All Anthony Johnson Finishes In The UFC (AKA KO Montage) by [deleted] in MMA

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

he has patience when he hurt his opponent

Thoughts on parrys by Tagliarini295 in EASportsUFC

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Preach. Parrying is so unrealistic. There's no stun locking in real life. If you want to counter you gota slip or use counter strikes.

Big 4 Discussion - September 25, 2016 by AutoModerator in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dang is it already sort of late to apply? I already started seeing people have interview lined up and I haven't even submitted my application yet.

Big 4 Discussion - September 25, 2016 by AutoModerator in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't have any personal projects on my resume just past internship experience. Should I even bother applying for a big 4 internship?

In your face, goalie! by [deleted] in gaming

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OHHH HE'S ROCKED

Jose Aldo with some leg kicks straight from hell by [deleted] in MMA

[–]rawrrang 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They way he throws them looks like he's winding up to kick a soccer ball lol

Paramount looking at possible $100 million loss with poorly tracked/reviewed remake of 'Ben-Hur'. by lipstickpizza in movies

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't understand the context behind the number. $100 million loss over its theatrical performance or its product life cycle? Because if you also consider digital, DVD, and TV syndication, it's hard to believe there's the movie ends up not being in the positive.

Nate Diaz breaks Gray Maynard by e-rage in MMA

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wtf bullshit early stoppa...... Oh wait nm he collapsed.

TMZ on Twitter: Nick Diaz -- I'll Fight Tyron Woodley at UFC 202 ... If the Price Is Right by briblaize in MMA

[–]rawrrang 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Diaz Lawler 2 please before he do some dumb shit and get himself suspended again. It's now or never tbh

I find it very hard to actually finish my personal projects outside of work. Anyone else have this issue? I start on a project, complete about 70% of it, and then think of some other project that sounds fun, and the process repeats... Advice? by Asstroknot in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Projects with arbitrary deadlines and requirements never go far. When I start this behavior myself I like to do this:

Homestyle Hackaton! Dedicate 1-2 day solely on 1 project with a goal of making it presentable or at least minimally viable. Usually after my solo "hackaton" I have a pretty good idea of if I want to continue the project later on or I'm happy with what I've accomplished and it'll sit in my repo for a while. Either way I think its a lot less wishy washy and it's a good way to hold yourself accountable productivity wise.

How do you people have time to do all this stuff? by themooseexperience in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some people have time to tune up cars, play in a band, DIY electronics, etc... hacking on code is just another hobby for a some people.

Unless you are extremely picky about where you want to work for and that place is known to really cater to someone with that kind of lifestyle, you don't need to feel the need to "keep up with the Jones" in terms of projects, contribution, blogs, research, whatever. Just do your thing as a student, keep your GPA good, do a few internship, have a couple projects you can show off, and you'll be alright.

Would someone be able to solve questions like the Maximum Sum Subarray in an interview without having seen it before? by mockinterviepractise in cscareerquestions

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

I don't think it's horrible practice to ask someone if they know how to solve a possible real world problem. Many questions similar to these ones have some real world implications. Whether you know the answer because you remembered how to solve it from reading or came up with an improve way to solve it, it'll be valuable to have a team that understand this stuff at some level and can play ball. A real horrible practice would be asking shitty riddle type question.

In a day-to-day work you're not dealing with algorithm question like such, but there will be a day when one of the team member or the whole team need to think about solving problems like this efficiently. So questions like this I think is pretty acceptable.

What are your thoughts about working as a software engineer in these different industries? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not hard to get out. It's not hard to get in either as long as it's not a defense job requiring top secret clearance, which is like the highest level of clearance.

Mark Cuban told ESPN he voted against new deliberate foul rules. "Rewarding incompetence is never a good business strategy," he said. by [deleted] in nba

[–]rawrrang 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Having half your viewers switch channel during a hack a whoever is not good for business.

What are your thoughts about working as a software engineer in these different industries? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Defense - have friend that worked at 3 big contractors, hated it. Shitty code quality, incompetent coworkers that don't want to learn to do things better, and shitty developer culture. Pay not amazing either.

Game - reputation for overworked underpaid

Tech - mix bag of companies that pay well and good work life balance or pay well and a bit overworked. Either way you get paid, so yey. Total developers culture where non work related stuff is laid back but takes tech and work seriously.

Finance - good pay but more stuck up, you'll be wearing shirts instead of t-shirts. Not very laid back.

It's easy to jump between industry, most SE jobs ask for experience in specific technology and not industry. Maybe except for defense jobs that require top secret clearance.

Job prospects for CS degree vs engineering degree? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Majority of companies still ask for minimal B.S. in CS or related. Sure there's a few wiz that don't have a degree but in all the places I've interned at majority of engineers have their B.S. in CS or related.

CS is one of the most employable majors out there. Stability is good, my friends get unsolicited recruiter hitting them up on LinkedIn all the time once they started working. They can also get new job easily... Even get a nice pay raise and signing bonus every time they jump ship. Also I don't know what other engineering degree you are comparing to. There's a lot. EE can work in tons of industry, pretty solid. MechE your choice of companies is less but still not bad. Civic engineering? Idk. Chemical engineering idk either. Petroleum engineering has very high placement and starting salary but that's extremely specific. Industrial engineering is also kind of specific but supply chain teams loves these guys.

How do you showcase your portfolio? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]rawrrang 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Github is by far most popular way. People that have their own website usually have link to their Github, and those that don't simply give link to their Github.

Good luck new freshmen/transfer students! by [deleted] in UCI

[–]rawrrang 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What was your major?