#FCCs Tutorial
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bispsolutions · 2 years ago
Text
Oracle FCCs Managing consolidation with 100% ownership | Oracle FCCs Scenarios
youtube
View On WordPress
0 notes
bob3160 · 1 year ago
Video
youtube
Net Neutrality - Back from the Future, But Where Are We Going?
0 notes
hillbillyoracle · 2 months ago
Text
When cell phones and internet go down...
If you're in one of a myriad of marginalized groups who know they can't count on the government to help them, then this post is for you.
I feel like I'm cramming messages into bottles from my fairly niche interest (radio, emergency comms) and chucking them into the sea of Tumble in the hopes it reaches people it can help. What happened in Spain and Portugal recently and some of the cell outages we've seen in recent years - they're is a great example of why back up communication methods aren't just for doomsday preppers.
If cell phones and internet (and possibly power) went out, how would you communicate in an emergency?
Note: this is geared toward the US. It's where I am and it's all I know.
If I only had ~$25
I'd grab a Beofeng UV-5R ($18-$25) if I thought I might study to get my ham license eventually ($15-$25 test fee + $35 FCC fee),
OR
If I knew I didn't want to test for a ham license and thought I might pay $35 for a GMRS license eventually, I'd pay a little extra up front and get a Beofeng UV-5G plus GMRS radio (~$35)
While this would not allow me to transmit usually, this would allow me to:
call for help in an emergency - the license requirement for transmission is lifted in the event of a genuine emergency
listen to weather frequencies - it will not turn on and give you the alert but if you know bad weather is coming, you can turn it on and listen for alerts as they come in. Weather stations give alerts for a fairly broad area so you'll be able to hear about any significant storms as the move into and through your area.
listen to local repeaters - repeaters, in my experience, are kind of a combination of a megaphone and an internet chat room. You set the frequency and the PL tones (password sounds your radio sends) for the repeater and then you can hear people from much further away. This is one, just fun to listen to on a given day but two, a great way to find out information if your area is experiencing an event but you don't require help. Some even have EAS weather alerts (thought this still won't turn your radio on if it's off in an emergency). Use repeaterbook to look for repeaters in your area and use CHIRP to program them into your radio - tutorials abound.
For ~$15 more you can upgrade the UV-5R to a bigger battery and USB-C charging (UV-5G comes with USB-C charging).
This can be thrown in a go bag if you need to evacuate or your housing is unstable. You can have your handheld radio monitoring a local repeater while you have a car or portable radio listening to commercial or public stations for updates.
If I only had ~$100
I would get a GMRS license ($35) and a Beofeng UV-5G plus (~$35) and a single Meshtastic node (~$25).
If I had a little extra, I'd grab a second Meshtastic node for a roommate, partner, family member or nearby friend.
This would get me the ability to not only monitor frequencies but the ability to talk on them in non-emergency times which would be helpful practice. Some GMRS repeaters have regular "nets" - it's basically a meeting on air where someone invited folks to tell them/radio in their call sign (radio license ID basically) and then they confirm they heard you. This gives you a chance to test your equipment.
The GMRS license covers your family so they can pick up a radio as well and then you'd be able to communicate with them as well (as long as they're close enough; 1-5 miles but varies by terrain, more range if using a repeater). It's not a phone so the conversation would be heard by other people but this is great for wellness checks or a quick check up.
Meshtastics add the ability to text people and share GPS coordinates with people near by - encrypted if you so desire. The range is much less (I've only tested it to about a mile currently though with tweaking more is possible). This adds an important link in your communication plan - asynchronous communication. As long as the device is on and paired and in range, you'll most likely receive a message. It does drop occasionally but that's pretty rare. My nesting partner and I often have to rely on them because the internet and cell signal is so poor up here but they serve us incredibly well for that. Beyond the Emergency Comms use, it's just nice for morale to be able to text during an event. Best part is, if you're in an area were other people have them too, you can bounce your signal further for no additional power.
Past this amount of money, I'd still get my GMRS license and encourage my friends and neighbors who didn't want to study for the ham license to get theirs. Then I'd get my ham license and buy the best handheld I could afford - probably one of the value Yaesu models - so I have several ways to both coordinate among my loved ones and get any needs to a net in the area during a disaster.I'd get and pass out several meshtastic devices to people who were within range that I might want to commincate with. I'd look into back up power for recharging (I like my Jackerys).
