moved from QA and testing to developer roles, but usually as an internal transfer.
yeah. My current company botched mine.
moved from QA and testing to developer roles, but usually as an internal transfer.
yeah. My current company botched mine.
yep, the reply isn't so much for you, just reminding people that various activities can offer this, and it's more accessible than one may think.
This post has appeared in multiple places. It's useful , but it ruins the development career potential of people that stick with it, because any subsequent job application just sees "TESTER" and not "DEVELOPER" and bars you from changing specialization.
we did it ~~reddit~~ lemmy.
something something face size, something something fountain neck
This is how you do a non gendered mascot, it's clearly a fox. Fucking Salesforce and its horrible "Astro" which has no gender, also, no ethnicity, wears several costumes on top of each other AND has no mouth.
It's the perfect corporate identity : a being deprived of cultural origin, identity and opinions.
Or the code you are working on is calling a system that is currently unreliable which you cannot be responsible for.
Fuck test automation, it's a fucking trap get out of it as soon as you can
Cargo Cult Programming is bad.
choose a hobby. Apply some of the lessons from this video :
These people are the actual fucking globalists trying to make a new world order.
But practicing falling down safely. Ukemi.
Ukemi (受け身) refers to the art of safe falling and breakfalls in Japanese martial arts
Just as advice, you don't even need to go to martial arts class to get this; various activities have tutorials on falling "correctly", even theater! Even if you (the reader) don't get a formal lesson, let me share the basics :
Better yet, have a spotter (someone who is there to make sure you don't fall off whatever thing you are on).
I learnt the last one from trampolining and indoor climbing.
somehow a milk carton that looks like a mix between an asian stereotype and an easter island head looks like the eastern european first lady of the US