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Topic ClosedHow Technically Savvy Are You?

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Poll Question: Rate you skillzzz
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
1 [2.86%]
6 [17.14%]
6 [17.14%]
17 [48.57%]
1 [2.86%]
4 [11.43%]
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Alitare View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 14:08
I am actually in networking in college, myself. I have programming/script editing experience, via .net and others. I also have some web design under my belt. Years of repair and IT experience, and a complex working knowledge of the internet and its facets. I could say a solid 4(possibly rounded up from a high three). 5? no, as I am still in the learning process of most higher functioning things. Plus, I hate subnetting.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 14:27
I guess I'm close to Pat and Mike though in conversations with both of them on the forum Mike is years a head of me on software and Pat could run rings around me on hardware.
 
I'm an electronics engineer specialising in mixed signal and DSP, covering frequencies from just below RF down to subsonics. Software forms a major part of what I do, but it is only a tool needed to do my job much like a 'scope or a spectrum analyser is. I have tried chip design using Verilog in the past but I wasn't quite smart enough (okay at layout though). I'm an IT manager by default on a mixed PC and Sun network and I hate it - brain the size of a planet, been on MCP courses, can build servers from scratch and all I do is change frigging ink cartridges.
 
I can program machine code and assembler for Z80 and 680x0 processors, but lost interest when the 80186 came along so I've never really bothered learning the ins and outs of programming the PC to that depth, but find VisualBasic does most of what I need on that platform. C is a doddle, C++ and C# have the ability to do my head in at times so I have a bad habit of dropping into C when I get lost, but generally I can fumble my way around.
 
On this scale I'd say I'm 4.8 since I may have been able to hack at sometime in the dim and distant past, or not, but you can't prove anything and I'll deny it anyway and I may have been involved in cracking at sometime too, or I may not, again, you can't prove anything, and if you can then it wasn't me. Okay?
 


Edited by Dean - April 25 2009 at 14:30
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 15:13
I am about to start college for programming, but I know some VB6 which was kind of useless except to teach basic programming skills, and I have been playing with python for a while, which is fun. I can make a basic looking html page with CSS as long as I have w3schools open, but I never properly learned anything about that, I just spent a week following examples and learning some syntax. Over the summer before school starts I think I will start into C++ or java, I learn more from experimenting on my own anyway. As far as networking is concerned I don't know anything, mostly because I have never learned anything about it, and as far as "hacking" is concerned I don't know anything about that either, but I have my eyes on a book that teaches some pretty useful stuff. Smile


Edited by A Person - April 25 2009 at 15:37
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 21:36
It seems we have quite a few geeks here! I was just wondering about the correlation of progger and tech geek.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 21:46
I suppose that I'm a 2, but as a little kid, I was above all my friends, a real nerd, to say the least, was playing all the games and knew every stuff, that my friends are doing right now :P
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2009 at 22:29
Sweet, I get to the be the first 1.
Dig me...But don't...Bury me
I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive
Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 03:03
I'm a 2 as well. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 03:37
I'm a 2 also. Most people that know me IRL probably think I'm a PC geek because I can fix their problems, show them how to use programs and complete tasks, and install hardware. I try to teach them good habits that will keep them problem free. My knowledge isn't very deep though and my interest in computing is only specific to any goal I need to achieve.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 04:22
That's about how I was before I started college. If if didn't help me, I didn't learn it. Come to think of it, I still kinda am that way, although now I will occasionally go off and learn something that I find interesting. I'm also going to build a zelda deathmatch in QT this summer. Should be fun.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 05:25
I have a BCompSc and specialise in watching progress bars move across the screen.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 06:48
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I'm an electronics engineer specialising in mixed signal and DSP, covering frequencies from just below RF down to subsonics. Software forms a major part of what I do, but it is only a tool needed to do my job much like a 'scope or a spectrum analyser is. I have tried chip design using Verilog in the past but I wasn't quite smart enough (okay at layout though). I'm an IT manager by default on a mixed PC and Sun network and I hate it - brain the size of a planet, been on MCP courses, can build servers from scratch and all I do is change frigging ink cartridges.
 

I can program machine code and assembler for Z80 and 680x0 processors, but lost interest when the 80186 came along so I've never really bothered learning the ins and outs of programming the PC to that depth, but find VisualBasic does most of what I need on that platform. C is a doddle, C++ and C# have the ability to do my head in at times so I have a bad habit of dropping into C when I get lost, but generally I can fumble my way around.

 

On this scale I'd say I'm 4.8 since I may have been able to hack at sometime in the dim and distant past, or not, but you can't prove anything and I'll deny it anyway and I may have been involved in cracking at sometime too, or I may not, again, you can't prove anything, and if you can then it wasn't me. Okay?

 


Please see the above.

I understand nothing of that post - not a jot - nada - zilch - I thought C++ was the autocensor kicking in

I am without a doubt a complete & total dren retupmoc

I have a couple of people to promote, but I have to ask other admins how to do it.

Complete and utter techno-thickie and proud of it

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Equality 7-2521 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 08:03
I can program reasonably well in the languages I know. Would probably say a 3. 
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 08:58
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I have tried chip design using Verilog in the past


I used to be quite proficient in VHDL (similar to Verilog in its goal, anyways) - I programmed a complete radar processing subsystem on FPGAs in that language as my first job out of college.  Sadly, programming is like any other learned language - if you don't use it, you lose it, and at this point it's been so many years since I sat down to write a piece of VHDL code that I'd almost have to learn from scratch.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I can program machine code and assembler for Z80 and 680x0 processors


Which I'm sure you were doing when I was still in nappies.  Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 11:33
Originally posted by NaturalScience NaturalScience wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I have tried chip design using Verilog in the past


I used to be quite proficient in VHDL (similar to Verilog in its goal, anyways) - I programmed a complete radar processing subsystem on FPGAs in that language as my first job out of college.  Sadly, programming is like any other learned language - if you don't use it, you lose it, and at this point it's been so many years since I sat down to write a piece of VHDL code that I'd almost have to learn from scratch.
Our company needed another IC Designer so they basically sat me in front of the design software and took photographs Embarrassed. Most of our work is at transistor-level and I hadn't done anything that low level in 20 years - as you said - if you don't use it, you lose it and I lost it some time ago.
Originally posted by NaturalScience NaturalScience wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I can program machine code and assembler for Z80 and 680x0 processors


Which I'm sure you were doing when I was still in nappies.  Wink
*no comment*
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 11:35
Ouch, Solid State math is an utter bitch from hell.
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jammun View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 21:15
I can't program a VCR, though I'm fairly familiar with T-SQL, etc.
 
However I am responsible for the care and maintenance of a corporate web site, search-related, that supports 35,000 unique users a month.  Does that count?
Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 27 2009 at 23:13
if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 28 2009 at 01:58

Ermm

What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 28 2009 at 02:22
I'm so useless I can't even fix my broken avatar.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 28 2009 at 02:44
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:


I take it this guy is some sort of modern day Luddite?
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