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So I decided to go back to school last year, and here I am, studying for computer science. I actually moved to a completely different city, left a great full time desk job, and moved back into an apartment, basically uprooting everything. I'll write more about my life experiences as time goes on, but for the time being, I'm planning, currently, just to get my bachelors and get a job, but the idea of getting a masters sounds good too. And I'm enjoying the college life a little, even though I'm a little older than most juniors. (Not by a ton. Not by too much. But maybe a tad. )
These days it's easy to get your feet wet and get your foot in the door without one. BUT, 1. With the degree, you get the experience of being in college and having the experience of a lifetime while you're at it.
2, you have every opportunity under the sun to make great connections without having to fight an uphill battle.
3, you have less to figure out on your own. As a part of your studies, you will learn advanced coding in advanced languages, various algorithms, how to write great code, etc. And it will force you out of your comfort zone and teach you many things you might not have brought on to yourself.
And, 4, it looks great to employers, even if you get a job outside of the field.
I'm not too terribly far off from graduating and I'm already beyond excited, and glad I made the decision to go back to school. What are your thoughts on getting a degree in the field?
As you've probably noticed, and as I'm excited to bring to you, we have our updated look and feel as of today! I've spent the last couple of weeks trying to unearth my hiatus and uncover the vaults of some CSS and HTML knowledge. Rather than do a massive update, I'm having a beta period where we update the site as we go during April.
During March, some of the things that were added/updated include:
New look and feel (based on the old one with some improvements and brighter colors)
Bug fixes on the forum index related to the most recent post.
New emojis (Click on "get more" in the post editor)
New sidebar with latest posts, today's top poster, quotes from the community, etc.
The sidebar, as requested before, can be disabled from the user control panel if you have a smaller monitor! Go to user CP -> edit options (on the side panel), and there will be a "show side boxes" check box.
Hope everyone enjoys what has come so far! What do you guys think?
I am creating a new thread , to give the heads up out there in our community, for any feedback, ideas, and suggestions to improve the site, and the look of the site in any way possible ?
Never touched Python a day in my life before this semester. Been learning it for classes, and I think I already like it a lot better than most other languages I've tried. It is worlds easier than C/C++, a lot easier and cleaner than Java (disclaimer: coming from a novice Java programmer, but I did find Python a lot easier to learn), and, well, worlds cleaner (albeit a tad bit harder) than PHP.
And PHP has its limitations and its strengths. It is so different from every other programming language that it's not even funny. Well, it looks like C almost. But the nice thing about PHP is it really doesn't complain about very much when it comes to your code. It makes it easy to jump into, and unfortunately, makes it easy for people to make simple mistakes when they are writing their code (using variables that don't exist in ways that aren't intended, or having habits that might lead to poor security practices, etc.)
Python takes the ease of PHP almost, makes the code a tad bit cleaner (less brackets, forced indentation, etc.), adds a lot of great libraries that are clean and concise, and perhaps a little easier to get a handle on than Java, and, well, Python complains a tad bit more than PHP I've noticed. Not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing. But in Python, you can't just use a variable out of nowhere or index into an array where there is no index declared. Unlike PHP, you'll get an error, not just a warning. And if you try to cast something to an int when it can't be casted, you'll get an error and kill your program. In other words, you'll probably land more errors, but if your program works, you're less likely to have bugs of functionality and it's more likely to work as expected.
Overall, I almost want to to do my web development in Python now.
That being said, still a relatively new Python coder and I have a ways to go before I've mastered it. Anyone else here have any experience with it?
Because I'm fairly certain I'm tackling Java next.
It's official, as of early wednesday morning (GMT), one of the greatest minds of our time Steven hawking died at 76 years old.
suffering from Motor Neuron Disease he was given 2 years to live back in 1963, here we are in 2018 and he finally died of old age.
the man is well known both for his theories of cosmology and physics as well as his lectures and efforts to educate the masses.
he will be missed, one of the greatest minds of several generations is now gone.
I, hereby, shall rant about the difficulties of changing oil on my 2007 Jetta.
Love this car to death, but the time for an oil change had come. It's an $130 oil change, no idea why really, but it is. Takes six quarts of synthetic oil, which costs me around $30 plus the filter, which is maybe $5 or so. Needless to say, I save a lot of money just doing it myself every 7,500 miles or so.
Last time I tried to get it changed, however, the oil filter, I swear, was on so tight it was absolutely impossible to remove after hours or work and a few different oil filter wrenches that had costed me more than the oil itself. It was a little frustrating, and I figured, eventually, that perhaps I could get away with just changing the oil itself and forgetting the filter.
So that being said, this time around, the filter really kinda needed to be changed. It had been 15K miles, and not changing your filter after that long is a terrible idea for the quality of the oil that you're running in your engine, and is altogether not good for the longevity of its internal parts by any means.
It took wedging screwdrivers in and out of the wrench tool, a lot of tape, three different wrench socket tools and two ratchets, a steel bar that was several feet long as a lever, and hours of arm labor to finally break it loose. The feeling of finally getting that filter off was worth its weight in gold.
And of course, I was presented with a clogged filter. Figures that it probably hadn't been changed in who knows how long. And additionally, it's doubtful the people that changed the oil before I bought the car bothered to change it. If they did, shame on them for tightening it as much as they did.
Hence, why I always do my own maintenance on my vehicles. I find it hard to trust anyone else.
Since were entering the heart of golf season, i thought i would start another golf thread..
So Right now im watching the final round of this WGC Tourney out in Mexico and 47 year old Phil Mickelson has a 1 shot lead over a host of other players..
i think we can still mention Tiger woods in this thread but just not to make him the main topic of it
Alright so I'm going to keep this simple because the RGB scart mod is probably the easiest way to get the best picture from anything before 1998 but after around 1985 or so
so 3rd through 5th gen, 2nd and 1st gen were coax only and 6th gen on wards has decent high quality cables for it.
a good example of the difference can be seen in this video
right away you'll probably notice the image is clearer, the colors are more accurate, sharper, and most notably, that rainbow effect is gone.
1 Video cable for said console. (this is different for every console so do your research.)
1 soldering iron.
Some lead free rosin core solder.
a good length of wire that you don't mind chopping up. (Old IDE cables are a popular choice but you can get multiple feet of cable in various colors cheaply through amazon.)
Some Capacitors. (get the right one for the right cable mod, this will determine the quality of the image.)
at least 1 Resistor, usually 180 ohm but check the diagram first.
Heat shrink cable sheathe/tubing - for protecting your work and making it look nice and neat.
An eXacto knife/box knife. (this is also important, you are going to need to open the casing around the connector that plugs into your console of choice.)
Patience
I can't tell you how many times I messed up due to impatience, always double and triple check your solder joints.
finally if you don't already have one a multi-meter is super handy, you can use it to reverse engineer what wires go to what pin on the Console specific video cable.
Step One, Take that knife and carefully travel along the part where the case is closed on either end opening the plastic shell around the connector, you can skip this step if you have a multi-meter and feel like reverse-engineering your cable.
Step Two, De-Solder or make note which wires go to which pins, your choice, I will be posting the diagrams at the end.
Step Three, Slide your heat shrink tubing/Sheath along the cable making sure to leave the ends exposed where they go into the connector casings it'll be difficult to do this after you solder both ends on
Step Four, If you have any capacitors or resistors Solder them to the the correct wires/Scart pins now so that you don't forget later, remember, this will most likely determine if you are successful or not, on some consoles those resistors can be the difference between a dark faded/washed out image and a clear one.
Step Five, Solder your wires to the correct pins, if you've soldered any capacitors and or resistors to the pins connect the wires to the other "leg" of them.
Step Six, Make sure to wire your grounds correctly, if you don't properly ground your cable you'll get a lot of audio and video noise and distortion.
Step Seven, Test your cable, better to test it now and not when you have to take the whole thing.
Step Eight, If your test was successful then attach the casings to the ends of your cable, you're done, congrats, you have an RGB cable for "insert console here"
Q&A: if you've gotten this far then good but I'm sure you're wondering why SCART?
well... let's be honest it's mostly because SCART is the standard for RGB on everything from a sega master system to a SNES to an atari Jaguar.
there's even SCART for the original XBOX and PS2... though those look just as good through component cables so it's sorta pointless.
plus these days you can get SCART to HDMI upscaler's for around $30 allowing you to play your classic game consoles in glorious 1080P resolution at 60 frames per second, no stretching or fuzzy image, you can blame the yellow composite cable for that.
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Diagrams:
Note on these diagrams the yellow squares are Resistors and the double lines are capacitors.
Resistors are measured in Ohms
Capacitors in Micro Farads
Diagrams Provided by Evil Tim over at optusnet.com.au
there are other setups but I'll leave that to another post as most other consoles either can use HDMI, component, or require actual modding of the game console.