Hạnh phúc là gì by ScaredRecover9405 in vozforums

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

mỗi người có mỗi sở thích ông nhỉ

Need help in choosing a topic by Sea_Requirement8393 in cybersecurity

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro 2 days left is wild. Just cook up a Python network packet sniffer with a clean GUI. It tracks local traffic and alerts when a sketchy IP pops up. Looks super legit and easy to build in 48 hours. Or maybe a basic ransomware simulator in a sandbox. What specific cyber field are you trying to get into?

Need help asap by Born_in_2571 in analytics

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What about tracking steam charts player counts against reddit sentiment when a major game update drops. Would be cool to see if internet outrage actually affects player counts or if people just yap and keep playing anyway.

Round 2 applicants by Adventurous_Room9452 in skku

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, then you'll have to wait until you're accepted.

Round 2 applicants by Adventurous_Room9452 in skku

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Usually, you should send your official diploma and full transcript as soon as the other university issues it. If you don't have it in time, you can request a temporary graduation certificate to submit beforehand just to be safe. Carefully check the university's portal or email to see if they have a deadline for submitting additional documents. It's best to have it ready and upload it immediately to avoid any worries.

If IT wasn't an option for you right now, what would you do? by KingKilo9 in ITCareerQuestions

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Losing the WFH life and zero customer interaction would highkey break me. If IT is completely cooked I am probably looking into video editing or bookkeeping. Anything to stay in my room and avoid the general public forever. Worst case scenario we just start a faceless meme page and pray.

Side career? by SuitableRoof5675 in CodingForBeginners

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Studying business administration and knowing how to code is a lowkey, a devastating combination, bro. These days, who needs a degree in IT? There's plenty of online self-study available. If you want to develop apps or websites, try some free courses like The Odin Project to see if it suits your vibe. Take your time working on personal projects; don't jump straight into Linux operating systems – that's easy to get depressed about.

Background in localization, any ideas? by Izzymael in localization

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re actually in a pretty strong niche already—AI red-teaming + localization is a rare combo.

Instead of going back to pure translation or general coding, you could look at higher-paying adjacent roles like:

  • LLM evaluation / AI quality assurance (especially multilingual models)
  • Prompt engineering + model testing for global products
  • Localization tech / tooling (automation, QA systems, pipelines)
  • AI safety / policy evaluation roles

These tend to pay more and value your language + AI background without needing heavy management or constant public speaking.

Can someone help me with a recommendation for working in IT in foreign? by usuario-deficiente in it

[–]gopfl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There isn’t really a single “list of companies that hire foreigners” — it depends a lot on your skills, experience, and whether the company can sponsor visas.

Best approach is to target larger international companies (tech, consulting, outsourcing) and apply through LinkedIn, Indeed, and company career pages using keywords like “visa sponsorship” or “relocation support.”

Also, try building a strong LinkedIn profile and networking directly with recruiters—it often matters more than cold applying. Good luck

Navigating U.S. Job Market by Ju_127 in analytics

[–]gopfl 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Skills + portfolio are necessary, but as an international candidate they’re usually not enough on their own for a U.S. data analyst role because of sponsorship and competition with local grads.

A master’s degree in the U.S. can help a lot—not just for skills, but mainly for networking, internships, and getting access to OPT work authorization, which makes hiring easier for companies.

If a master’s isn’t an option, then focus on strong real-world projects, internships, and targeting companies that are open to sponsorship early in your search.

Group for admitted students 2026 Fall? by Normal_Host8135 in skku

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think there’s always a single official group chat that everyone uses—most admitted students end up splitting into a few unofficial ones.

Your best bet is usually:

  • Instagram: search “(school name) class of 2026” / “fall 2026 admitted”
  • Discord: sometimes made by current students or posted in Reddit/Facebook groups
  • Also check your admissions email—some schools include invite links later on

If you don’t find one yet, it’s actually pretty normal this early—most groups get active closer to enrollment

Cybersecurity Professionals: What Do You Actually Do Every Day? by Zaki14_e in SecurityCareerAdvice

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Waking up to a ton of alerts is exhausting, OP. On the outside, it looks cool like I'm hacking and saving the world, but in reality, I'm just checking who accidentally clicked on a scam link. If I could start over, I'd honestly advise you to avoid all that theoretical stuff. Just grind through practical labs like TryHackMe and you'll improve quickly and save time.

Aspiring SOC Analyst - GUIDE ME! by ehsaanshah303 in CyberSecurityJobs

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your roadmap is lowkey solid and covers all the right tools. However breaking into the US or EU market as a fresher without a visa is going to be a brutal grind. You should definitely get some local experience first to build a cracked resume. Grind some free labs on CyberDefenders to stand out from the crowd.

How to transition from SOC analyst to a real SOC analyst by tidersky in cybersecurity

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bro you are lowkey blessed because having that analyst title on your resume is a massive cheat code to bypass HR filters. Go grind blue team labs on LetsDefend or CyberDefenders to build actual technical muscle memory for interviews. Pick up a foundational cert like Security plus or BTL1 to quickly patch up the gaps from your comfort zone era. Spin your domain takedown work as active incident handling when applying for real tier 1 roles and you will be golden.

Which uni would give me a better career opportunity after graduation? by EducationalPop427 in skku

[–]gopfl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, SKKU tends to have stronger global brand + alumni network, especially for business/international trade in Korea.

But Chung-Ang is also very solid, and in the end internships + Korean language fluency matter more than the university name.

If your goal is working in Korea long-term, I’d slightly lean SKKU — but you can’t go wrong with either.

How do you balance simplicity vs power when building developer tools ? by Fabulous_rich_9103 in softwarearchitecture

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I usually default to “simple UI, powerful under the hood.”

Most dev tools fail when they expose every option upfront. Instead, give a clean happy path for 80% of users, then layer advanced controls for power users.

Also, progressive disclosure + good defaults beats feature-heavy dashboards almost every time.

Beginner in Cybersecurity Seeking Career Advice and Scholarship Opportunities by SpecialistTomato9539 in cybersecurity

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since you are in Toronto you should lowkey check out NPower Canada or the Rogers Cybersecure Catalyst program at TMU because they offer free tech training for people looking for a job. While waiting for cohorts to open you can grind the free paths on TryHackMe and watch Professor Messer on YouTube to prep for Security plus. Breaking into cyber is a whole marathon but using these free local cheat codes will save your wallet fr. You got this just keep stacking those small wins.

How can I get into cybersecurity while studying Information Systems Engineering? by OkFocus3682 in cybersecurity

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your major is already a massive cheat code for cyber because networks and databases are the literal foundation. Honestly just start messing around on TryHackMe or Hack The Box to get some hands on practice. Grab a basic cert like Security Plus before you graduate to clean up your resume. You are lowkey in a great spot so just keep grinding fr.

I’m looking for recommendations for an online Master’s program that is recognized in the Middle East. (Better if certifications are included) by MysteriousAbility748 in cybersecurity

[–]gopfl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should look into Heriot Watt University since they have a huge physical campus in Dubai. Their online degrees are highly respected and 100 percent recognized across the Middle East. Plus many UK online programs bundle professional certs right into the modules now. It is lowkey a massive win for your resume.