Amateur radio is a deep well and this barely touches on it of it. Don't let how vast it is keep you thinking it's too complicated for you. I promise it's not. I'm very much a noob myself but I'm happy answer any questions that I can.
This is part of self care - ensuring you can care for yourself during chaotic events and emergencies to the best of your ability. Even a little bit of preparation can keep something like storm outbreak or power outage from turning harmful or even deadly. Learn what you can. You've got this!
102 notes · View notes
foxpunk · 2 years ago
Text
I've seen an increasing trend on here of people asking for tutorials on how to do very specific things while making a neocities website--mostly very basic things in HTML--and while this isn't bad in and of itself (asking questions is good!) it is indicative that whoever is asking has not learned any basics of HTML. And while I maintain that asking questions is good, asking for a tutorial for tiny bits and pieces of HTML is never going to teach you HTML. Mostly, it'll teach you how to copy and paste.
And hey, maybe you don't wanna learn HTML. Maybe that's not your goal and you're just playing around and having fun, and y'know that's cool too. Keep on having fun!
But if you're someone who does want to learn HTML, this is not the way. If you're not sure where to start, I recommend Free Code Camp. It's, well...it's free! And very well made! And the lessons are all interactive and start from the very basics (they also make sure to incorporate accessibility as well). Start their interactive web design course and you'll have the basics down in no time flat; especially if you put everything new you're learning into practice with website building in between lessons.
If you want to go the extra mile, I have more resources and reading you can pair with your FCC lessons in the neocities tag on my blog.
Happy coding, everyone! 💖
123 notes · View notes
motorclit · 1 month ago
Text
I highly suggest whoever is reading this to get into shortwave radio listening. There are plenty of reasons for this, such as if your radio is portable (is rechargeable or takes batteries), then when the power/internet goes out, you won't be completely in the dark regarding news or the weather (I'll get to weather radios in a minute).
Make sure you get one with an adjustable antenna, too.
There are PLENTY of tutorials on YouTube and several books that can help you get started. As far as books are concerned, I *highly* recommend Shortwave: Radio Listening for Beginners by Anita Louise McCormick. I finished it not too long ago from the library, and it covers a very brief crash course in the history of radio including who invented it, how radio waves work, etc.
I will say that if you look for YouTube tutorials, you will run into a LOT of videos talking about "HAM radio," and that's basically for people who really want to set up their own little radio station and transmit instead of listen. You *will* need to apply for an FCC license for that, so if you wanna get into that, there is no shortage of resources of people on YouTube talking about everything you wanna know about that.
I strongly urge (actually, I'm begging whoever is reading this) to get yourself a weather radio. Weather radios are, as the weather YouTuber Ryan Hall puts it, "Like a smoke detector but for tornadoes." These radios are designed only for the weather, but if you have an emergency, from tornadoes to flash flooding, even wildfires, there is an alert system that will go off. The one I have is a simple Midland brand one that so far worked like a charm. While I havent had any nights of it waking me up due to dangerous weather, it did alert us to a tornado warning when the derecho hit the other week. That was while we had no power or internet, and because my muž and I live on my parents' farm, we have almost no cellphone signal. My mom and I got the cats to the basement before the worst of it hit us.
The weather radio I got is the $40.00 one from Ryan Hall's shop site. If you want to get that or the other model, his site keeps getting sold out on them and can sometimes be hard to keep in stock. You can program them to go off for only certain alert systems, or if you want, you can keep them on in case you think shit is so whacky that you wouldn't rule out the possibility of a hurricane or an iceberg in Nevada or something (yes, they have alerts for EVERYTHING on this little radio, they are not fucking around).
The instructions that come with your weather radio will help you figure out which regional radio station you should pick for your state and county by directing you to a website that helps you figure that out. The weather radio also comes with a wall plug, but be sure to have batteries in it (and plenty of spare batteries reserved if you're without power for many days) for when you lose power. I periodically unplug mine so I can plug in some lights, but that's for a few hours each evening. My radio lasted for 3 days on batteries alone during the power outage, and the only thing I had to reset on the radio when I gave it fresh batteries was the clock. All of my settings were saved.
