> Ms Langford's pilot dad Martin Langford - who was flying jets in the US when al-Qaeda destroyed the World Trade Center in 2001 -said he will "have a little chat" with his daughter.
But they got the idea, decided it was better than all their other ideas, went out, spent money on materials to make them, made them, dressed up in them, left the house in them...
@monners my parents were more of a "you want a playstation what? No. You can't even pay for it with your own money. Get the fuck outside and play with sticks"
And that's the story of how I got a nail through my hand...
Hell, before I got my brothers droid (20 years old), I put a signed, $1500 check in my moms hand and said, "Mom, this is a check for a smart phone. I need to get emails on the fly at school. This covers my entire line for 2 years, and the cost of any phone I want."
I mean sure we were poor, and my family had issues, and I got teased for liking nerdy things. But I got lots of girls, had lots of friends, and was capable of shutting up anyone who made fun of me
@rlemon that was me too. I wasn't the coolest kid in highschool, but my brother was like.. the man. And when we ended up going to the same college we became each others wingman and it was awesome lol
I didn't linger though, I graduated, worked full time cleaning pools, and when I got home, I grinded on the job hunt. I went from college graduate to web developer in 3 weeks after my final final exam in college
Aside: Reasonable discussion of the extremes of life for people from different situations without it being all one-upmanship or taunting of people who don't conform to the echo chamber's dictation. I love this room.
@Retsam because why? I'm 27, have been working in the industry for a while, and can get the new information I need from online classes that are not colleges or universities that cost a hell of a lot less
I'm not saying if I could I wouldn't have gone in the first place. but I didn't. and now I feel going back for a bachelors in cs would be a waste of my time. I may as well just go back when I have the time to invest and take something that really interests me and not for a careers sake. like astronomy.
maybe. but again, for what? I'm not looking for work. and if I was I have been getting offers with my current education / experience. there are some things I would like to know more about but that would require me taking a lot of other maths and physics courses. again it isn't that i don't ever plan on not going back. I just don't see it impacting my career that much by me not doing it now.
I dropped out of my masters because I couldn't take structured learning anymore. I don't want to pay to do research in a topic I don't give a shit about.
Learning outside of a school where you can do what you want is so much better, as long as you're motivated. Which I think is a fair assumption to make about people in a chat room about programming.
@Shmiddty so no "w3fools" or arguments with him, but "oh cool, thanks. Though I might have doubts and I've heard some recent criticism. You might want to check it out.". Thank him for the debate and for discussing coding or something too.