Message from @windows96
Discord ID: 792544599523983470
Danng nice
Certificates are only good for a few years so don't want to jump the gun on it.
What are you doing with that many cores? Virtualization or pen testing?
Yeah I think my security + cert just expired this year. good for 3 years I think
Luckily I got out of govt defense contracting so I dont need to go through that god awful process again to get sec+
Lots of virtualization but also I'm working on next generation networking technology so I have to keep different virtual networks virtualized for different tests. Lots of the works requires me to publish large amounts of data to the virtual network which takes lots of compute and RAM which is why I have 64 GB of RAM.
ayy I just upgraded mine to 64gb as well
Just a i7 tho
No fancy rgbs
Dusty as hek
Much dust
Eventually my lab on campus should have a full rack of servers and 100 gb networking equipment for me to work off of but with COVID the campus is dragging their feet.
You should clean it
I know but who has the time
Just a can of air and a microfiber cloth to get the fan blades
I could make some more half ass excuses but you right
Jeez these chromium apps are memory hungry
That's why I hate electron
My laptop hated me when I was grading at the end of the semester. I was grading any free time I had about 80 student programing projects and while my laptop had 16 GB of RAM I was maxing that and using about another 6 GB of SWAP.
What lang?
Most students did python but some C and C++.
I always wondered if the ta's actually run the programs or just look at source
I'm doing part time master's software dev
I'm not sure about all TAs but I run the code.
That said, I'm fairly sure the TA for one of my undergrad classes never ran one of my codes because it would crash of you let it run to completion and I got full credit.
"idk compiles and runs fine on my machine"
so true hahahahaha
thats my computer when im downloading engines and peripheral software
That's everyone's computer when I distribute an internal software build
a what
Anything I develop for internal testing essentially
oh
Not a huge deal when it's sent out to other engineers who are somewhat computer savvy, but when I have to send it to non-engineers it's always mess.
"My computer told me that file you sent me was a virus and won't let me run it"
"Hit Run Anyway ignore it I know it looks scary but just ignore it"
What's even more frustrating is when I send out a zip file (because there's a bunch of DLL's) and explicitly say; Please extract the entire archive then run someProgram.exe. And they shoot me back an email "Hey I get an error cant run the program"