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Posts
7
Comments
1,081
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • That's true. People shouldn't be discouraged financially from working. I haven't done I proper calculation of all cases of this and the total tax cost but for sure you could use the tax system to get the desired distribution.

  • I support it. It's an insanely expensive policy though and should be implemented carefully and be based on income. An example would be:

    • No income $1000 a month
    • Min wage $500 a month

    Combined with better tax policies that don't tax poor people. Health, education and other basic services should be almost free while having a strong social housing programme.

    This way nobody gets priced out of living and there's still plenty of incentive to get a job while having some funds to invest in hygiene and clothing to land the job.

    This amount and threshold should be increased in the future.

    I really support UBI since you can better model the demand curve with externalities instead of making things free while having it accessible to poor people. Free school might be too low of a cost when calculating benefits to the individual and society so giving people money to afford a heavily subsidised cost would allow for more accurate economics.

  • I don't think vigilante violence is a good idea but if some of the murders in the US are targeted at billionaires instead that's fine by me. If the system wasn't fucked this wouldn't have been news.

  • I have KDE Neon on my Laptop and Bazzite on my desktop/server but I want to switch it up a bit.

    I'd like to get a TuxedoOS laptop with specific hardware fix and I'm also thinking about EndeavourOS these days to try out for a couple of months.

    For the server I think I'd probably to just go for Ubuntu because it's piss easy to manage because of the experience I have with or just the Fedora KDE. I really like Bazzite though for all the batteries included.

    I prefer manufacturer Android on my phone but I hate it with a fiery passion. I have an uncommon Xiaomi phone and the memory management is abysmal where they kill activities almost instantly after they go away from view. I like it because the battery life is amazing. I'd prefer to use LineageOS but it's not supported on my phone.

  • Clean Code, in overly idealistic and speaks like it's the holy truth but ideas are generally good. Same with Clean architecture. The guy talks like it's the only way but in my experience it's just a collection of tricks you could do but maybe shouldn't because of time pressure. One off code with a single purpose doesn't have to be that clean and functions almost never have to be that small.

    Pragmatic programmer is also good and there are also more books on non-programming part as well. You could also ask ChatGPT since it's really good at exactly these questions.

    Still, no use reading this until you ran the gauntlet of building up basic programming skills :)

  • My journey went codecademy -> codingame -> quitting my job and going to university -> first job

    I went to University to get more problems to solve after grinding codingame and decided to overkill them and had fun while doing it. I remember Mars lander, it was really hard, hahaha.

  • Start my picking what you want to do with programming. Then do a couple of simple challenges in any language like advent of code and such in python just to get your feet wet and solve some problems.

    After that you should have the main building blocks and then you scale up into making a "thingy" sized project. I personally liked making games with progression like.

    1. Text adventure
    2. Tic tac toe
    3. Another text adventure but with battles and hit points.
    4. Tetris

    Then you can start learning separation of code into modules like "This is the game and this is just how it's shown" which applies to pretty much every application with a user interface.

    After that you have enough skill to learn anything and you can go about learning a specific skill or technology that you want to work with and you'll be at a skill level of a junior programmer.

    Advancing beyond that I'd recommend reading a couple of books (crazy I know) that go over best practices and why they exist. You use those guidelines and get better at working with larger amount of code and then you get to mid level. During this time you should also basic rules of thumb on how long each thing takes to run, both algorithm complexity and how http requests are usually the bottleneck.

    For senior level you'll need to gain a lot of experience and become a library of solutions and bug knowledge while also having a good grasp of tradeoffs. You'll need to know when to insulate yourself from change and when it's overkill to deliver the code in a timely manner while not sacrificing tomorrow.

    It's very hard to skip any step in my opinion but reading a couple of books really helped me advance through the junior phase quickly just by knowing what solutions are out there. Books are not as valuable when you don't have experience since it'll stick 10x better if you encountered the problem described in the book.

    To get started just pick anything and get your feet wet. Good luck!

  • I stand corrected, that's an excellent case of socialism working that was democratically elected in a multi party system. I didn't know one existed! Thanks for sharing. It also has some really good numbers for a state in India.

    Here's a paragraph from Wikipedia page on Kerala for everyone else that didn't know about it.

    Kerala has the lowest positive population growth rate in India, 3.44%; the highest Human Development Index (HDI), 0.784 in 2018 (0.712 in 2015); the highest literacy rate, 96.2% in the 2018 literacy survey conducted by the National Statistical Office, India;[11] the highest life expectancy, 77.3 years; and the highest sex ratio, 1,084 women per 1,000 men. Kerala is the least impoverished state in India according to NITI Aayog's Sustainable Development Goals dashboard and Reserve Bank of India's Handbook of Statistics on Indian Economy.[22][23] Kerala is the second-most urbanised major state in the country with 47.7% urban population according to the 2011 Census of India.[24] The state topped in the country to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals according to the annual report of NITI Aayog published in 2019.[25] The state has the highest media exposure in India with newspapers publishing in nine languages, mainly Malayalam and sometimes English. Hinduism is practised by more than half of the population, followed by Islam and Christianity.