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#coding pc
diginiam · 2 years
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Nowadays, processors are a necessity for any software development project. But which processor is the best for software development?
This blog looks at all the relevant factors and ranks the processors from best to worst based on those factors.
So whether you are a beginner or an experienced programmer, read on for advice on choosing the best CPUs for software development in 2022!
I have a new computer that will most support coding and software development (Java scripts).
Here need this software to perform other tasks like graphic design and software. I did extensive research, and based on what I found, the best CPU for Virtualization my purpose was the Intel Core i5-12600K.
I think. There is probably a costly machine out there that beats that one in most respects, but in my budget, I think it is everything I want: 10 cms. It is multitasking, 3. GHz. Is PC gaming an acceptable choice?
When picking the best CPU for coding, there are a variety of factors to take into account. Clock speed is not an essential factor for most consumers.
For gaming, however, clock speed is still vital, and the more cores available, the better for intensive workloads. Clock speeds on the fastest CPUs in a given processor line will be the greatest.
Entry-level computers are designed with Intel CPUs in the Core i3 and i7 series. High-end gaming laptops and coding laptops are best performed with i9 processors. For basic applications, AMD offers the Athlon and Ryzen lines.
More cores in newer CPUs provide enhanced performance. They are ideal for hard-core coding because they have a stronger memory than their predecessors.
To code successfully, you need a good CPU. Here are the best CPU for software development in 2022. Make the right choice and start coding today!
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ikiprian · 3 months
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Barbara Gordon's Coding & Computer Cram School is a popular YouTube series. Tucker Foley is a star student.
Barbara Gordon's Cram School posts free online courses for both coding and computer engineering. Think Crash Course in terms of entertainment, but college lecture in terms of depth. Hundreds of thousands of viewers flock to it— students who missed a class, people looking to add new skills to a resume, even simple hobbyists. It’s a project Barbara’s proud of.
Sometimes, when she wants to relax, she’ll even hop in the comments and spend an afternoon troubleshooting a viewer’s project with them.
User “Fryer-Tuck” has especially interesting ones. Barbara finds herself seeking out his comments, checking in on whatever this crazy kid is making next. An app for collecting GPS pings and assembling them on a map in real-time, an algorithm that connects geographic points to predict something’s movement taking a hundred other variables into account, simplified versions of incredibly complex homemade programs so they can run on incredibly limited CPU’s.
(Barbara wants to buy the kid a PC. It seems he’s got natural talent, but he keeps making reference to a PDA. Talk about 90’s! This guy’s hardware probably predates his birth.)
She chats with him more and more, switching to less public PM threads, and eventually, he opens up. His latest project, though, is not something Barbara has personal experience with.
FT: so if you found, hypothetically, a mysterious glowing substance that affects tech in weird and wacky ways that could totally have potential but might be vaguely sentient/otherworldly…. what would you do and how would you experiment with it. safely, of course. and hypothetically
BG: I’d make sure all my tests were in disposable devices and quarantined programs to keep it from infecting my important stuff. Dare I ask… how weird and wacky is it?
FT: uhhh. theoretically, a person composed of this substance once used it to enter a video game. like physical body, into the computer, onto the screen? moving around and talking and fighting enemies within the game?
FT: its been experimented with before, but not on any tech with a brain. just basic shields and blasters and stuff, its an energy source. also was put in a car once
FT: i wanna see how it affects software, yk? bc i already know it can. mess around and see how far i can push it
BG: […]
FT: … barbara?
BG: Sorry, thinking. Would you mind sharing more details? You said “blasters?”
Honestly. Kid genius with access to some truly wacky materials and even wackier weapons, she needs to start a file on him before he full sends to either hero or villain.
[OR: Tucker is a self-taught hacker, but if he were to credit a teacher, he'd name Barbara Gordon's Coding & Computer Cram School! He's even caught the attention of Dr. Gordon herself. She's full of sage advice, and with how she preaches the value of a good VPN, he's sure she's not pro-government. Maybe she'll help him as he studies the many applications of ecto-tech!]
