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Alisa Esage Шевченко
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Hearted Youtube comments on Alisa Esage Шевченко (@alisaesage) channel.
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That “Practice first, then theory” was totally spot on. After years of CS theory in uni I felt this weird feeling of not really knowing whats going on. Then had to learn by myself everything again by just practicing, and now “Practice first” has become my motto too. Practice is the only way to test our assumptions about reality. As you said, the failure rate is incredibly hard, and therefore mental straining. Something I still need to get used to. However, this also means that when things do work out, you get this deep sense of relief. For that split second you managed to have a somewhat decent model of a small portion of the world that contains you. That, in my opinion, is the essence of Hacking. Its such a warm feeling. Thanks for the video, precious things were said!
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This is one of the best explanations of Assembly I have ever seen, glad I found your Channel
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I am so happy I got recommended this! My interests are psychological and this is so helpful. We can map out the neural hardware all we want but very few people are actually taking the process of mapping out psychology from the base cognitive functions upwards and the ones that are either gatekeeping the process to avoid ridicule or are using some pretty esoteric terminologies and computer science and mathematics seem like decent enough parallels to formalize a language for this yet people in the field of psychology typically don't have advanced mathematical and computer science skills given their work is intuitive. If I can establish a single axiom syntactically, then this would be an effort beyond valuable for demonstrating psychology beyond just the purely logical and loosely defining the illogical semantically. The hard part is creating large systems and then breaking them down into constituent parts for obvious reasons of complexity but stuff like this is really helping me to understand how to navigate insanely complex systems and maintain continuity.
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"You don't have to team up" This! It's been pushed down my throat throughout my career that I needed to "work in a team" that "teamwork makes the dream work". Uggh. And that you need as for help from a "goto person". Especially if you're a woman. I've always thought this was bullshit. It cultivates a sense of dependency, that you can't solve things on your own, perform critical thinking etc.. I left my last job and struck out on my own. Personality-wise I'm a lone wolf - don't work well in a group/"pack". Alisa, you are so right. You don't need anyone's "help" to be in this line of work and be successful. Thank you for obliterating Myth #3. . And thanks so much for this video. subscribed <3
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So many gems of wisdom in this video. Thank you, Alisa, for putting it up for us. And I hope to be able to attend one of your courses soon :)
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She is pretty smart . This was interesting to say the least.
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Thank you Alisa, from the UK. I’ve been following you for several years now, used to be on Twitter, but deleted it. I’m a Web developer but I love assembly.. can’t explain why, I just LOVE it… I love bits.. I don’t find challenge in high level coding. I work full time, so trying to learn on weekends and evenings. You are inspiration to me. I started playing with networking scanning … nmap and the like… but it is not scratching my itch… I want to sit in my room on my own and read assembly but I have to do other languages, Java, python, php etc because it earns me a living. I want to quit my job and just do assembly .
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So cool!
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I admire your products
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Great video 👌. My most anticipated topic after kernel and browser
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very good stuff! Thank you for sharing!
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😢 hoping one day I become like you
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❤️❤️❤️
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