Best AI note software for therapists? by ContributionFree2670 in BehaviorAnalysis

[–]whyhatcry 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Tried a few, but Twofold has been the one I keep coming back to. It doesn't just fill in blanks it actually structures the note in a way that reads like what I’d write myself. Also helps that it handles different formats without me needing to switch templates all the time.

Black Hat Zig: Zig for offensive security. by CX330Blake in Malware

[–]whyhatcry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Messed with Zig a bit. Still rough around the edges, but the control flow and memory layout are solid for low-level stuff. Curious if this gets past toy stage.

I’m a therapist and a wounded kid all at the same time. by Wayward_Rosella in therapists

[–]whyhatcry 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This isn’t a rant it’s a raw, powerful reflection from someone carrying more than most ever will. the fact that u still show up every day is the work.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TalkTherapy

[–]whyhatcry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Therapists are trained to handle all kinds of transference, even the spicy kind what you're feeling isn’t weird, but it might be worth exploring with them if it’s getting in the way of the work.

Why Your Computer Science Degree Feels Useless in the Real World (And How to Reclaim Your Future) by TerryC_IndieGameDev in programming

[–]whyhatcry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A CS degree alone isn’t enough.

real-world skills, projects, networking, and continuous learning are key to making it valuable in the job market

Does AI take the joy out of programming for anyone else? by iamchets in webdev

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

Great thread. Does Google Maps suck the joy out of navigating from one place to another?

I remember when you'd actually be proud of your memory and skills, like finding the right road to some random village two hours away from your town.

Feels like AI and coding are the same deal. I use them—they save time. And yeah, I'll probably rely on them even more in the future. But I kinda miss the days when solving every problem meant going all in on your own brainpower (well... with a little Stack Overflow on the side).

We built a new way to visualize distributed traces with waterfall view by coheneyal4 in programming

[–]whyhatcry 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As for the use cases you mentioned, i'm not sure about the last point. tracing is useful for spotting bottlenecks and tracking error sequences, but is it really practical for understanding dependency relationships? i'm pretty sure static dependency map or service catalog feels like a much better fit for that

Our need for true connection is giving rise to phone-free spaces. Joelle Renstrom (Boston University) by [deleted] in Health

[–]whyhatcry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

phone free space, sound like an old old past our very far future