[-] Arigion@feddit.de 41 points 3 months ago

Not very intimidating, as long as they keep on fucking.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 24 points 3 months ago

Hättest Du Stress am Arbeitsplatz hättest Du keine Zeit für einen Workshop. Früher, da hatten wir noch richtigen Stress. Und heute? Was wird verlangt? Zwei Seiten auf einmal umzublättern? 😉

8
submitted 4 months ago by Arigion@feddit.de to c/music@lemmy.world

RATATATA

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 65 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

What an odd name for a movie studio. No wonder they shortened it.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 116 points 10 months ago

As a politician I can assure you that if you vote for me I will put into law that volcanoes will be forbidden to erupt in our wonderful country.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 22 points 10 months ago

In short: it's always like this, sometimes more, sometimes less. And guess what: it's the main part of the job. As a developer you have to understand what the customer (your boss) needs (sometimes not what they say they want) and to figure out how to do that by yourself. It's nice to have colleagues you can ask, but it's like on stackoverflow. The accepted answer is not necessarily the right or good one. Often you have to work with bad documented legacy artifacts (code, api) and figure out what they do. Also the tech changes, you have to constantly keep up with changes and what was great years ago may now be outdated. My advice:

  • Do not start coding until you are sure you understood what is to be done.
  • if there is no user story to describe the task write it yourself
  • write good tests for your code. It's an art. While thinking about corner cases you often find questions you did not think about at first
  • if you don't know how to do it ask people around you, browse the web, read books. Develop the skills to figure stuff out. Most of the time noone knows the correct answer. It's your job to find it.
  • do code reviews with others, usually both benefit from it
  • write clean code

If you don't like your working environment then change it. Especially when you think you can't learn anything new there or it is no fun to work there. Go to meetings in your area (meetup or so) or online to meet other developers and ask them about their job. You get a feeling about what is considered a good job in your area. Good developers will always find a good job. Be one of them. As long as you think you're a god who can code anything, that's probably not the case. ;-) The best you can achieve is to be an expert in a very narrow field and to be good in some others.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 25 points 11 months ago

I found Waldo.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 37 points 1 year ago

Educational. The evolution of Diggy Diggy hole: https://youtu.be/sI_PxGu7nZk?si=1QllVekmnrLI6SDH

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 109 points 1 year ago

It's illegal in the EU, so probably not there.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 32 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here you go: https://youtu.be/FIRT7lf8byw

Disclaimer: That guy was lucky. Don't try this.

184

A blue rubberduck with an Australian flag and the text Australia printed on it, positioned on a white cup

2
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Arigion@feddit.de to c/baldurs_gate_3@lemmy.world

I always wanted to play D&D and/or a crpg and now I see the hype about BG3, but when I watch streams and let's plays I don't understand most of the jargon.

  1. So how beginner friendly is it?
  2. Are there good tutorials?
  3. Are there difficulty levels, like less mechanics for beginners? I found the UI a bit overwhelming.
  4. How frustrating is it if you don't understand the mechanics at first?
  5. How long does it take to learn the rules? How complex are they? Do I need to remember stuff like: oh I can only cast this if the day of the month is a prime and the mother of the target was born under the sign of zock or can I just happily nuke everything with fireballs?
  6. I have only time to play on weekends. Is it easy to get back into the game or do I need to remember most of the past story to enjoy it? So is it casual player friendly?

Thanks.

87

I think this video needs far more views.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 51 points 1 year ago

You can book this as a service for only $499/$999 per month from a dodgy website with no company adress but bold claims about time savings. Lol. Source: https://applybyapi.com/#pricing

But the best thing is: you can't send your open jobs by API. You need to use a rich text editor:

Post your job Upload your logo and use our easy rich text editor to make your posting shine. Unlimited job postings are included with every plan.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 222 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here's an article about it: https://dev.to/maggiecodes_/how-i-applied-to-a-tech-job-using-a-post-request-193d

The thing that annoys me is the response. It should return status 201 created and the id of the new resource for future delete/update operations. Instead it returns 200 ok and some clear text. Wouldn't want to work with such an API.

[-] Arigion@feddit.de 33 points 1 year ago

Shattered pixel dungeon

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Arigion

joined 1 year ago