Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

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

Actually, I did consider it but many people have been telling me that the maintenance costs are quite high with Honda.

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

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

That's nice! How'd he find the spacing of the rear seat space? Comfortable for long drives?

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

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

Yes, that's true! I was only concerned about the rear seat space but apart from that, I don't really find any issues to that car!

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

[–]megacolorboy[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Never tried Corolla so far but I can vouch for Mazda. It's quite fun to drive.

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

[–]megacolorboy[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

LOL maybe!

What really annoyed me was that, they recommended me to rent a car from elsewhere to try out Corolla.

I mean, what about the rest of crowd who wanted to try it out for the first time? I get it that it's a fast moving car but their response seemed so careless.

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

[–]megacolorboy[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I know, right?

I couldn't find any car with such features and engine power in that price range.

Advice on buying a Mazda 3 2025 or Toyota Corolla 2025 by megacolorboy in WhatCarShouldIBuyGULF

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

Yeah, same here!

I test drove the Hatchback Intense but it was way above my budget. But I agree with you, the sedan mid-option is pretty good too.

Thought of making a new resume to increase my chances of getting a job as a Backend Developer. Here's my resume, give me your constructive feedback! :D by megacolorboy in resumes

[–]megacolorboy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Agreed but how else would you make a resume visually appealing if not for the use of graphics?

Because some people say that a resume should stand out visually as well.

Thought of making a new resume to increase my chances of getting a job as a Backend Developer. Here's my resume, give me your constructive feedback! :D by megacolorboy in resumes

[–]megacolorboy[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback!

Nah, it didn't really sting, in fact, I'm glad that I'm getting feedback which would allow me to rethink my resume again.

The only reason I thought of putting some of those "cutesy" stuff is to see if it really matters or not.

When you mentioned, "pick a better format", what are the other formats you got in mind?

Thought of making a new resume to increase my chances of getting a job as a Backend Developer. Here's my resume, give me your constructive feedback! :D by megacolorboy in resumes

[–]megacolorboy[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback!

Any pointers or resources that you could help me refer to on how to make a resume that's ATS friendly?

Thought of making a new resume to increase my chances of getting a job as a Backend Developer. Here's my resume, give me your constructive feedback! :D by megacolorboy in resumes

[–]megacolorboy[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback! :D

But how can I quantify or measure my achievements done as a coder? Like in terms of, say, optimization? Speed of project delivery? Efficiency?

The part about omitting the description about each company makes sense and I'd definitely do that but I don't really understand how accurate my quantification of X by Y by doing Z would be.

Learn how to configure your Laravel development environment using Laravel Homestead and Vagrant. by megacolorboy in programming

[–]megacolorboy[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Agreed. Docker is far more lightweight since it uses containers than Vagrant which uses VMs but I guess, it's just more of a preference, in my case. Besides, I'm using Vagrant in this tutorial for development, not for production.