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spideymans

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spideymans
·3 yıl önce·discuss
Apple says kids younger than 13 shouldn't use the product. Another excuse for you :)
spideymans
·4 yıl önce·discuss
Gosh. I hate Apple’s right to repair BS, but to this day Apple remains the only consumer electronics company that has provided a consistently positive technical support experience for me.

It’s so hard to step out the Apple ecosystem when these other manufacturers have consistently screwed me over with repairs.

I’m specifically calling out Dell, Samsung and LG here. All were utterly terrible experiences.

Dell was the absolute worst though. They sold me a $1,700+ XPS notebook that months later had a non-functional trackpad, and they refused to do anything to rectify the situation. With an investment that large I need certainty that I can get support, and thus far Apple is the only PC OEM that has provided that.

If anyone can suggest non-Apple OEMs that at least provide a competitive support experience, I’m all ears.
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
VR and AR is still in its early adoption phase. It's too early to make any predictions about which VR/AR platforms or products will ultimately have mass market appeal. As an analogy, none of the biggest smartphone manufactures in 2004 really ended up mattering in the long run.
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
Unfortunate that they'll take Instagram down with them.
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
When you have a hammer, everything look like a nail. Technology is our hammer.
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
YouTube! My YouTube recommendations are always full of food stuff, so I just passively learn new foods/techniques as I browse the website.

I recommend you check out Ethan Chlebowsk's channel in particular. His recipes are pretty damn tasty, while remaining approachable to the average joe.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDq5v10l4wkV5-ZBIJJFbzQ
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
This is perhaps a root cause of the Dunning–Kruger effect.
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
The trick is to aggressively dive headfirst into a project, such that it becomes unconscionable for you to give up :)
spideymans
·5 yıl önce·discuss
Yup. Knowledge usually works like this.

When I first got into home cooking a few years ago, the learning process was painfully slow. It must've taken several attempts spread across a week just to learn how to make basic scrambled eggs the "proper" way. Now after a few years of experience, every ingredient I learn to work with seemingly unlocks a dozen more dishes that I can easily assemble. The rate of learning accelerates evermore.

Software is very much the same. And the cool thing about software is that the domain of knowledge is effectively infinite. No one person can ever run out of things to know in this field. You can only learn more and get even better.