Because of the current regime here in America, radio might be a lifeline regarding news, as radiowaves don't give a shit about international boundaries. Canada understands most Americans don't want the bullshit going on right now, so it wouldn't surprise me if there will be a radio station or two that might broadcast American news for any American who has a radio because the internet is a hot steaming pile of rotting garbage right now. Basically be ready for a potential Radio Free America helping us out from Canada long before the regime decides to make buying radios complicated or impossible.
You don't *need* a super-fancy radio, and be careful of dropshippers when you go to make a purchase for a regular shortwave radio. I'm getting mine in the mail today, which is a C. Crane Skywave model. I had to get it slightly used because brand new they can be pricy. (I got mine used from eBay.) The Skywave 2 (the newer model) is advertised as being able to also listen to Air Traffic Controllers, which could be important for many people's safety these days since planes are dropping from the fucking sky. The reason I had to buy a new radio is because the only non-vehicle-based radio we have is a shitty modern boombox that is already malfunctioning to some degree and doesn't have an external antenna at all. We used the sketchy radio signal listening to a station airing 80s and 90s music to fall asleep to since there was no power to power the large fan and we need background noise or else we can't sleep. (And now I've reawakened the heavenly feeling of falling asleep to the radio faintly playing in the middle of the night.)
I am begging younger generations to learn some analog tech, as you don't need internet for it, you don't need a subscription, you don't have to worry about it spying on you, etc. And fellow Millennials, re-learn what you can. Re-embrace the old tech. Teach younger gens and don't be dicks about it.
Let's make radios cool again!
4 notes · View notes
mostlysignssomeportents · 2 years ago
Text
This day in history
Tumblr media
I’m kickstarting the audiobook for “The Internet Con: How To Seize the Means of Computation,” a Big Tech disassembly manual to disenshittify the web and bring back the old, good internet. It’s a DRM-free book, which means Audible won’t carry it, so this crowdfunder is essential. Back now to get the audio, Verso hardcover and ebook:
http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org
Tumblr media
#15yrsago World of Developmentcraft: academic paper on gold farming as a development activity in poor countries https://www.salon.com/2008/08/07/gold_farming_global_economy/
#15yrsago California Supreme Court: Non-compete clauses are not enforceable https://workforce.com/news/non-compete-agreements-going-going-gone
#15yrsago Pacemakers can be remotely pwned https://venturebeat.com/security/defcon-excuse-me-while-i-turn-off-your-pacemaker/
#15yrsago Working Medeco high-security keys can be whittled out of plastic https://www.wired.com/2008/08/medeco-locks-cr/
#10yrsago HOWTO bake nested, hemispherical cakes https://cakecrumbs.me/2013/08/01/spherical-concentric-layer-cake-tutorial/
#10yrsago Audiobook memoir of Disney Imagineering legend Rolly Crump: More Cute Stories https://itskindofacutestory.com/?p=102
#10yrsago US businesses stand to lose up to $35B as a result of PRISM https://www2.itif.org/2013-cloud-computing-costs.pdf
#10yrsago Spectacular Haunted Mansion re-creation with Rollercoaster Tycoon https://thedisneyblog.com/2013/08/08/haunted-mansion-recreated-in-roller-coaster-tycoon/
#10yrsago Knitting as computation https://web.archive.org/web/20130810104616/http://www.k2g2.org/blog:bit.craft:computational_model_of_knitting
#10yrsago Standards bodies explain why they think the law should be copyrighted and paywalled https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2013/08/07/should-legal-codes-be-copyrighted-lets-sue-to-find-out/
#10yrsago Bill to cut off funding to schools that ban brandishing a pastry in a gun-like manner http://www.loweringthebar.net/2013/08/bill-would-protect-students-right-to-carry-pastry-guns.html
#10yrsago Crooks rip off nonprofit rape crisis center, then return the stuff with an apology note https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/stolen-computers-arrive-back-at-non-2013-08/
#5yrsago Leaked Facebook memo reveals “psychological trick” developed to entice high-school students to sign on https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/facebooks-teens-tbh-psychological-trick-memo
#5yrsago Here’s the report that showed the FCC lied about being hacked and then lied about lying https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uPl5NsbXowzbXrYf9KHBp-GVilTLQqyW
#5yrsago Inside the triumphant Alex Jones banned everywhere story is a worrying nuance about free speech and platform dominance https://memex.craphound.com/2018/08/08/inside-the-triumphant-alex-jones-banned-everywhere-story-is-a-worrying-nuance-about-free-speech-and-platform-dominance/
