Top products from r/xqcow

We found 10 product mentions on r/xqcow. We ranked the 7 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/xqcow:

u/CorporalSpoon31 · -1 pointsr/xqcow

Firstly, I wanna say sorry for your losses. You've had a rough life but good shit trudging through it 3Head, although you've arguably lost the best years of your life (Chester Bennington Who? Robin Williams Who?)

Now, I don't give a fuck if you were #1 or #777 in your programming class at your trashy school. You didn't get my point that however well you do in school doesn't matter, because regardless, you're bounded to solely that school, you're not nationally or internationally ranked (Being an analogy Andy, the #1 runner in my high school runs a 16:30 5K which is pretty good, but is no where near the international Olympiad level; the same is true with you and your trash-tier programming ability, you haven't accomplished anything in that field outside of school [and don't blame this on your illness, if you realized you were intelligent in high school, you would've been something back then, before your chronic disease emerged])

Also, those are the most fundamental basics of a multi-paradigm programming language, I learned Object-Oriented, exception-handling, recursion, generics, use of external libraries, methods, events, pointers, e.t.c. in 7th grade and there are hundreds of kids who'd done so at a much earlier age than me. Anyone with a somewhat quantifiable amount of intellect can understand that shit, that's the basics. You never truly got into programming, I can tell, as if you did, you would've instead listed the more complex theorems that actually require intellect to be able to derive and truly understand (algorithms and data structures) such as Computational Geometry and Shortest Path Algorithms(BFS, DFS, Dijkstra, Floyd Warshall, Prim, Kruskal), Computational Number Theory, Hashing, Trees, Data Structures(segment tree, fenwick tree, disjoint sets, Heavy-Light Decomposition). The list is endless; although you're 30 and pretty far behind, if you're at all interested in truly understanding these algorithms, their proofs and derivations (if you want to work at google, apple, e.t.c you need to learn), here's a link to an introductory book written in Pseudocode: https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Algorithms-3rd-MIT-Press/dp/0262033844

(I may be immensely toxic, but just trying to help you out if you're still trynna stay on the CS path)

Also, you don't understand the problem-solving I was referring to. The questions you are referring to, given in school, require very basic problem-solving skills that don't truly captivate the beautiful art of problem-solving. True problem-solving is when you're faced with the most difficult and complex ad-hoc (One subdivision of programming problem topics contains problems for which there exists no general technique or algorithm, i.e. no well-studied solution. These are known as ad*-hoc problems. Each* ad*-*hoc problem is unique, and requires a specialized approach) problem ever, where you have to manipulate it to devise an innately beautiful algorithm which beautifully merges a bunch of previous theorems that seem unrelated to creatively take a shortcut to the solution in a truly brilliant manner(this is easy to explain to others who understand problem-solving, but it's kind of hard to generalize it so sorry for the butchered explanation, here's a link that you can explore to learn more: https://artofproblemsolving.com/ )

Here's a programming question (from the final round of the USA Computing Olympiad for the brightest programmers across the nation, which I successfully solved). It may seem simple at first due to its short length, it's actually immensely complicated and requires immense critical thinking+IQ to come up with a unique algorithm which solves every possible test case; in my eyes, it truly captivates the art of problem-solving. If you're at all interested in seeing it here's a link: http://www.usaco.org/index.php?page=viewproblem2&cpid=950 (and don't lie and tell me you solved it, I know you can't because it requires knowledge of the complex Gauss-Bonnet theorem in topology/computational geometry taught far after Multivariable Calculus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss%E2%80%93Bonnet_theorem )

TWITCH: And no, your remark about finding another way in was pretty retarded, of course, everyone would think of doing that, that's simple ban evasion. I'm obviously not gonna create a new twitch account to fucking chat, I already stream myself programming on my main twitch account so I'm not gonna go and make a whole new account to just chat, I'll donate someday and get unbanned from Felix's channel. Furthermore, I'd have to resub and build up my sub-streak all over again so not worth.

Also, I highly doubt I would've committed suicide if I were in your shoes because I would still have something going for me, the fact that I can and will make a meaningful contribution to society. And I know why you "weren't good enough for your interview," because you couldn't problem solve, most interviewers for companies such as Google and SpaceX ask questions that are slightly easier than those found in competitive programming competitions.

And bill gates and zuckerberg were dropouts because they were entrepreneurs, they could've easily finished college but it wasn't worth it because their companies started rapidly growing; they have skills that you don't, you're just a random dropout for no reason, most dropouts that make it big drop out because they see another vision for themselves. The main reason I want to go to a top university isn't for the education, I could learn all that I want from edX and Coursera, it's to meet others top students in hopes of creating our own successful business from our dorm.

If you're still interested in becoming a dev, hope that helped (although I'm half your age so I don't see why you'd listen to a zoomer like me regardless).

Edit (Didn't see your edit, I'm boutta go hard for disrespecting me): You're fucking retarded lmfao, your reddit is filled with gaming related shit (you're 30 and you game for a living, sad life) so I scrolled down to see the first post not in r/xqcow or r/letitidie and your age was there, I didn't see any sad shit you posted.

And yes, I do actually help others and inspire those invested in my field that I find in school and other communities, if I realize that they have recognizable talent and intellect to be something, but I'm not gonna be a soyboy cucklord who tells someone they can do it when they're realistically not smart enough to, I won't hold their hand and tell them they're worth something when they're really just an average andy that doesn't have the unique ability to ever do anything meaningful; I'll gladly shit on others who aren't smart and sit in a corner studying all day for the SAT because they can't naturally do well; I'll gladly tell them to kys, as talent outweighs hard work heavily.

I'm not privileged, I started at the fucking bottom (Kapp -> low middle-class) and reached the top myself, if you can't do it and are complaining, then natural selection retard.

(Also, Iostux is dogshit, I'd roll him in a 1v1 Kapp)

u/Tommy7373 · 2 pointsr/xqcow

I would get a projector at least 720p native, something like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MZL7H4X/

There's a lot of chinese branded ones that have lower resolutions like 480p for somewhat cheaper: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MZL7H4X/

I would definitely spend the extra money and get a 720p native projector. Rule of thumb is <720p is around $75, 720p chinese is around $125, 1080p chinese is $200-250, 1080p name brand $500+

You could go used and get something like this: https://www.ebay.com/itm/LG-Projector-Ph300w/264438619931?hash=item3d91c51f1b:g:KBAAAOSwe6FdXiA4

That's the projector I use personally, 720p and really small, albeit the battery in that one doesn't work anymore.

u/NotYori · 1 pointr/xqcow

I believe this was the exact one she used

Signature Brands Pumpkin' Masters Carving Kit https://www.amazon.com/dp/B017RVLWLU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_30bQDbX49V70J