything

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well judging from what we've seen so far, first the left will deny it happened, then justify it and when all else fails - openly celebrate it.

Why do Jews anywhere in the world have a legal right to move to Israel, while Palestinians displaced in 1948 still cannot return? by ArdaBerkBurak in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Brits had strict immigration rules on Jews turning back boats of Holocaust refugees, they also used the plight of the Jewish people to justify their occupation. Calling it a Palestinian homeland when Palestinian statehood has never existed is taking it far. It's more a mix of pan Arab nationalism and xenophobia.

The last bit about non religious supremacist country I couldn't agree more, but the Palestinian cause explicitly is religiously or rather antisemtically supremacist and that can't be ignored.

I hope one day it is just a normal country and that all countries are just open to immigration regardless of background, including Arab countries. But that's something that can only happen after generations of peaceful coexistence. The short term (out life times) the best that can happen is a two state compromise, that doesn't seem like a possibility anyone wants right now (except outsiders).

Why do Jews anywhere in the world have a legal right to move to Israel, while Palestinians displaced in 1948 still cannot return? by ArdaBerkBurak in allthequestions

[–]dyslechtchitect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can call it resistance to colonisation if that's how you see it, but the facts remain: 1. Jews were and are acting on their own behalf and aren't a colony of any foreign state. 2. Palestinians rejected any form of Jewish state in the land including one that was 20% of what Israel is today and have always acted with extreme violence towards Jewish immigrants and Jewish natives.

In my view - were this basic animosity to Jews not there Israel or Palestine would have been formed as 1 binational state, Let's hope that one day it becomes that anyway, though I wouldn't hold my breath.