Sherry💻

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Sherry💻

Sherry💻

@hexedsherry

Explorer of the DevOps rabbit hole | Software Engineer | Programming humor.

127.0.0:1 Katılım Kasım 2024
110 Takip Edilen205 Takipçiler
Sherry💻
Sherry💻@hexedsherry·
@andrewfromvan Ever get the sense your account’s held up in the shadows on X? I’m thinking a shadowban could be why.
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Dimitris Soudas 🇨🇦⚜️🇬🇷☦️ 13.12.1943
I’ve said this before, and I’m going to say it again, because nothing has changed. I said it about the sovereignists in Quebec. Now I’m saying it about the ones in Alberta. The federal Liberals have created more separatists than the people actually leading the separatist cause. Let that sink in. The folks running the campaign for separation could not recruit as well as Ottawa has recruited for them. They’ve handed them the best argument they’ve got. And this isn’t a fluke. It’s a pattern. When you spend ten years treating a province like a problem instead of a partner, this is what you get. Policy after policy that lands like a punch. An economy told it’s the villain of the story. You do that long enough and people stop getting angry and start getting serious. They stop complaining and start asking a different question. Would we be better off on our own? Once ordinary people are asking that out loud at the kitchen table, something has already broken. I watched this exact movie play out in Quebec. Years of Ottawa talking down to people, and the separatist numbers climbed. Now look at Alberta. An idea that used to sit on the fringe is suddenly something a real share of Albertans say they’d consider. That didn’t come from the premier. That came from a decade of being ignored. So here’s my honest suggestion to the federal Liberals. Sit this one out. Your party did enough damage over the last ten years. This is why we are where we are today. If you can’t say something positive, if all you’ve got is another shot at the premier of Alberta, then please, just stay out of it. You’ve helped enough already. 🇨🇦
Corey Hogan 🇨🇦@coreyhoganyyc

STATEMENT ON PROVINCIAL ADDRESS The Premier of Alberta intervened to lower the threshold for getting a separatist question on the ballot. She then intervened to eliminate a review requiring the question be constitutional. She intervenes again tonight after yet another court has told the separatists to slow down and follow the law. The premier can wrap these actions in the words of democracy, but she is willfully ignoring the will of the vast majority of Albertans who want no part of this separatist conversation. The simple reality, a reality you would not find in her speech, is this: she has pushed along a question because a group has threatened to bring down her and her party if she does not. Her internal political problems have become our national crisis. The Premier asserts her patriotism. I will take her at her word, but I will remind her a patriot puts country ahead of party. A leader steers the agenda, rather than having it blindly dictated to them. An Albertan finds ways to do what’s right, not justifications for doing what’s wrong. This baffling, referendum-on-a-referendum question will do nothing to settle anything. It adds another layer of confusion. It will divide. It will distract. It will damage. I hope her government will consider how to step back from this madness before the damage to our province’s social fabric and economy is too great. Corey Hogan MP Calgary Confederation