#5yrsago There’s something eerie about bots that teach themselves to cheat https://www.wired.com/story/when-bots-teach-themselves-to-cheat/
#5yrsago Japanese self-sharpening mechanical pencils give the lead a tiny turn every time you lift the tip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_OXoxymeho
#5yrsago Young doctors revolt, force AMA to consider backing single-payer healthcare for the first time https://kffhealthnews.org/news/once-its-greatest-foes-doctors-are-embracing-single-payer/
#5yrsago A machine learning system trained on scholarly journals could correct Wikipedia’s gendered under-representation problem https://www.wired.com/story/using-artificial-intelligence-to-fix-wikipedias-gender-problem/
#5yrsago 12% of music industry revenues go to musicians https://consequence.net/2018/08/musician-12-percent-43-billion-revenue/
#5yrsago Facebook throws an extra $10m at Zuck’s personal security https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-08-02/protecting-mark-zuckerberg-just-got-more-expensive-for-facebook
#1yrago So You’ve Decided to Unfollow Me https://pluralistic.net/2022/08/08/locus-of-individuation/#publish-then-filter
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Back my anti-enshittification Kickstarter here!
15 notes · View notes
kramlabs · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
LoRa communication Module
Tumblr media
youtube
:
Tumblr media
. https://www.newegg.com/p/2A3-00UG-000J9
youtube
.
.
Tumblr media
. https://www4.comp.polyu.edu.hk/~csyqzheng/papers/LoRaJamming-INFOCOM21.pdf
2 notes · View notes
heyeinin · 8 months ago
Text
the second best advice i can give about learning to code is "dont give up."
the absolute best advice i can give is
find something to be insane about and run with it.
find something that you are passionate about and that you can wake up every day and think about for hours and then design and build a website for it. it can be anything you love in the entire world. when i was a kid, i was rabid about my neopets and the stories i had written for them, so i built petpages that allowed me to spruce up how i presented what i had written. in 2019, i got so into a video game character who surely would have had an author website that i built a fake one for her as if she were a real person.
ive been coding semi-professionally for about a year to get a feel for it and now ive committed to doing it as a full-time job. find something to be fucking batshit about and let it carry you.
list of resources for the fundamentals of HTML under the cut. (TL;DR: htmlforpeople.com, the HTML handbook from fcc, w3schools, freecodecamp)
if anyone has any resources for more things that focus on just the very fundamentals of HTML, id love to hear them! im trying to teach someone to code and hes not a pantser and doesnt really benefit from reverse engineering or trial and error-- hes going to want a solid base before he tries to dive into anything more complex.
i have been thinking about it and i think it might be useful to link some intermediate HTML/CSS tutorials for neocities developers. i think a lot of people may be in a similar place that i was when i started developing neocities sites-- i had more than a passing familiarity with both, but i wasnt "good" or "skilled" at using it yet, and i definitely wasnt confident in my knowledge or application. so here are some things ive found and bookmarked that i felt were useful in progressing from "yeah, i know how to build a webpage with HTML/CSS" to "i am good at HTML/CSS."
htmlforpeople.com - this is "your first html site" type of stuff. the most important part of anything is the fundamentals, and i found this extremely well broken down without being borderline condescending in its presentation. this guide approaches html in a way that ive not really seen before (as a type of document) and that i really, really love! check it out.
the HTML handbook (freecodecamp.org) - a slightly more in-depth guide that i think breaks down things in a way that is useful but a little more advanced than htmlforpeople and provides additional useful context that even as someone who had been building (basic) websites for 15 years i didnt know or fully understand.
w3schools - for reference! good for practice, too. they have sections on HTML and CSS, and you can do learning courses as well. they are not very in depth, though, and if you want something more structured and in depth, you ought to try...
freecodecamp - i recommend fcc over most others not because i think it is soooo superior in terms of their teaching style but specifically because i really like their model. they are not a business trying to separate you from your money by promising better courses if you pay-- anyone anywhere can take their (quality) courses for entirely free and they have discussion boards, a discord, etc. and its just... refreshing. pls give fcc a try if you are learning to code.
