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8 votes
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I'm about to start my first ever job as a Software Engineer. I'm terrified about losing it in a layoff.
I wanted to be a SWE ever since I was a young kid, and now after a undergrad + masters degree I was one of the first people in my batch to get a job. I just moved to a new country for my first job...
I wanted to be a SWE ever since I was a young kid, and now after a undergrad + masters degree I was one of the first people in my batch to get a job. I just moved to a new country for my first job and I love it here already, it just feels sad imagining if I do get laid off and I'd have to go back to where I was doing my Masters (and even that would be limited time visa before I have to go back to my very under-developed home country). I do want to just mentally let go of the anxiety and just focus on performing good at my job but with all the recent layoffs it feels hard, my own company laid off a lot of people last year and because of that their glassdoor rating is kindof bad. I've been spiralling a bit just reading the glassdoor reviews of people blaming the management of uprooting their lives. Other people who changed cities or countries and were left jobless and were trying to navigate in a extremely bureucratic environment.
I have a 6 month probation in which I can be laid off pretty quickly, I just need to learn to not worry about the stuff I can't control.
34 votes -
Starting out making music
I got my friend a midi beatpad a while ago and he's about to start using it to experiment with music. Does anyone have any tips I can pass on? Any help with software/equipment would be greatly...
I got my friend a midi beatpad a while ago and he's about to start using it to experiment with music. Does anyone have any tips I can pass on? Any help with software/equipment would be greatly appreciated.
10 votes -
Qalculate! - the ultimate desktop calculator
42 votes -
Are there any downsides to installing a newer (unsupported) macOS on an older MacBook Pro?
I happen to be in possession of a 2013 MacBook Pro that runs macOS 11 Big Sur and it's decent for that. Let's say I wanted to run the latest apps and macOS on it, things that don't work on Big...
I happen to be in possession of a 2013 MacBook Pro that runs macOS 11 Big Sur and it's decent for that.
Let's say I wanted to run the latest apps and macOS on it, things that don't work on Big Sur. I know there are unofficial ways to get those on the MacBook, OpenCore Legacy Patcher is what most articles recommend that I've seen.
Has anyone here tried that, and were there any big problems with that setup? Were there any broken apps or features after upgrading? Did everything become slower?
13 votes -
Using game controllers and keyboards for custom shortcuts
13 votes -
Windows 10 end of life could prompt torrent of e-waste as 240 million devices set for scrapheap
48 votes -
Tesla recalls two million US vehicles over Autopilot software issue
35 votes -
Via: Solving the 100 GB problem
56 votes -
GeoGuessr pros guess which Google Streetview images from around the world have been photoshopped
8 votes -
Does anyone have recommendations for physics simulation software? (E.g. Algodoo, Simulo, Physion, etc.)
I just got into watching physics simulation videos on youtube, stuff like marble races, marble battles, Multiply Or Release, and various other simulation content. Absolutely enthralling stuff for...
I just got into watching physics simulation videos on youtube, stuff like marble races, marble battles, Multiply Or Release, and various other simulation content. Absolutely enthralling stuff for someone like me who enjoys simply watching an environment do its thing.
I wanted to get into making my own sims/scenarios and was wondering if you all on tildes had some recommendations. I've been trying algodoo and it seems very nice but I've heard its mostly abandonware and theres some features I find lacking. So I wanted to look into options for my little tinkering. I understand that there may not be a perfect one but I'd love to have some options to try and tinker in, and my research has led me to lots of them that seem at first look to be purely for academic purposes.
To crystallize my desires into a definite paragraph:
I'm looking for physics sim software recommendations to make my own marble races and other simulated 'games'. I don't mind having to learn it from scratch(including scripting language). I dont care if its paid or free. Ease of use is great but Non-essential since it can likely be learned over time. Preferrably not abandonware, or at least feature-rich if development has been completed. and lastly, performance is definitely important since I'll likely be building some grand designs as I settle in.15 votes -
Watsonx: IBM's code assistant for turning COBOL into Java
11 votes -
Former Twitter employees give advice to companies who want to replace it
15 votes -
The spirit of “view source”
19 votes -
A coder considers the waning days of the craft
35 votes -
Microsoft’s Windows Hello fingerprint authentication has been bypassed
41 votes -
US Ninth Circuit judge allows social media lawsuit to proceed. Section 230 doesn't automatically protect against liability for platform design defects.