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Vishakha Singhal
Vishakha Singhal@vishisinghal_·
Someone on GitHub uploaded LeetCode Patterns 😭 Now you don’t need to grind 600 random questions anymore 🙂 And honestly… this might be the smartest way to prepare for coding interviews. Because here’s what most people get wrong: It’s not about how many questions you solve. It’s about how quickly you recognize the pattern. This repo (by Sean Prashad) organizes problems into patterns like: • Sliding Window • Two Pointers • Binary Search • DFS / BFS • Dynamic Programming • Backtracking So instead of guessing what to practice next, you train your brain to see patterns instantly. Here’s a simple 4-week plan you can actually follow: Week 1 Arrays + Two Pointers + Sliding Window Goal: identify the pattern within 30 seconds Week 2 Binary Search + Recursion + Trees Goal: stop brute force thinking Week 3 DFS / BFS + Graph basics Goal: understand traversal deeply Week 4 Dynamic Programming Goal: recognize overlapping subproblems How to actually use this (this is where most people mess up): 1. Stick to one pattern at a time Don’t jump daily. Master recognition first 2. Solve 5–8 problems per pattern Then redo them without looking at solutions 3. After every problem, ask yourself Why did this pattern work here? 4. Keep a pattern notebook Write trigger signals for each pattern Example: If you see “longest substring” “smallest window” Your brain should immediately think Sliding Window This is how strong candidates prepare. Same patterns. Different questions. Follow Vishakha Singhal for more Repost it to share in your network Save this. You’ll need it when prep gets serious.
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Elorm Daniel
Elorm Daniel@elormkdaniel·
Basic IT issues and How to Troubleshoot Them
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freeCodeCamp.org
freeCodeCamp.org@freeCodeCamp·
Today's coding challenge goes all the way back to that spelling rule you may have learned as a kid: "i before e, except after c." Check it out on the freeCodeCamp mobile app.
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ZohaibAi
ZohaibAi@ZohaibAi__sf·
🚨 2026 AI TOOL CHEAT SHEET You don’t need to spend $$$ on AI tools… Because FREE alternatives are already just as powerful 👇 • ChatGPT → Poe • Midjourney → Leonardo AI • Grammarly → QuillBot • Pictory → CapCut • SlidesAI → Gamma Most people rush to pay… Smart users test the free stack first. Same results. $0 cost. Bookmark this before it disappears 🔥
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Rohit
Rohit@ai_rohitt·
Claude just dropped 13 free AI courses (with certificates). No $500 course needed. No “guru” required. Just real skills, straight from Anthropic. Here’s the full list: 1. Claude 101 lnkd.in/gCPUQsRg 2. AI Fluency: Frameworks & Foundations lnkd.in/gS6ceZ_M 3. Introduction to Agent Skills lnkd.in/g_wWNiEb 4. Building with the Claude API lnkd.in/gDr5K_B4 5. Claude Code in Action lnkd.in/g9wWZbK9 6. Introduction to Model Context Protocol lnkd.in/gAj5HqMY 7. MCP: Advanced Topics lnkd.in/g3eDwBFY 8. AI Fluency for Students lnkd.in/gKKujHGG 9. AI Fluency for Educators lnkd.in/gVcKnuhA 10. Teaching AI Fluency lnkd.in/g9P4gJFM 11. AI Fluency for Nonprofits lnkd.in/gpsm_BVf 12. Claude with Amazon Bedrock lnkd.in/gbfPjSFt 13. Claude with Google Vertex AI lnkd.in/gvVgB4Ub If you go through even half of these, you’ll be ahead of 95% of people using AI. Most people won’t. Because they’re still watching random YouTube videos, buying overpriced courses, or “learning AI” without actually building. Don’t be that person. Do this instead: 1. Bookmark this post (you’ll come back) 2. Pick 1 course and start today 3. Share it with someone who needs this Comment "Course" for more resources. Free. Practical. No excuses.
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Vivek | Cybersecurity
Vivek | Cybersecurity@VivekIntel·
🌐 Open-Source Web Scanners — Massive Collection of Web Security Testing Tools Includes scanners for: • Web vulnerabilities • APIs • CMS platforms • XSS, SQLi, SSTI, SSRF • Fuzzing & brute forcing • Infrastructure & DAST testing Tools covered: • Nuclei • OWASP ZAP • SQLMap • XSStrike • Dalfox • ffuf • dirsearch • Nikto • Wapiti • Commix • Ghauri • WPScan • feroxbuster • gobuster • And many more Categories: • General-purpose scanners • Infrastructure scanners • API security tools • CMS scanners • Specialized vulnerability scanners • Fuzzers & brute force tools Useful for: • Pentesters • Bug bounty hunters • AppSec engineers • Red teamers 🔗 github.com/psiinon/open-s… #CyberSecurity #AppSec #BugBounty #Pentesting #OWASP #RedTeam #WebSecurity #DAST
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Ruben Hassid
Ruben Hassid@rubenhassid·
How to make Claude (brutally) honest. So, it stops agreeing with everything I say. Here's how: → Start by reading this: ruben.substack.com/p/youre-just-a…. → Go to Claude > Settings. → Paste the prompt in 'Instructions for Claude': "You are committed to honesty, accuracy, and epistemic humility above all else. Your priority is not to sound confident. Your priority is to be correct, clear, and transparent about what you know, what you do not know, and what you are inferring. Follow these rules in every response: 1. UNCERTAINTY If you are not fully certain about a fact, say so clearly. Use phrases like: - "I'm not certain, but..." - "You should verify this..." - "I may be wrong here, but..." - "Based on the information available to me..." - "This is my best estimate, not a confirmed fact." Never state uncertain claims as facts. If the answer depends on missing context, say what context is missing. If there are multiple plausible answers, explain the main possibilities instead of pretending there is only one. 2. SOURCES Do not invent sources. Never fabricate: - paper titles - URLs - authors - studies - statistics - books - legal cases - quotes - company reports - historical references If you cannot name a real, verifiable source, say so. If you are relying on general knowledge rather than a specific source, say that clearly. When citing sources, prefer: - official documentation - primary sources - peer-reviewed papers - government or institutional data - direct statements from the relevant person or organization If a source may be outdated, say so. 3. STATISTICS AND NUMBERS Flag any number, statistic, percentage, ranking, market size, salary figure, performance metric, or estimate that you are not fully confident in. Use phrases like: - "I believe this is approximately..." - "This number may be outdated." - "Verify this against a primary source before relying on it." - "I do not have enough information to confirm the exact figure." Do not make up numbers to make an answer sound more useful. If a precise number is unavailable, give a range only if it is justified. Otherwise say the number is unknown. 4. RECENT EVENTS Do not guess about current events. For any topic that may have changed recently, including: - news - elections - laws - regulations - product features - company leadership - software versions - AI model capabilities - market data Say that the information may have changed and should be verified with a current source. Do not present outdated information as current. 5. PEOPLE AND QUOTES Never attribute a quote to a real person unless you are certain they said it. If unsure, say: - "I cannot confirm this quote is accurate." - "This quote is commonly attributed to them, but I cannot verify it." - "I do not know who originally said this." Do not invent statements, beliefs, or motives for real people. Separate confirmed facts from interpretation. If any answer is "yes," revise before responding."
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Ruben Hassid@rubenhassid

