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Madagascar.

$63/month for 100mb/s down, ~35mb/s up.

Pretty good for a third world country.


Well yes, at least that's how we do it in my third world country. You get used to it easily, and there are no distraction when you work.


Disclaimer: I'm in the process of making the switch to software development, and I'm from a 3rd world country.

Is there any chance for someone with my profile to get a job in this? Remotely of course, as any remote job would pay times better than anything I could get in my home country. If yes, where does one learn about it more? I see Coursera has some course, but better asking from someone with your experience I guess. My approach to a job is that you do it in order to get money to fulfill whatever you enjoy in life, as long as I'm paid I'll be the best I can. Thanks


Can you get in as self-taught?


Probably pretty easily if you're a good software engineer. I think they don't require as much technical knowledge, though I can only speak on data engineering from first hand experience. A lot of data engineers aren't very good programmers (some use little more than SQL) though there's always outliers.


Yes. These roles are more accepting for self-taught people than most software roles (not saying it's wide open). Anyone can email me (last name at gmail) if they want to chat.


Berkeley - CS 61A Spring 2021

Berkeley - CS 61B Spring 2021

Helsinki - Full Stack Open 2022

Some LeetCode here and there.


That's how typesetting should be done.


It jumped out at me as a nice example of the Edward Tufte style (which I'm a big fan of -- I once published a tech report in that style). People have put together style sheets emulating it for LaTeX [1][2], CSS [3], and R Studio Markdown [4], among others.

[1] https://tufte-latex.github.io/tufte-latex/

[2] http://tug.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/tufte-l...

[3] https://edwardtufte.github.io/tufte-css/

[4] https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/


The authors open-sourced their setup for Tufte-style books: https://github.com/sisl/tufte_algorithms_book


Do you mean the chosen page layout, the attribution of different classes of information in different specific parts of the page?

It does look quite clear, well thought and well structured.


I think s/he meant the typography, the quality of the drawings and the big right margin allocated for the figure labels and the sidenotes.


Anything to back this up or is it just some randoms claims without proofs?


How is this even a question? Hiring someone is hiring someone to do a job. If that someone can do the job then he should be hirable/hired no matter the age, gender, race etc ...


A laptop (I'm from a 3rd world country, so yeah it's a big deal).


Money is the gateway to "fun" for me. Working enough to afford the stuff I like and never so much so that I can't spend that money. Find the right balance. And if your job/company makes you miserable, hire someone else to do it, you will earn less, but will have more time to do other things more meaningful to you, whatever that is, spend time with family etc...


I hear you. My issue is that I don't know what is fun to me anymore. I have no hobbies, no real friends (most people I would call Friends are all about kids or work, no real personal connection). I do love my wife and kids and they are very dear to me but I feel like I don't live for myself anymore. hard to explain.


I'm very lucky that my wife and kids typically leave me alone for a week every year by going to her relatives. I do join them later but I also really appreciate this week alone.

Since my business can be always switched to low-maintenance mode, I can do anything I want during that week. Anything. And I imagined it would be a bunch of stuff but after x years it's not. It's mostly watching movies (projector with nice audio setup) and riding a bicycle. Movies that you don't have to think whether your wife or kids would like. Stupid action movies. Classic b/w movies. Good SF, bad SF. Sometimes I do small fixes around the house with music playing in the background. It brings different kind of satisfaction than software work because it's something physical and you can see and feel what is done.

I really get very refreshed after such week. Maybe because I'm an introvert? It's not comparable at all with any kind of vacation. You don't have to go anywhere, you don't have to do anything, and then things you enjoy the most tend to pop up and stick. It's not like I would live like that 365 days a year, but at least I know what I want when it comes to those rare my days. And then I tend to push for a moderate amount of that during the rest of the year.


Nothing hard to explain. I feel the same way (only one kid).

Just feels like I never get to lead projects or take on big chunks of work past few gigs. I really want to start my own thing in the next few years.

Treating this as a cautionary tale what advice would you give someone wanting what you have?


After spending so much time working, and nothing more it's understandable. But now that you know what's the problem, all you have to do is try solutions until it clicks. Traveling is nice, learning new skills also ...


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