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It's not perfect, but it's miles (or kilometers if you prefer) better than other communities out there online for the most part.
Primadonnas in tech are a dime a dozen, and they haunt a lot of places online, not just the workplace.
I recently ran into some on a discord server. They are so tiresome. I told them in my experience the real talent helps other people get good, and the punters waste everyone's time talking trash.
It shouldn't bother me, but what does bother me about it is some people are so desperate to feel like they're better than other people that they can't even play well with others for any length of time. Get some therapy.
I've seen it here, but it's nowhere near as bad as I've found elsewhere. Thanks to the regular contributors here who make this a positive place to be rather than turning everything into a d*** measuring contest.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
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honey the codewitch wrote: some therapy
It seems in your case it works perfectly
However pay attention to the small prints - next session is a paid one!
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
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ditto
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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A wise man knows certain things, a fool knows everything.
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If you go back a decade or more, I thought back then that the Q&A was quite toxic. IIRC some new guidelines were posted and enforced in order to make it a more pleasant experience for beginners.
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I'm glad I missed that. I visited a decade ago but on a different account that mysteriously stopped working on me, but also I just lurked and didn't really visit Q&A.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
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True. And as for the Soapbox...
Personally, I liked having a place where I could rant with (mostly) intelligent people, but I understand why the hamsters decided to remove it.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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I still think Q&A is just a temporary thingy
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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And you are also a big part of making this community a great place!
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I too am grateful for this place for the same reasons.
What still amazes me is how it retains it's friendly culture still, mostly anyway.
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honey the codewitch wrote: I've seen it here, but it's nowhere near as bad as I've found elsewhere.
I remember very long ago on a UsetNet forum where the author of one book (and several later) on the technical subject would routinely attack anyone that asked a question that was remotely simple on the forum for that subject. He would respond not just with RTFM but with often quite a bit of ire directed at the poster.
Just surprised me that despite how good his books were at teaching that apparently actually answering questions (or just skipping the question) seemed beyond him.
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Quote: I'm grateful for this place. i read this as "I'm grateful for the people who create this place."
without critical intention: here, you found a place you could redefine a forum, and become a "star."
more power to you !
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
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Yes, that is what I mean, when I say "this place" - I mean "this community", not just "this website"
It is the people here who make the difference.
Regardless of me. I'm glad I can come into this place, ask a question, share a thought, post an article, and for the most part, it's a positive experience.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
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well, you altered my initial perceptions of you and your behavior, in the context of seeing/realizing the entire gestalt of the lounge was drifting into more trivia, less liveliness
if you teach me, you are my mentor,
if you challenge me, you may catalyze my transformation,
if you point out my mistakes, you are my teacher.
going forward, i keep thinking you and/or Marc Clinton could conjure a singularity that could give C# .NET highly compressed generic DSL creation tools, or decision table tools. ... yeah, i like to think of work other people could do: the vice of presumption!
cheers, bill
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
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Hitting the proverbial nail on the head!!
I left such a community a few years back (one of the largest, now going through a moderator strike - aghumm ) because of the 'victimization', 'mine is longer than yours' and plain out 'arrogance' where learning/teaching became a thing of the past and a 'I am the boss, do what I say' attitude ruled the day.
Thank you CP for having us, we are not perfect either, most of us that is , but the communal interaction and comradery is definitely something to write home about!
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This place is fantastic, but I'm trying to get my head around anyone trying to go mano a mano with the likes of you. Some of your posts are just intimidatingly complex.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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I am in total agreement with your statement on all points. I recently got certified (PMP) as a Project Manager. I did well on the 180 question certification test, however there is supposedly a 1st time failure rate of up to 60% on the 210 test. I prepared diligently for the test and am happy to share my study/prep techniques. The PMP core values are built on responsibility, respect, honesty, and fairness. These values for me also mean helping out those around me that I interact with. This community has been awesome and thankfully I've seen very little condescending self-righteousness on here. I love it! Great post. 
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Me too!
I'm 80 years old and after being involved with computers
for some 40 years I don't program anymore...but I read
this newsletter every day!
73
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VE2 wrote: I'm 80 years old and after being involved with computers
for some 40 years I don't program anymore
I'm reading this (catching up with old threads), and thinking to myself, man, the stories this guy must have.
I'm 51 and have nothing but a tremendous amount of respect for those who came before me. I don't remember seeing your name much in the lounge, so I'll say this: I encourage you to share your thoughts whenever you think you have something to contribute to a thread (or start new ones altogether). I'm sure you have some pearls of wisdom that you simply don't think of as such.
We'll deal with any "ok boomer" type of response. They tend not to get very far. 
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Thank you for your kind comments!
I've seen quite a few changes along the way - from a walk-in Cray computer that filled a whole floor to my latest I just got today, a mini i9 that fits in my hand!
73
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I remember hearing of a few Cray models that were still being produced when I was just starting - I never had the pleasure of seeing such a beast in person however.
As for the mini i9...these days I rather like the Intel NUC and similar...and although Intel announced not too long ago they were getting out of that market, some of their competitors are still going strong - I own 3 Beelink systems, and a relative bought a pair, to replace an office computer and home one. I'm not aware they have any i9-based ones - if you have a link, please share.
Still, it's pretty amazing that you can replace a desktop or tower with something that can be mounted behind the monitor and otherwise completely hidden.
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Nice. I have 3 cheap Beelinks, but never splurged for an expensive CPU in that form factor.
My first question would be, how hot does it run, and how noisy does the fan get?
I'd love to replace my full-sized VM host tower with 64GB RAM. Either I'll get another tower with 128GB, or a pair of smaller form-factor machines with 64GB each. But if the price of each is the same as a single tower...I'm afraid the tower will win out.
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The fan is very quiet, I have to look closely to confirm
that it is indeed on. My apartment is often at 80 deg these days
and it does get warm to the touch. So far no issues that I know of.
73
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Good observation. I love helping teach others what I know, and I like learning from others.
Where I draw the line, and give up trying to share what I know, is when the person doesn’t want to learn or has an attitude similar to “OK, Boomer.”
When I was young in the software development industry, I learned from older coworkers. Some of them were old, grumpy, WWII farts, but I learned to look beyond that, show respect, listen, learn, and build on that. I excelled in my work then and now because of that. They are dead now, but what they taught me lives on in my work, adapted for today’s newer technologies.
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