1 note · View note
jcmarchi · 11 months ago
Text
Are Deepfakes The New Spam Calls? Here’s How To Protect Against Them
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/are-deepfakes-the-new-spam-calls-heres-how-to-protect-against-them/
Are Deepfakes The New Spam Calls? Here’s How To Protect Against Them
If you saw a deepfake of your company’s CEO, would you be able to tell it wasn’t real? This is a concerning challenge that organizations around the globe are dealing with on a frequent basis. In fact, just recently, an advertising giant was the target of a deepfake of its CEO. A publicly available image of the executive was used to set up a Microsoft Teams meeting in which a voice clone of said executive – sourced from a YouTube video – was deployed. While this specific attack was unsuccessful, it paints a larger picture of the emerging tactics cybercriminals are using with publicly available information – and this is just the tip of the iceberg.
Technology has become so sophisticated that only about half of IT leaders today have high confidence in their ability to detect a deepfake of their CEO. Making matters worse, cybercriminals are not only impersonating CEOs, but the entire leadership team, with CFOs becoming popular targets, as well. Deepfakes are becoming increasingly easy to create. In fact, a quick Google search of “how to create a deepfake” produces various articles and YouTube tutorials on exactly how to create one. Costs are becoming negligible, meaning that deepfakes are essentially the new spam calls.
Spam calls are all too common today. In fact, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) claims that U.S. consumers receive approximately 4 billion robocalls per month, and advancements in technology make them extremely cheap and highly lucrative, even with a low success rate. Deepfakes are following suit. Cybercriminals will utilize deepfake technology to trick unsuspecting employees even more so than they are today, and deepfakes will eventually become an everyday occurrence for the average consumer. Let’s explore strategies that leaders can implement to best protect their organization, employees, and customers from these threats.
Establish Strong Guidelines
First, leaders need to establish strong guidelines within their organization. These guidelines need to come from the very top, starting with the CEO, and be communicated frequently. For example, the CEO needs to firmly explain to the entire company that they will never make an odd or random request to an employee, such as buying several $100 gift cards – a frequent phishing tactic. These attacks are often successful because they come from a place of leadership and aren’t questioned. However, as CEO deepfakes become more common, we are becoming more aware that they are, in fact, not real. As a result, I anticipate they will work their way down the organization, to include VPs, Directors, front line managers and even peers.
Just think: having a peer or your immediate manager ask a request of you is pretty common. Why should you have a reason to question it? Guidelines can also be related to the use of these deepfake tools within your organization, including banning the use of them on company-owned technology. Setting these guidelines and guardrails is just the first step.
Confirm Requests Through Multiple Channels
Second, when requests do need to be made, there should be a strategy in place to confirm them via multiple modes of communication. An example could be if a request comes from the CEO, that request will be shared over email and will also include a follow-up via an instant messaging platform used in the workplace. If there is no follow-up, the employee should either ignore the request or proactively confirm it over Slack themselves, then notify internal security teams per their security policy. Similarly, perhaps a request is made via a Teams meeting, similar to the tactic used for the advertising company deepfake. This request then needs to have an email confirmation and/or a Slack confirmation. Better yet, confirmed via a quick phone call if walking over to their physical desk is not an option. These processes should be communicated often and to the entire organization to keep them top of mind. Then, when an attempt is known, establish a process to share the example broadly throughout the organization to create pattern recognition of the types of threats everyone should be aware of.
Hold Frequent Trainings
Third, organizations should implement frequent company-wide training to keep deepfakes, and other types of identity fraud attacks, at the forefront of employees’ minds. These are helpful for a few reasons. An employee may not even know what a deepfake is or know that voices and videos could be faked. Additionally, employees may defer to the “out of sight, out of mind” mindset – if deepfakes aren’t top of mind, they may easily fall victim to an attack. Research shows that employees who received cybersecurity training demonstrated a significantly improved ability to recognize potential cyber threats.
