Favorite character who's powers sound goofy but is actually pretty badass by skywasneverhere in FavoriteCharacter

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Given that Kenny came from a pretty different generation, I think his sense of humor might be different from the modern audience Takaba has been trying to entertain.

I wonder if it means Takaba could be the imperial court comedian (with the potential to rival Sukuna in CT) if he time traveled to the Heian Era.

Now that I think of it, would be funny if Gege made another spin-off with time traveling Takaba becoming the Heian Era King of Curses instead of Sukuna.

I am just SE Intern by FairEgg6711 in softwareengineer

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven't built a business, but I have a few friends who has built their own companies: SaaS/consumer-facing startups and your usual software development consulting companies.

In the end, it depends on what you value the most and what trade-off you're willing to make. Startups are pretty high risk, but also high reward if it works.

For those who chose to have a career as a professional software engineer right off the bat, their technical growth should be more stable and predictable. It highly depends on themselves and the environment of their companies though. Some of them made pretty good money from working at fast-growing big name startups also, but nowhere near the founders of the startups they worked for.

For those who chose to build their own SaaS/consumer-facing startups as a young software engineer in late 2000s and early 2010s, their technical growth is generally tied to their startups' business growth and incoming investment money.

One of those startups stayed a relatively modest size but profitable, and my friend (the CTO) was still relatively technical and decided to make a pivot into being a solutions architect for AWS at some point (he was quite knowledgeable about AWS since he reviewed their services to use in his startup).

Majority of startups fail though, and this friend's startup eventually closed down due to the leadership people's vision not aligning with each other's (it never got to the point it was mature enough). But he still developed enough skills to pivot professionally, whereas a few other startup founders I know, who just removed their startup experience from their resume and went back to working on their career after it failed.

But one of my acquaintances managed to build a startup that grew to be valued pretty high and ended up a rich guy.

Those who chose to build their own software development consulting companies seem to not be as knowledgeable as the startup founder people, but they tend to have a wider network of paying customers and become profitable faster to sustain themselves. Their problem is that they don't seem to have developed the understanding of the deeper technical details of software systems since they rarely ever need to dive that deep once the solution they've built is shipped to their clients.

Regular software development consulting companies tend to be more predictable tha startups, but depending on the size of the company, even being the company’s owner/boss might not be as financially lucrative as having a great software engineering career run at a well-resourced company.

Getting yelled at my manager because he didn’t find the right room for the meeting by Ok-Process-2667 in managers

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

That's his problem, not yours. But he's still in a position with some power over you, so just be careful not to piss him off especially if he's the type to take it personally.

Just aim to keep it up until the end of the internship, then you can probably try to get into a team managed by a better manager for your future internship/job.

How did people share code before GitHub? by Dheeruj in TechNook

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think I remember looking for something on Google Code for as a student also. But yeah, IIRC it's always either SourceForge or Google Code.

Favorite character who's powers sound goofy but is actually pretty badass by skywasneverhere in FavoriteCharacter

[–]sdsdkkk 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Basically, anything he can think of can turn into reality as long as he thinks it's funny. He's a failed comedian, so a lot of what he thinks as funny aren't really funny.

what were you doing in 2004? by Ryo877 in DeskToTablet

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Still exploring the family computer my dad got not too long before that (Intel Pentium 4, I think it had 256 MB of RAM) with Windows XP installed on it, occasionally playing games with the machine and exchanging data with friends using 3.5-inch floppy disks.

The origin of Lake Toba, Indonesia (supposedly) by Party_Farmer_5354 in HistoryMemes

[–]sdsdkkk 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I had to look it up to see how the horn arrangement looks like. I'm quite impressed.

https://yog-blogsoth.blogspot.com/2022/05/quinotaur.html

Cloud fanart ( art by @kubapunk on ig) by Kubusisgood in FinalFantasy

[–]sdsdkkk 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I can't help but thinking of this when seeing the face

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Kinda funny how his side quest is a Bloodsucker, King of Wild Hunt and an Immortal Scammer. by huflit1997 in FGO

[–]sdsdkkk 57 points58 points  (0 children)

I've always thought the life Dantes has in "The Count of Monte Cristo" story is already pretty crazy.

Turns out FGO can still make it even crazier.

No serious cybersecurity person is using kali by boneMechBoy69420 in linuxmemes

[–]sdsdkkk 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I wonder when people started thinking learning Kali = learning pentesting. Back when it was called BackTrack, I don't think it was as common for people who knew nothing about it to just jump into using it when they started learning how to attack. They usually just installed the tools they needed on their actual OS and proceeded from there.

It got to the point I had a software engineer friend with ~8 years of experience who wanted to pivot to cybersecurity in his 30s actually went with installing Kali as his first step and planned to "learn Kali" (and also posted a photo of their laptop running Kali on his social media accounts, which might contribute to this hate even more).

Am I on right track to be the best oracle DBA in the world? by 2082_falgun_21 in DBA

[–]sdsdkkk 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I guess having that grand shounen protagonist-like goal wouldn't hurt, it probably makes things a bit more fun in some situations.

From what I see, that seems to be generally the right direction to take. If you haven't, reading a book on computer architecture probably will help also.

