Hi! I'm a private tutor, physicist, chemist, software developer, and founder of educational technology firm EdUKTech Ltd. I spend my time teaching maths, physics and chemistry GCSE, A-levels and the odd uni course online, learning as much as I can, and am currently designing and coding a Web application to teach science and maths. I'm also creating written, video and question based content for anyone who wants it, and my platform. If the earth started spinning slower and my circadian rhythms changed to match, I would be spending the extra hours in each day writing uplifting trance and watching more crap movies and good anime. Maybe even finally learn Japanese! I love 70s, 80s, disco, metal, classical, baroque, romantic, trance, rave & electronic music amongst others (Steely Dan, Dolly Parton and Green Day for example). Beethoven is the greatest of all time, but Dave Mustaine of Megadeth is a close second, then the Bee Gees (sorry Mozart...) Dr Andrew Lawson BA MA (CANTAB) BSc (Hons) MChem DPhil MinstP.
Talking about anything you want. Note I'm pretty new to Web development. Although I started coding when I was 8, I'm learning the new tech.
No blogs yet.
Devalla Sai Charan great list - I was learning Vue but realised I didn't understand why I was typing a lot of things in. I was just learning the patterns, not understanding them. I've decided to go back and become much better at JavaScript, then node and express before going any further. Thanks for saving me time with this list 馃憤
Robert Weber I agree with what you are saying. I saw this for the first time a couple of days ago and was very impressed. I then realised it was the first step to computers writing their own code. Comments to code is here, it just needs improving. Add something that generates a tech spec from a detailed request, then breaks down a tech spec to a series of comments and the process is complete. The human element required will decrease to zero - this singularity you mention. There's not many hand cotton weavers left these days. Previous tech improvements always eventually generated more work than they removed. Hard to see what kind of work here - it does feel different.