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- May 22, 2008
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
^Just downloaded all the apps. Thanks for the heads up will be giving them a try tomorrow!
There are a lot of resources to study for interviews: Cracking the Coding Interview, HackerRank, and LeetCode are just a few.Im hearing the interviews are tough..they just give u problems and u have to explain on how u solved them..CS teaches you theory but it is not all programming..it was only an idea just so I would be a little more acclimated with a variety of languages..I don't see how learning more could be bad at all
Anyway only time will tell if I will invest in a bootcamp
I'm making the career change very soon, and I have a restored passion that started in High School.
Has anyone in here used a bootcamp? Which would you recommend? Which to avoid?
Any personal experiences?
I want to work with Oracle. I met an Oracle guy at a agency-wide meeting ONCE in April 2015. Said hello, shook his hand, asked him a couple questions, told him I'm interested, and sent him an email as follow up... Never heard back. He randomly emailed me in January to ask if I was still interested. It turns out they can't get any qualified candidates for their mid-level Oracle DBA positions and, in management's desparation for qualified DBA's, they might be willing to overlook the experience requirements and let me "intern" as a DBA while I'm working as an analyst in a hybrid role.
Still have to talk it over with management (and I'm definitely not touching Oracle without a raise,) but ya boy might be a legit DBA soon
Lots of php script talk on this recent Yezzy releas, thought this might need to get some shine.
Lots of php script talk on this recent Yezzy releas, thought this might need to get some shine.
Tried using the script but I'm not an administrator on my mac even though there's only one user account on it. Not sure how to get around it besides enabling the root user account which I don't want to do since I might mess up something.
Lots of php script talk on this recent Yezzy releas, thought this might need to get some shine.
Tried using the script but I'm not an administrator on my mac even though there's only one user account on it. Not sure how to get around it besides enabling the root user account which I don't want to do since I might mess up something.
Enabling the root user won't mess anything up...unless you log in as root and mess something up. Root is just a user that can make any operating system level change. You can make your default account an administrator if you want, it won't change anything unless you choose to do something weird. While running a bot script might be dangerous for other reasons, changing your permissions to allow you to run them is perfectly safe.
For future reference: http://m.wikihow.com/Become-an-Administrator-on-a-Mac
What makes you think using the sudo command to run your script is "risky"?I messed up when I said I'm not the administrator. I am the administrator under the users panel but I don't have the ability to unlock everything...if that makes sense. I tried the root user right now and that didn't seem to work. https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204012
Not sure if you've used the script but here's the error I get. I asked and someone suggested using the sudo command but that's risky. I also tried logging in as a root user but that is a no go. I'll just have to use sudo once I feel comfortable I guess.
View media item 2238621
What makes you think using the sudo command to run your script is "risky"?
If you don't know what you're doing, you do need to use some caution if you're using it while editing crucial system files. But if all you're doing is adding 127.0.0.1 dev.adidas.com to your hosts file there's really nothing to worry about. And I'm assuming you'll be copy/pasting any other commands from solemartyr's guide so using sudo on those is fine too.
^ Are you following a guide to set up your script?
If you're copy/pasting a command and it's giving you a permission error, just add "sudo " in front of it and proceed normally. That's all you need to do.
Think of it like driving a friend's car. You don't have the keys but you know how to drive. Once you get the keys you'll drive a little bit more carefully, but really everything is the same as if you were driving your own car.
If the command is your friend's car, sudo is the keys.