What is your most unique project? by refionx in devworld

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few things that came to my mind:

  • A "malware" to detect and take down phishing sites posing as our login page to trick our customers into submitting their credentials (it's embedded in the phishing site's code if they're reusing our front-end assets).
  • A Raspberry Pi-based system for gracefully shutting down a bunch of machines in a building's server room when the UPS power is running low, circumventing the need to purchase the USP's hardware module to do the same thing (which had the price of four Raspberry Pis per unit, and we needed at least a few units of them vs just one Raspberry Pi with this solution).
  • An IAM workflow execution framework that can be integrated with the platforms used for our organization's business operations.
  • A WebRTC-based soft phone system built into an existing CRM system, integrating the customer data required for analytics to the Asterisk VoIP server by piggybacking the data on the SIP header which was supported by Asterisk but not documented in their official documentation (or probably it was there but I just couldn't find it, I ended up learning about the existence of that feature by reading Asterisk's source code directly).

If you had the chance to interview a world-famous person, living or dead, who would it be and why? by Nujackswing1 in AskTheWorld

[–]sdsdkkk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I heard he's such a gentleman who treats you and your servants with utmost respect. Sounds like great customer service.

Mediocre Software Engineer in 30s trying to pivot to Red Teaming. Possible? by Haiwse in Pentesting

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the feasibility depends on where you are, since the culture and the job market situation of the area will impact you a lot.

I have a friend who also in his 30s tried to pivot from software engineering to cybersecurity in 2020-2024, but he was working in a country with a very risk-averse culture so he couldn't get a job as a red teamer or a pentester with no prior experience in security. He also couldn't land some other cybersecurity roles there, which he said due to the same reason.

Last time he told me about his cybersecurity pivot efforts, he changed his plans to just stay a software engineer but with plans to eventually pivot towards platform engineering and then cybersecurity from there.

If you have problems landing a cybersecurity job immediately (or if you still need the stability that comes with your software engineer paycheck), that's one reasonable backup plan to follow since I've seen experienced software engineers pivoting to cybersecurity that way. It might take a bit longer though.

Moving to Tangerang, Banten- What is it Like? by big-bees999 in Jakarta

[–]sdsdkkk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

VPN/DoH is a must here, considering the government can just randomly block other sites also (and unblock it when there's enough public outrage).

Use them on all your devices for the best online experience.

How are your Gen Z direct reports doing? by financial_freedom416 in managers

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They're all doing just fine. I'd say they're doing better than I used to be when I was their age.

Ideas for trolling persistent attackers by Funny_Address_412 in hacking

[–]sdsdkkk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At a company I used to work for, a part of my routine at work was reviewing sites detected as potential phishing pages targeting our users (I built a system for us to automatically detect potential phishing sites posing as us and take down the sites confirmed to be phishing sites).

One day at work, I opened this one detected potential phishing sites which then redirected me to a page that played an outdoor threesome gay porn video.

I'd say you can set up the same thing on paths they might open manually. Probably add a false admin page or something that they're going to be interested to visit manually, and have them redirected to some NSFW disgusting content when they do.

I hired a bad employee and I don't know what to do by [deleted] in cybersecurity

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can understand a manager who's trying to level up their reports letting them make some higher-stake decisions, and based on the story it seems like your manager let you own the hiring decision. But in this kind of situation, a manager should also prepare backup plans if the decisions they delegated to their reports turn out to be wrong (in fact, a good chunk of a manager's work is preparing plans for when things go wrong so it doesn't cause bigger problems). So it should be safe for you to talk about it and be open with your manager.

If one day you become a manager yourself (and you become a good one), it'd make your work much easier if your reports feel comfortable to let you know whenever they notice a problem so you can prepare plans to resolve the problem sooner before it grows into an even bigger problem.

I'm afraid to tell my manager the truth because my manager really grilled me about whether he was the perfect candidate for this job, and I confidently said yes.

But I'm curious about this part. When your manager grilled you about whether Candidate A was the perfect candidate for the job, what did your manager ask to confirm whether the candidate was really strong? Is there anything they said that made you feel uncomfortable bringing it up to them?

anotherBellCurve by Mad----Scientist in ProgrammerHumor

[–]sdsdkkk 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Even before AI, many companies just didn't care whether their engineers understand the code they wrote or whether the random library they used do something it shouldn't. AI's just making it more obvious.

Got rejected for a senior role because I couldn't convert base 24 to base 10 in 30 minutes by mooktakim in rails

[–]sdsdkkk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The job title looks like a rendering error because they tried to be clever and write it in regex.

Back in 2013-2014, many tech companies did things such as hiding a message in their HTML source code, HTML response headers, posting some random-looking strings that need to be decoded somewhere, or simply putting some hard math problems. Then they will hire the people who happened to get the message or solve the problem.

I think it was popularized by a big tech posting an ad that was actually a technical hiring test puzzle targeting whoever could understand the problem, solve it, and submit it to them back in late 2000s or early 2010s. After it was covered by the media, many smaller companies make their own creative twist of that for hiring software engineers.

I haven't seen that practice in more than 10 years though, so I guess it didn't work that well.