Skip Navigation

Posts
0
Comments
131
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Oh no, I didn't even know those existed

    Oh they're terrible

    Thanks I hate it

  • tbh GoDaddy looks sussy too if you didn't know better lol

  • I just want to have fun, no matter the length. I love Titanfall 2's campaign and it only takes a couple hours to complete, even shorter than most shooters. People complain that it's too short but I think that's its strength. But a lot of AAA games I've played just feel stretched and bloated like Assassin's Creed and Far Cry, where it's just not fun at all between all the tedious things I have to do.

  • Lemmy now: memes about how all the memes are this

  • Thanks for the advice! I'll certainly give it a try. And if there's one thing I appreciate here that I didn't get to have on Reddit, it's user interaction. I'd rarely ever hear back from a comment on Reddit, and if I did chances were it was someone with an attitude. People seem really nice here

  • I wasn't even aware this existed! This is really cool. Normally I've just stuck to a brand that I know works for me, but this is far better.

  • For how much web content is reliant on pretty much Chromium, it's no comparison to the old competing standards between browsers. It is somewhat frustrating still, but I'd much rather have what we do now than before.

  • I'm still having a hard time adjusting, to be honest. Granted much of reddit is full of reposts, even so there's still just a lot more content and interaction. I could and did spend all day on one or two subreddits, but here it's kind of checking in one a day and seeing maybe a few new posts. I don't have anything else though, so I'm just often left starving for content. But I just can't give spez the satisfaction of returning.

  • I think the modern paradigm of frameworks and libraries really makes things confusing, because you can learn every single bit of vanilla JS and then Angular is still like a different language, just like all the rest. I started teaching myself in 2005 so I did have the advantage of a bit of the old world of programming, but I also wasn't allowed to own a computer and I spent years and years on graphing calculators and notepads learning the basic principles of what is now second nature to me. There's lots of great options people have already mentioned, C# or Python both are pretty good, but pick one and stick to it. A few months of daily work on it will get you far enough to get a grasp, and a few years of it will get you started on a career. But just get started with it and keep at it, I promise you will get it!