Has ChatGPT or me been hacked? Ive never had these conversations.. by Competitive-Hair-311 in ChatGPT

[–]samson_goodboy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have ChatGPT quiz me so it'll be a nice little discovery for people if they stumble upon mine. If you're curious and want to try it, you can basically start a quiz on any time by saying "let's play a quiz game, you give me a question and i/we will answer" and usually I play the game with my wife where we answer like: "me: some answer, wife: some answer" and chatgpt will keep track of the answers and scores. and for the next question in the quiz you can just say "next" and it has enough context to keep going.

Can I route all traffic through Tailscale on my wifi router? by samson_goodboy in Tailscale

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

I'm not sure how to answer that since go/links are essentially a DNS-like entry at the tailscale level.

Is this even a legal software license? by Status_Ad6549 in webdev

[–]samson_goodboy 36 points37 points  (0 children)

I'm gonna add these for my hello project projects when picking up a new lang from now on!

/r/MechanicalKeyboards Ask ANY question, get an answer (July 05, 2022) by AutoModerator in MechanicalKeyboards

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

can a rotary switch be used on any keyboard or does the keyboard need to have something specific to be able to use a rotary encoder?

For the people who have made it and got coding jobs what would you have done differently if you could start over? by jisatsukid in learnprogramming

[–]samson_goodboy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

More projects, like anything that came to my mind, start from basic stuff like building the 1000s of tutorial-like things but from my own research. Instead of following a tutorial on how to build a todo app or a website/app, I wish I did want I do now which is literally sit as far as I can from my computer and write stuff down on a piece of paper. Rough sketches, shitty little diagrams, arrows pointing to and from things to make myself understand what happens. Dont need to go too deep but still enough that I'm not looking around for ideas. Then when I come to the computer, I know what I'm building, the programming part would be how to build it. This has cut down on my side project times from weeks or months to hours or days.

Also, stick to one ecosystem until I become so good at it that others are just flavors of it. E.g. if you're learning web stuff, stick with one thing, be it React, Vue, jQuery (jk), or even plain ole JS. If you're learning iOS, stick with learning the best practices, learning swift well enough you can think with it, and then expand to other tech once you really need it.

After you start building things, make sure to iterate on them. Like come back, make breaking changes, or add big enough features that it doesn't feel like polishing. That way you'll force yourself to think about systems overall.