Deepfakes aren’t going anywhere, and they are becoming increasingly frequent and hard to detect. However, by establishing guidelines, verifying requests via multiple routes, and implementing consistent training across your organization, we can be better prepared and protect against these threats. In an increasing digital world, our diligence to trust less and verify more will be essential in maintaining the security and integrity of our digital identity.
0 notes
sonalchawhan · 2 years ago
Text
youtube
In this video Tutorial we will explain Oracle FCCs Working with Tickets | Oracle FCCs Support Activities | Oracle FCCs Beginners 👉 BISP Training is the most trusted and branded name in online education across the globe. For Training Schedule: https://lnkd.in/d33a4Yg Training for FCCS: https://www.bisptrainings.com/courses/Financial-Consolidation-and-Close-FCCS -------------------------------------------- 👉 BISP Solutions Inc. was founded in 2012 as an IT consulting and service provider, specializing in Oracle EPM, NetSuite, Fusion, SAP, and BI technologies. Immediately Available consultants on Multiple technologies BISP Solutions Inc. List of our consultants available for C2C requirements: Email Us: [email protected], [email protected] Call us: +91 7694095404 or+1 678-701-4914 Please don’t forget to Like, Share & Subscribe Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bisptrainings/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bisptrainings Follow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/13367555/admin/
0 notes
bispsolutions · 2 years ago
Text
Oracle Financial Consolidation Problems and Solutions
View On WordPress
0 notes
sebilpov · 2 years ago
Text
12-15 Jam Sehari Belajar Web Development Secara Otodidak. Inilah Jadwalku Setiap Hari
Senin-Jum'at
06.00-12.00: Belajar
12.00-13.00: Istirahat
13.00-16.00: Belajar
16.00-17.00: Olahraga (Lari/Bersepeda)
17.00-19.00: Istirahat
19.00-23.00: Bikin Mini Proyek
Sabtu-Minggu
06.00-23.00: Tidur
Sabtu - Minggu memang tepar, terbantai, tidur seharian wkwk. Jadi jadwal ini sebaiknya jangan dicontoh kalau kalian masih punya aktivitas lain dan nggak ada dukungan orang tua. Jadwal segitu juga cuma untuk 4 bulan pertama saja. Selanjutnya tobat, jadi lebih aware untuk istirahat.
Teknik Belajar Ngoding Ampuh: Praktik Terlebih Dulu, Belajar Belakangan
Salah satu teknik belajar ngoding yang baik adalah dengan cara "Praktikkan Terlebih Dulu, Belajar Belakangan"
Gini langkah memulainya:
1. Pilih 1 projek untuk dibuat. Misalkan membuat website portofolio pribadi, blog, atau ecommerce. Kalau bisa skalanya yang lumayan besar untuk dikerjakan
2. Langsung gas bikin. Bermodal apa yang sudah kita tau saat ini, langsung kita implementasikan untuk membuat apa yg direncanakan.
3. Pikirkan apa yang bisa di-improve. Setelah projek jadi, kita lihat apa ada fitur yang bisa kita tambahkan. Misalkan tambahkan fitur login, register, dan forget password.
4. Pelajari teori yang dibutuhkan. Jika dirasa kita tidak punya ilmu untuk menambahkan fitur yang ingin ditambahkan tadi, barulah kita cari tutorial di youtube, google, tanya chatGPT.
5. Pakai ulang di projek selanjutnya. Setelah selesai & puas dengan penambahan fitur serta banyak teori baru yang dipelajari, jangan berhenti di sini. Tetap lanjutkan untuk buat projek selanjutnya
Musik Yang Membuat Fokus Berkali Lipat Ketika Ngoding
Apa kalian suka dengarin musik ketika ngoding tapi selalu sulit fokus dan malah ikutan nyanyi? Cobain pakai musik tanpa penyanyi ini. Dijamin lebih fokus dan menambah produktivitas (Seenggaknya buat saya sendiri)
1. Chillhop (www.chillhop.com)
2. FCC Code Radio (www.coderadio.freecodecamp.org)
3. Lofi Girl (Youtube)
4. Chill Music Lab (Youtube)
5. Fluidified (Youtube)
6. Lofi Cafe (www.lofi.cafe)
7. FilFar (Youtube)
8. Lofi Ghostie (Youtube)
9. Lofi Geek (Youtube)
10. Coffee Music (Youtube)
Hal Yang Harus Dilakukan Untuk Mendapatkan Pekerjaan Remote Pertamamu
Penghargaan terbesar setelah belajar web development adalah mendapatkan pekerjaan + bekerja secara remote!