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dollya-robinprotector · 9 months
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Worlds crossed! Gender bends meeting
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A.k.a PCs and School LIs dress in Vietnamese student attires (modernized áo dài and áo tấc)
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At this point, many have known I am Vietnamese, so I take the chance to finally do what I always had done when entering new fandom: MAKE CHARACTERS WEAR VIETNAMESE TRADITIONAL CLOTHES!!
I hope you guys can appreciate the beauty in our culture~🫶✨✨
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computer-nerd-girl · 1 year
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pcstan · 1 year
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PC wedding + Cartman instagram story
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corvindne · 9 months
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intrepid heroes love to lean in for a little kiss
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Wait are lya and kariya short???
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Also, Lya's and Lyah's heights can be combined into 161412 - January 6th, 1412. Guess whose birthday that was? :D
Kariya is basically a copy of Lya so they share the same height.
Me? I've stopped growing since I was 17 :)
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nekomiras · 27 days
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ive come to the realization i never posted my gepard drawings i made during the game's closed betas.... oops!!! pretty blonde be upon ye now i guess
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plantboiart · 2 months
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My autism superpower is being able to connect every single song i listen to to just roll with it blood in the bayou with minimal effort
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objectivefruit · 25 days
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im BEGGING all of you to go watch Conan O’Brien on Hot Ones because he is literally a Ally Beardsley PC!!
I can physically see them saying the words and coming up with the jokes while he talks… it’s uncanny
please tell me i’m not being crazy about this
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omeletcat · 1 month
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@tweeked-out
he vibing fr, what do you think hes listening to?
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queen-caramilflinda · 2 years
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The fact Lou is playing a queer character this season makes me really happy. Obviously gay people should be able to play gay characters and that representation is incredible BUT there is such a culture among cishet men of not wanting to seem gay, or that being gay somehow takes away from masculinity that it is refreshing in a way to see a cishet man jumping right in and playing a queer person without it being awkward, stereotypical, or overcompensating. Not only does Lou play it well but the rest of the cast doesn’t question it either, despite Lou (afaik) historically only playing straight men.
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bubba-draws · 1 year
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draw suggest: hollow and grimm exchanging gifts~
This was supposed to be one (1) drawing but I may have gotten a little insane
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computer-nerd-girl · 11 months
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vaporweb · 7 months
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StarCraft Taught Me How to Code
It was the year 2000. I regularly hung out with my best friend, Mike. His older brother, Bobby, was always in the office using the computer. He was playing StarCraft. I was really captivated by it. Bobby commanded massive armies and used them to destroy enemies from an isometric point of view.
Bobby never left the computer long enough for me to give it a try, but Mike said they have it for the N64. We stayed up until 7 in the morning the next day playing it. It was terrible. An RTS on a console was an abomination. A mouse and keyboard was a necessity. But I was 10 years old and I didn't care and we couldn't stop playing.
I eventually got the game for my own computer. It was the fist online game I ever played. Battle.net was a super highway to another dimension. I could play with anyone—from the east coast to the west coast, Europe to Asia. It was easier to find people with similar interests than on the Web.
You could essentially create your own game using StarCraft assets. It taught me logic and how to code.
The game was fun. But the thing that became my favorite was its campaign editor. You could essentially create your own game using StarCraft assets. It taught me logic and how to code. You would create conditional statements, and if conditions were met, then something would happen as a result.
When you played other peoples' games, you first downloaded them and they would go in a specific folder that you could open in the campaign editor. Sometimes people used mods that would lock you out and prevent you from reading their logic, but most of the time you could learn from them and see how the games worked.
I read a lot of other peoples conditional statements, copied them and saw how they functioned. I learned a lot about triggers, making things happened at certain times, or causing something to happen when someone brings something to a specific place.
I give a lot of credit to StarCraft for my love to code and build things for the Web.
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pov-amna · 8 months
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When you find out that your 'original' code is just a copy of a copy of a copy...
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