I worked for a court and a judge asked me to make a website with a button that would show a green circle 95% of the time and a red circle 5% of the time. I didn't ask what it was used for.
Yes, I was always interested in computers and video games but never thought to try programming until looking at a list of careers and deciding to study CS.
The first language I learned was Java. It’s one of my least favorite languages now but I think it was good enough to learn the fundamentals.
Yes. It was the first web language I learned and I haven't had a reason to switch to something else. I tried learning nodeJS and django but I didn't like how much setup was required to get a page up.
I follow Smash Brothers Melee through Reddit, Twitch channels of top players, and a Discord server for local tournaments near me. I’m guessing you can do this for Fifa too.
I tried doing this a couple years ago. You should download the source and read the docs. If I remember correctly noobs are recommended to make improvements in drivers/staging. There are "TODO" files with things that need to be done. There is a good post about "wanting to contribute" that used to be at the top of the kernelnewbies IRC channel you can read.
I don't work for a tech company, but my job "requires" employees to use VMWare for everything. I try as hard as I can to avoid using the VDI because it is so slow.
I have to request for software to be installed, and our policy is to only install software on the VDI.
I'm not sure about emacs, but I don't think there is anything wrong with teaching vim to new programmers. I learned it along with Java in my first programming course. I think it should be presented as an option along with other editors, though.
From there you can block 3rd party scripts and frames. To save the rule you need to commit it in the "My rules" pane by clicking on the temporary rule you added.