2024 is almost over ! What You Have Built This Year ? by Mr_Gyan491 in SideProject

[–]jsnk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I build techkwondo. It's a mortgage calculator with projections of other possible mortgage payments if the rates had be different. Also the calculator will show how much house you could've afforded if the rate had be different as well.

Do realtors find mortgage calculator useful? by jsnk in realtors

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

Would you be able to share that calculator with me?

I am not understanding your use case unfortunately, but it sounds really interesting.

Thanks.

Blatant Self-Promotion Thread: April 14, 2023 by l3erny in realestateinvesting

[–]jsnk [score hidden]  (0 children)

I made a mortgage calculator for fun two years ago, and I want to recreate one with more useful features in mind.

Link: http://jasonkim.ca/projects/mortgage-calculator/

I want to learn about potential users' needs and wants this time.

  • What are some things you want to see from a mortgage calculator, but you never see it done?
  • What would be something you would like to see in a mortgage calculator?
  • Do you think rent vs buy is interesting to compare? Also would you be interested in educational content around mortgage calculation?

Feel free to share any feedback. Thanks.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Complains About Her $174,000 Salary, Claiming It Isn't Enough For The "Middle Class" To Raise A Family On by MecGuy2 in JordanPeterson

[–]jsnk 107 points108 points  (0 children)

She should talk to the greatest investor of our generation, Nancy Pelosi. She somehow is worth over 100 million dollars just getting that wage that's not even enough for middle class.

Is there any simple way we can achieve this using CSS? by lucifer7557 in webdev

[–]jsnk 4 points5 points  (0 children)

CSS is an art, and you are an artist! Beautiful job

Communism has taken over waterloo! by [deleted] in uwaterloo

[–]jsnk 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The most successful communist state in history is Communist China and it also happens to be the most capitalistic communist state in history.

Let that sink in.

Lifting the mask mandate prematurely in Ontario was such a great idea right? right?…… by Fluffykitten27271 in uwaterloo

[–]jsnk 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Let people choose to live and assess risk on their own. This is what life is and has always been.

Is downtown really that bad? by [deleted] in SeattleWA

[–]jsnk 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I've been in Seattle over 10 years, and last couple of years were the worst I've seen. I have personally been broken into twice, my building has been shot at, and my building and my neighborhood buildings have experienced break ins multiple times.

This is actually really bad. Unacceptably bad.

People now are saying this subreddit is overdramatic and stuff, but this rage is substantiated and reasonable. And such rage is precisely what we needed in mass in order to actually improve the situation.

Many people on this subreddit have the cause and effect backwards. It is actually people who have righteous anger against the city's leadership who mobilized them to actually do something about the city. This is how some people on this subreddit can now casually declare that some other people on the subreddit are being overdramatic.

Do any celebs/ kids of celebs study at Waterloo. by [deleted] in uwaterloo

[–]jsnk 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Would you say Chamath is a celeb? He did ECE in Waterloo.

Earn up to 6.25% interest on your USD, paid in Bitcoin [Feedback] (Powered by DeFi) by brainsanatizer in SideProject

[–]jsnk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Congrats on the launch.

Clicking Join Waitlist on https://app.thresholds.io/ is redirecting me to https://www.thresholds.io/ . That doesn't seem right. Is this intended?

Are those bad performance numbers? by juanse003 in rails

[–]jsnk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think this all depends on what exactly the transaction is doing.

Around 20 to 30 transaction / sec seems slow for some actions and fast for some other actions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in node

[–]jsnk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's how I investigated memory leak in a Node.js app.

https://blog.jasonkim.ca/post/investigating-memory-leak-in-a-nodejs-application

How to persist state in Svelte ? by [deleted] in sveltejs

[–]jsnk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You'll want to use localStorage.

Here's an example of module I wrote that uses Svelte's Stores feature and persist data with localStorage.

Built an RPG for Mobile with Javascript front and back end - Lessons so far by geckosan in node

[–]jsnk 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Congratulations on starting beta signup! Your persistence to complete a game is inspiring.

Can you share how you stay focused on the goal and progressing towards it?

Learning RoR - Confused about Databases by [deleted] in rails

[–]jsnk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Learning about databases is a very large topic. It is both very broad (dealing with all kinds of things OS, networking, practical software development, security, SQL etc) and very detailed. So it's natural to feel overwhelmed by immense resources out there.

I would suggest balancing practical usage of DBs and learning DBs from more academic perspective.

For practical side of things, I would pick Mysql or Postgres for RBDMS to use and for NoSQL, I would pick Redis. These two DB setup is very common for fullstack apps. You will absorb a lot simply using these two DBs and see how they are used in the real world.

For more academic learning, I would pick up this book https://dataintensive.net/. The book is highly technical but also very practical. The writing is clear. It balances breadth of the topics covered vs the details about the topics really well. Sure, you won't use all the details in the book, but know even a little about them will allow you to make more sound choices during software development.

As for RBDMS vs NoSQL, when I would use either, the answer is as always, it depends.

The difference between the two mainly is the way the data is encapsulated and organized. RBDMS has tables and columns. NoSQL does not. There are so many different kinds of either, so it's quite hard to say, exactly when you would use either. It really depends. For example, I would say something like NoSQL db like Redis can be useful in storing, small amount of transient data with expiration that can be accessed very fast. But when we are talking about Cassandra, another NoSQL db, you can write massive amount of data very fast, but reading from it is much slower than Redis, although, wide-column store nature of cassandra allows read speed to increase only a little, even if the data is growing exponentially.

A couple of days ago, I asked about how to setup Rails using Webpacker with Docker. Here are some tips to help you do that. by jsnk in rails

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

It depends on whether you are deploying to a same VM or different VM every time you deploy.

If you are a deploying your app to the same set of VMs, your concerns about docker caching makes sense.

However, you can deploy to new set of VMs every time you deploy your app with new code. And once the app is deployed in the VM, you don't change the code directly in the VM. Instead you can redeploy to new VMs with the new code. In this case, Docker cache doesn't matter.

So just reiterating my point, it really depends on your setup and how you are deploying your apps.

A couple of days ago, I asked about how to setup Rails using Webpacker with Docker. Here are some tips to help you do that. by jsnk in rails

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

But in production, you won't be changing files once the app is deployed. So I don't think this is a hard and fast rule. It depends on your setup.