16 votes -
GM's Cruise recalling 950 driverless cars after pedestrian dragged in US crash
28 votes -
The beauty of finished software
25 votes -
NASA just sent a software update to a spacecraft twelve billion miles away
56 votes -
On GoGuardian and invasion of student privacy
24 votes -
This Austrian website exposes the truth about soaring food prices
44 votes -
Software development jobs for people that want to have a life outside of work
Hey there! Back when the pandemic was in full swing, I stumbled upon a comment that shared a link to a website with a title quite like this post. I can't quite recall if I saw the comment on...
Hey there! Back when the pandemic was in full swing, I stumbled upon a comment that shared a link to a website with a title quite like this post. I can't quite recall if I saw the comment on Reddit, the orange site, or even here. The site was quite basic, and claimed to have a list of jobs from companies that understood that its workers would like to have a life outside of work
The job market has changed a lot since the pandemic, but if any of you awesome folks happen to know where I can find a good part-time software development job, I'd be seriously grateful.
38 votes -
The surprisingly subtle ways Microsoft Word has changed the way we use language
38 votes -
The unreasonable effectiveness of plain text
21 votes -
Microsoft might want to be making Windows 12 a subscription OS, suggests leak
74 votes -
Jellyfin - A Call for Developers
78 votes -
Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro to get seven years of software updates
43 votes -
Automated translation programs cause problems with US asylum cases, make 'insane' mistakes
8 votes -
Android 14 adds native support for using smartphones as a webcams
15 votes -
Probe reveals previously secret Israeli spyware that infects targets via ads
36 votes -
MS Paint adds support for layers and PNG transparency
63 votes -
Today I learned this weird Windows keyboard shortcut opens LinkedIn
43 votes -
Should I use third party firewall or antivirus on Windows (or elsewhere)? Which one?
It's seems to have been common sense for a while now that Windows has good-enough security software that you don't need 3rd party tools but is it actually the case now? Is there anything to lose...
It's seems to have been common sense for a while now that Windows has good-enough security software that you don't need 3rd party tools but is it actually the case now? Is there anything to lose or gain from trusting 3rd party with this stuff?
20 votes -
Chromebooks will get updates for ten years
23 votes -
Local governments aren't businesses – so why are they force-fed business software?
31 votes -
Lucid dreamers transmit musical melodies from dreams to reality in real-time in groundbreaking study
22 votes -
A developer built a 'propaganda machine' using OpenAI tech to highlight the dangers of mass-produced AI disinformation
27 votes -
Windows 11 has made the “clean Windows install” an oxymoron
98 votes -
Leaked Wipeout source code leads to near-total rewrite and remaster
24 votes -
First look at AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 3
18 votes -
My secret to dating in San Francisco is a spreadsheet
24 votes -
Pyramid schemes are illegal. MLMs are not. What about the tech that powers them?
6 votes -
NVIDIA debuts AI-enhanced real-time ray tracing for games and apps with new DLSS 3.5
24 votes -
Tesla reportedly asked US highway safety officials to redact information about whether driver-assistance software was in use during crashes
35 votes -
Tips for buying + reading ebooks that are synced without using kindle/play books?
Hey! I’ve been trying lately to get rid of big platforms from my life. One part of it is that I usually buy ebooks/audiobooks from apple, Amazon or google, however I’m then also forced to use...
Hey! I’ve been trying lately to get rid of big platforms from my life. One part of it is that I usually buy ebooks/audiobooks from apple, Amazon or google, however I’m then also forced to use their reading app, which is a vendor lock-in I’m not comfortable with.
I know there are plenty of ebook readers out there, but I’m trying to find
- A store where I can buy ebooks that can be opened in a ebook reader of my choice.
- A way to then sync my progress between phone and laptop. I have nextcloud setup, so if I can make use of that then it’s perfect.
Anyone here got any tips?
22 votes -
darken (developer of SD Maid for Android) has had his developer account terminated after twelve years for "stalkerware policy" on Google Play despite having no actual stalking tools in the app
14 votes -
Windows Secure Time Seeding sometimes resets clocks months or years off the correct time
19 votes -
The XMPP newsletter June and July 2023
4 votes -
Many temptations of an open-source browser extension developer
73 votes