Berikut beberapa pelajaran yang saya dapat ketika mendapatkan pekerjaan remote pertama:
1. Tetap apply, meski belum pantas. Cari kerja (apalagi sekarang) memang susah, tapi tetap apply lamaran dan jgn menyerah. Minimal 300 lamaran per bulan oke?
2. Jalin pertemanan sebaik mungkin. Wabil khusus di dunia maya, cari kenalan yang berprofesi sesuai target kerjaan yang ingin kamu capai. DM, perkenalkan diri, balas konten yang dia buat.
3. Sharing pekerjaanmu. Hal ini memang untuk pamer skill, ngebuktiin kalau kalian memang jago di bidang web development. Kalaupun belum bisa pamerin yg bagus, setidaknya kalian sudah kerjakan sesuatu dan syukur2 ada yg kasih saran.
4. Persiapkan untuk interview. Step interview biasanya: wawancara recruiter, test teknis/take home, user interview. Setiap step beda persiapannya dan jgn remehkan step wawancara recruiter. Tips standout dari yg lain: Tunjukkan antusias yg tinggi di tahap ini.
5 Skill Yang Membuatmu Produktif Ketika Bekerja Remote
1. Programming skill yang kuat. Web developer harus punya basic programming skill seperti HTML, CSS & Javascript. Setelah itu tentukan mau pilih jadi frontend, backend, bahkan fullstack.
2. Bekerja secara asinkronus. Kerja remote bersandar dengan komunikasi asinkronus. Cara komunikasi ini perlu kita pelajari karena memang ilmu yang sangat diperlukan ketika bekerja secara remote nantinya.
3. Manajemen waktu. dengan baik Bayangkan saja nggak ada yang ngawasi, mau tidur waktu kerja bisa, main game bisa. Di sini kemampuan pengendalian diri sangat penting agar bisa menyelesaikan kerjaan tepat waktu.
4. Teknik menyelesaikan masalah. Merasa bodoh ketika nggak nemu solusi, tapi merasa paling pintar ketika masalah selesai terpecahkan haha. Pelajari tekniknya karena caranya sudah ada, tinggal dieksekusi.
5. Teliti ketika bekerja. Ketika baca requirements fitur, baca issue yang ditemukan, cari bug di code, typo kodingan, console.log yg sering keikut di commit (tenang, ini saya aja kyknya haha)
Cara Memulai Belajar Web Development Jika Tidak Punya Pengalaman
1. Pilih cara belajar yang tepat. Kuncinya adalah tau cara belajarmu yg cocok seperti apa. Apakah pakai tutorial online, bootcamps, atau belajar sendiri.
2. Perkuat basic terlebih dahulu. Basic web development itu ada 3, HTML, CSS & Javascript. Pastikan menguasai ke-3nya sblm bikin project yg lbh kompleks atau mau terjun ke frontend/backend.
3. Bikin website portfolio. Di sana kamu bisa upload projek yang kamu buat. Mulai dari yang paling simple sampai yang paling kompleks. Sedikit demi sedikit gantikan yang simple dengan yang kompleks seiring bertambahnya skil.
4. Kembangkan juga softskill. Skill teknis seperti ngoding memang penting, namun tidak kalah pentingya juga skill untuk berkomunikasi. Apalagi kalau kalian ingin dapat kerjaan remote skill komunikasi lewat tulisan adalah hal yg harus dipelajari.
5. Tanamkan growth mindset. Web development itu perkembangannya sangat cepat, jadi sangat penting untuk memiliki kemampuan untuk terus belajar dan update dg teknologi terbaru
0 notes
spoopy-eneko · 5 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
I can't believe I'm up to 1,600+ youtube subscribers!!! My channel suddenly blew up all of a sudden and im still in shock aaaaa. Hopefully will get the next tutorial out sometime soon! All the next ones I wanna make are taking a long while to film.
