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just finished a organization project for my wife.

its a web app where you make boxes, add images or text of what's in the box. then get a qr code that you can tape to the box and scan to see the text or images in the web app.

hoping to make it a lot easier to look for things in the storage unit. instead of removing all the totes and looking in them. Just scan and see if the description fits what I'm looking for


neat idea!

Seeking work | full stack php developer. (Current focus is on agentifying workflows and ai video for advertisers)

Have experience with python/Django/java(old spring boot). But the majority has been with laravel.

Most front end experience is with vuejs and angular.

About me: I have roughly 10 years of experience as a full stack developer. Outside of this i have 3 years of experience teaching at coding boot camps and adjuncting at a local college.

I absolutely love build tools and sites that people enjoy using. I always joke that I design functional potatoes. But that doesn't mean I can't make something pretty. Lol

At my current place of employment I have taken the place of the go to guy for llms and agents. I frequently spend time learning how they work and going over research papers. Currently I'm working on automating video creation for advertisers.

Some key accomplishments over that last two years are: complete overhaul and redesign of a front end, automated 25% of all requests for a specific workflow (final output is on par with human output), fully automated process that required user approval before being sent out.

Location: est, usa Remote only Available full or part time.

Contact tinytownproducts@gmail.com


building another FPV drone. finally venturing into hdzero aka analog + (digital signal over analog signal)


I actually got a laptop from sager (clevo) and after 5 years of heavy use. my biggest complaint is the dam case. all the plastic clips broke. only a few screws holding it together. lots of gaps now. and a few cracks in the plastic.

but it's been thrown in a back pack and gone through several years of traveling in a back pack


Married, 4 kids.

8:30 awake and get oldest to virtual school

8:35 caffeine

8:40 skim teams/emails.

9-2pm switch between helping with 1st grade work and working.

2-4 hammer out work

4-5 I'm "at work" but normally spend my last hour on personal development


Anything you’re learning lately for personal development that has been fun?


Ardupilot

might be what your looking for


cold batts always get worse range got to plug it in and have a batt warmer (like Tesla).

not such a foreign idea when you have to do that for Diesel to get them to start in the cold.


idk about you but I know of atleast 15 gems made by Netflix. but majority are cartoons.

15 is nothing tho compared to all of their flops.

if anyone likes cartoons checkout: centaurworld - awesome wrap up on the last episode dogs in space Maya and the three dead end Cuphead over the moon Klaus


Everything about Klaus seems like something I wouldn't like... I'm iffy about Santa movies, I definitely don't like the "backstory which explains every minor detail"... and yet, it's fantastic. It somehow breaks through schlocky fake sincerity and makes it to real sincerity in a way that most shows & movies don't.


Klaus, Jingle Jangle, and Christmas Chronicles are on our annual Christmas watch list. Some of the best holiday movies ever made.


Centaurworld was really something else, very... Gen Z in its sensibilities. We enjoyed it a lot. The Cuphead show is way better than it has any right to be too. Dogs in Space seemed like fun but it didn't land with my kids for whatever reason, so we haven't watched much.


their refund process is a scam for sellers too. just had someone get a refund (even tho I don't do returns) claiming the item doesn't work.

I tested it and it works fine. never said in the post it was fully tested. buyer even modified the item. ebay just happily gave them their money and forced me to accept the return and refund


I always recommend a easy to remember sentence as a password.

with spaces, punctuation, some sort of capilatiozation scheme (cap every last letter, or every other ,etc) and throw a number in there.

lot easier to remember than 32 random bits.

purposely misspelling something, adding spaces, and your own cap scheme make it a secure password.


What works great for me is using _songs_ , ideally a sentence not directly from the chorus of a lesser-known song, complete with punctutation and some obvious replacement rules (such as `and` -> `&` ) . The reason why this works so great is that many people have some obscure song "in them" that they know by heart but which are not super widely known.

I only had to change one of my passwords once when my coworkers discovered I was reliably whistling "Stayin' alive" after logging in.


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