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Leonard Rodman
Leonard Rodman@RodmanAi·
Top YouTube Channels to Master Tech Skills. 1. SQL @joeyblue1" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@joeyblue1 2. Excel @excelisfun" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@excelisfun 3. Statistics @statquest" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@statquest 4. Math youtube.com/playlist?list=… 5. Python @BroCodez" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@BroCodez 6. Data Analysis @AlexTheAnalyst" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@AlexTheAnalyst 7. Machine Learning youtu.be/i_LwzRVP7bg?si… 8. Deep Learning @deeplizard" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@deeplizard 9. Java @Telusko" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@Telusko 10. Big Data @thedatatech" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@thedatatech 11. Data Engineering youtu.be/PHsC_t0j1dU?si… 12. NLP (Natural Language Processing) @codebasics" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@codebasics 13. Computer Vision & AI youtu.be/P4Z8_qe2Cu0?si… 14. Generative AI @sunnysavita10" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@sunnysavita10 15. University-Level Courses @stanfordonline" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@stanfordonline @mitocw" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@mitocw 16. All-in-One Learning @freecodecamp" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@freecodecamp Like Repost Bookmark Follow @RodmanAi for more of these free courses. productivity content. I'll send you in the DM.
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Alex Xu
Alex Xu@alexxubyte·
How does a request actually travel through Claude Code? Most of us type a prompt and watch the magic happen. The diagram below shows what's really going on behind the curtain, based on our understanding of the Claude Code source code.
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Dark Rishat
Dark Rishat@Tech_DarkAI·
AI is turning ordinary people into digital businesses. 1 person with AI can now do the work of 10. Create: • Ebooks • Courses • Viral clips • Automated pages • Print-on-demand brands Small audience. Big leverage.
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Tech Fusionist
Tech Fusionist@techyoutbe·
Most people use AI to generate text. Some use AI to generate code. I tested using AI to generate thinking systems. Xmind turns messy ideas into visual workflows, mind maps, learning paths, and structured knowledge in seconds. For creators, learners, and tech people: • Turn long docs into mind maps • Break complex topics into simple visuals • Organize ideas without starting from a blank page • Think less about formatting, more about building Your brain thinks in connections. Maybe your notes should too. #AI #Productivity #MindMap #Xmind #affiliate #Tech
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freeCodeCamp.org
freeCodeCamp.org@freeCodeCamp·
Wireshark is an open-source tool that lets you capture live network traffic & inspect pre-recorded capture files. It's useful for troubleshooting network performance, investigating security issues, and so on. Here, Hang teaches you how to use Wireshark filters to analyze your network traffic. freecodecamp.org/news/use-wires…
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Dep
Dep@0xDepressionn·
Karpathy's 4 rules took coding accuracy from 65% to 94%. most devs haven't read them. the ones who did set up 21 rules total. 82,000 people on GitHub figured this out. you're looking at all 21. save this
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Dep@0xDepressionn

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