Hey! I'm KG.codes (Kelvin Graddick); a professional programmer, app + website developer, and digital creator. This channel contains various app development, website development, and general programming posts/videos.
- Sharing my projects and coding inspiration - Coding tutorials, useful information, and career guidance - Coding challenges (Leetcode) - 📺 PLEASE SUBSCRIBE and contact me with questions! ru-vid.com/show-UCfv7SNcMWwn8QANjD7AgY5w
Great story! In short, mine is like; had windows 95, played runescape one it after updsting the 95 to 2000 software; accidently opened the console, surfed through and founf the html; i started copying and pasting stuff and started editing code as well as css (which they also had on RS); but after awhile i was wanting to do more but couldn't figure it out so i stopped analyzing the raw code data. Long story short it took 15+ years later to find resources to learn how to code and now i do tech related work everyday.
Try using an outdated chromebook with low ram and low memory. Nothing but raw code no nothin else not even another code editor straight text app no extra nothing...😢
I agree with most of this! The thing that helped me the most is separating the space where I eat from the space where I work, as well as having a separate office from bedroom
Started out good... but then you didn't make good on your promise. You originally said that maybe you don't have access to the code anymore... but then you had to open up XCode and make a new archive.
So, I've been on this RU-vid journey, exploring storytelling and video creativity. Recently found VideoGPT, and let me tell you, it's like having a secret weapon for making my content look super professional. People are loving the new vibe on my channel!
Recently my dumbass discovered that cable modems have max speeds. I should have known this since I been doing this since dial up in the 90's. I've been paying the ISP for bandwidth I couldn't use for probably a year or 2 now. Got a new cable modem and instant improvement. Decided while I was at it I'd upgrade my hand me down Cat5 with some Cat6a, another (much smaller) speed boost. Fairly inexpensive upgrade as well in the grand scheme of a PC build or home network.
That's cable internet for you. Most people download more then they upload anyways. So most people aren't really affected with that amount of upload speed
Yeah what @troy028 said - the max upload from my ISP is 20mbps and I get 17-22 avg based on testing which is what it should be. All I would need to do is pay more for a higher plan with more upload now, but I don’t need/want to right now.
Don’t get me wrong - you are right! For streaming 4k you need that but right now I don’t do any 4k streaming, don’t have a media server with 4k videos, or anything like that. So I’m just saying I rather save the money until I have the need. Now that I’ve wired up, all I have to do is upgrade my ISP plan when I’m ready.
Help me out, Even on like netflix's servers, the max speed it supports is like 50mpbs cuz of the trillions of people using it, so why buy gigabit when you're only gonna use megabyte
To me it’s not just about max speed - but also connection stability and quality. Even that max 50mpbs from Netflix can be affected by WiFi interference and/or congestion.
Also Netflix is just one source - there are many others some of us use daily that have a far better max downstream than 50mb. Like video game services, conference call services, etc.
This deserves more attention, I used to struggle a whole lot with the issue of learning a little of everything or a lot of one thing. I'd also like to add that when you're learning, you should decide to start on a project (of whatever difficulty you are capable of) and learn tools and languages through that, because realistically no project uses any single programming tool/concept, so you learn multiple things, and you learn enough of that skillset to know how to actually effectively use it.