Good point(s). Maybe it's because I'm neck deep in Assembly and I'm finally really understanding what is happening when I create a program. It's so much work and I've spent so much money to have a long-term career that is actually challenging and interesting to me.
I can see the merit in treating AI as another tool in the box.
So, I'm a CS student right now. Should graduate with a BS in May 2025. I'm thinking that I should push forward for a grad degree because I don't want to become a human prompt generator.
I'm a pretty big fan of icdiff. This utility allows you to compare two files to see what has been added or removed by using colorful fonts to highlight values.
Thank you! I'm very much into personalizing my tools. I've spent an embarrassing amount of time playing with Linux. I started to write my own configuration, but I quickly became lost in the lists of options. I wasn't sure what was really necessary or which plugin was doing what.
Everyone plays the game in whatever language they like and he critiques your code if you want him to. It's so much fun! More than that, it's a great way to learn while being social. We could do events in Discord with groups in a voice channel.
They offer courses supported by YouTube videos. They also offer certifications for subjects like JavaScript Algorithms and Data Structures, Backend Development and APIs, and Machine Learning with Python.
Thank you!