Oh that's a bummer. In my case, my system had a MUX switch, though I'm not fully familiar with it, it changed GPUs based on what the application demanded. It turned out to be a huge pain in the ass when the mighty Alienware turned out to be a bug riddled bloatware laptop and I had to disable the MUX switch to actually play games. Stuck with the dedicated GPU like you now, unfortunately.
Im a fan of energy drinks. I think you should have categorised the soft drinks into one category. There's a lot more to be included.
I took a look at it. The syntax looks scary and there's tons of words that seem simply alien. Any idea where I should start from? I haven't toyed with programming at a level this low.
Yeah I've been meaning to get my hands on it as well. Do you recommend any docs/videos/something else in particular? I learnt py and js by cloning a repo and dismantling things until something stopped working haha. I'd appreciate advice!
This was really informative, thank you for taking your time!
Rust has been on my radar for a while. I installed cargo and just never used it haha. Any docs/videos/other learning methods that you recommend in particular?
Is C not reaching obsoletion? I haven't heard a lot about it being used anywhere. I've only heard of clojure before, I'll look at that!
I appreciate your comment. I understand where you're coming from. I love the problems on codewars. Also by fluency I mean learning how to write neater code and of course, getting a better grip on the syntax.
Assembly is an interesting pick. I played with pseudo-assembly on a game called Shenzen-IO. Really fun, though I know real assembly is far more complex. Don't think I wanna get into that right now but I'll definitely use it sometime this year. Haven't heard of prolog, I'll look into that. Thanks!
Edit: I misinterpreted what you meant by programming problems.
Never wrapped my head around dot net. What can I do with it? I don't see a lot of projects with it.
Did those 3D tvs actually work?