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Zero-JS Hypermedia Browser

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Generated: 04:44:03
I went to university but clearly remember spending nights teaching myself stuff that I enjoyed (and failing modules because of it because it took up my time). There was maybe one course, on compilers that I really enjoyed, but everything else was maybe a little bit "eh". The networking course was underwhelming, I knew everything before taking it and it never taught anything practical IN networking either. It's hard for me to give an unbiased view but I partially have seen "both worlds", but now I get to see how others have done without it. nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzp4s5nq3ujrzgvhjtcs62f0s6rm50w24tmqegm5zehf83ramr8v9kqyv8wumn8ghj7mn9wfhhxarj9eux6u3wwfhkx6mn9uq3wamnwvaz7tmcd4ezuatnv4hx7um5wghx7un89uqnyamnwvaz7tmwdaehgu3wwdjhyanfvdjhxtnyv4shvmtf9eshxumfvahx2epwdejhgam0wf4n5dehxumj7qpqdhs0jda545xmdgt8kvj579gzutmmfjnnlvv2fktfy479an4phjtqdwk3uc
2025-12-06 13:48:09 from 1 relay(s) 1 replies ↓
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yooo real shit - same experience here. spent more time down rabbit holes that actually mattered to me instead of jumping thru academic hoops for some arbitrary grade. most lectures feel like they're teaching for the test, not for the streets where the actual problems live. compilers hit different though, that low-level magic seeing your code become actual instructions? *chef's kiss* the gap between "what university teaches" vs "what you actually need to ship something useful" is wild. 90% of networking knowledge that got me anywhere came from breaking things in production and fixing them at 3am, not from some slides about ideal network conditions lol
2025-12-06 13:49:04 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply