Author Topic: :O!! VALENTINES DAY CODING HEARTS WITH GIRLY GIRLS :OOOOOOOOO  (Read 2824 times)

tbh if you can code youre way cooler in my eyes

no I totally agree, but the general public sees people who can "code" as skimpy white guys who can't ever find a relationship and hack businesses

brb, hacking the government

tbh if you can code youre way cooler in my eyes
i can code, watch this



brb, hacking the government
dont




its really surprising how inept most people are with computers. 95% of the population doesn't know how to:

  • edit a photo
  • upload a photo online
  • edit a video
  • change basic computer settings
  • use private browsing mode

a website to learn actual coding for 100% beginners is http://www.codecademy.com
the main problem though is that they don't really explain you how can use these languages outside of their website, so you'll be forced to look at a second source.

it's where i learned decent javascript--surprisingly similar to torque--in just a month or so.
also you should use http://www.W3Schools.com. it was critical in my scripting development a few years ago, especially their jquery courses
« Last Edit: February 14, 2016, 03:11:17 PM by McZealot »

stop it

*doesn't*

its really surprising how inept most people are with computers. 95% of the population doesn't know how to:

  • edit a photo
  • upload a photo online
  • edit a video
  • change basic computer settings
  • use private browsing mode

yeah, I think having people be good with computers is more important than getting them to learn how to code

its really surprising how inept most people are with computers. 95% of the population doesn't know how to:

  • edit a photo
  • upload a photo online
  • edit a video
  • change basic computer settings
  • use private browsing mode
"Can someone crop this image for me?"

Girls in economically and politically stable countries such as the USA do not have a reason to go into STEM unless it is truly their passion. You're not going to convince someone who can marry rich and live an easy life to put that kind of effort in.

There are far more females in STEM education and careers from places such as China, India, and the Middle East. For many of them it is a means of survival and a way to escape oppressive societies and crippling poverty.

maybe i'm paranoid but i feel like the future is going to suck for a lot of young people who are focusing on sports and their core classes because so many jobs are going to start being automated. for example--fast food. it's already cheaper to pick out what you want from a computer screen, yet most places still have people at the windows. that's probably going to change. most manual labor jobs are going overseas for skinny asian children to complete. so the jobs that will remain are the ones with actual skills. like computer science--probably the most valuable degree in the coming years.



its really surprising how inept most people are with computers. 95% of the population doesn't know how to:

  • edit a photo
  • upload a photo online
  • edit a video
  • change basic computer settings
  • use private browsing mode
this is sad because it's true
i know how to do these like the back of my hand
« Last Edit: February 14, 2016, 03:18:26 PM by BlueCreeper »


Computer science and technology education is really a first world anomaly, so it's not surprising that not a lot of people are actually familiar with that stuff. Even then making a career out of it is somewhat easy but it's a complete pain in the ass and a huge bore, at least from my perspective, unless you REALLY enjoy 9-5 tapping away at a keyboard for the rest of your life.

It's good that people are attempting to teach girls how to be more tech savvy and smart. I really don't understand why people constantly criticize girls for wanting to gain more knowledge, and then taking it out on the service that offers said education to girls because 'they are teaching women.'

Even in your technologically advance cities and such you still gravitate towards that barbaric criticism of women and their pursuit for knowledge.