8 notes · View notes
foxpunk · 3 years ago
Text
Hey, you! Yeah, you with the cool neocities!
You're doing great! Really love what you've done with the place so far. Now here's something important moving forward. If you are making a neocities - especially if you are doing so with the motivation to fight back against Web 3.0 and reclaim the web as a space for individual users instead of for companies - please, keep the following in mind:
An inaccessible web is not a free web.
Repeat after me: An inaccessible web is not a free web.
Resources for Beginners to Learn About Web Accessibility and Web Design:
W3C's Introduction to Web Accessibility | W3C is the organization that decides on the standards of Accessibility on the web. They are an invaluable direct resource.
A Beginner's Guide to Understanding Web Accessibility
Mozilla's Accessibility Overview
WebAIM's Introduction to Web Accessibility
What is Web Accesibility in 60 Seconds! [YouTube Video]
Accessibility: What's the difference between WCAG Levels A and AA? [YouTube Video]
FreeCodeCamp | FCC provides an extremely beginner friendly Responsive Web Design course. The lessons for this course integrate accessibility standards naturally, and also have individual lessons specifically for teaching accessibility.
FreeCodeCamp's Accessibility Tag on their News Page
HTML Dog's Tutorial's for HTML, CSS, and Javascript
MarkSheet's Free HTML and CSS Tutorial
W3C's Easy Checks
W3C's QuickRef on How to Meet WCAG | I have filtered the QuickRef link to only show Level A requirements. This is the easiest level to meet and is considered the "bare minimum."
WAVE: Web Accessibility Evaluation Tool
10K notes · View notes
devdantodd · 3 years ago
Text
I went through a lot of freecodecamps HTML/CSS and javascript course and got bored and now I'm trying to make a clone of one of my favorite mini-games from SMRPG called Beetle Mania.
Tumblr media
My plan is to write and learn to code in Godot via a tutorial and then build my iteraition from that game. It's been going good so far but I do miss learning javascript on FCC but it's good to take a break from it. I'm finding once I get into the cycle of learning JS I can easily remember it's pattern and structure.
Tumblr media
Godot is great though and I'm having a lot of fun learning how it works. I'm on video 8 of this tutorial and can't wait to be done so I can start shaping my project into what I want it to be. Last night I spent about 5 hours messing around with Aseprite and made a bunch of animations for prototypes for my project so I can replace all the asset from the tutorial. I can already see how I want them implemented.
Stay tuned~
-Dan
Tumblr media
12 notes · View notes
opportunityandproduction · 4 years ago
Text
Mastery Journal
Well, I am in the last week of my digital Marketing class at Full Sail University, and it has been a terrific learning experience. I grew my capacity by intentionally leaning into the courses on LinkedIn learning and other sites that contributed to the acceleration of my education. In the last 4 weeks, I have learned inbound and outbound marketing, SEO, Search Engine Marketing, Google Indexing, ranking, the "importance, quality, and relevance" of your brand message links to your site, etc. (Batesole, 2021). Professor Maria Ferguson's weekly Zoom meetings helped gauge the class and apply what was learned. Acquiring knowledge on the pros and cons of retargeting helped me identify my company's new target market and how to recapture our previous audience's attention. The Keynote presentation assignment and the competitor website analysis also aided in me delivering fresh, unique insight into my chosen company. The Importance of Keyword planning and how it facilitates your target audience finding your company's website is also a game-changer. Digital marketing is all about optimization and getting your company's brand message in front of potential clients. In addition, the Hot Topics paper gave me the history of the Federal communications commission (FCC) and why knowing its laws and policies are essential to broadcasting across a broad spectrum. Finally, I created a Mastery Journal that I will use as a resource to measure my growth. This course has leveled the playing field, and I will continue to innovate and use this course's help in my personal life and professional career.
Reference
Batesole, B. (2021, January 14). Optimizing your website - digital marketing foundations video tutorial: Linkedin learning, formerly Lynda.com. LinkedIn. Retrieved October 19, 2021, from https://www.linkedin.com/learning/digital-marketing-foundations/optimizing-your-website?autoAdvance=true&autoSkip=true&autoplay=true&resume=false&u=50813145.
2 notes · View notes