

I simply chose to read it as that, as my head was not up for dealing with the letter soup that was the name.


I simply chose to read it as that, as my head was not up for dealing with the letter soup that was the name.


I chose to read it as JCLDS-PCB, which didn’t help.


In Norway you could make good money as an antenna port removal person, essentially filling it with solder or some such, and making paperwork confirming it had been done.
If you had that piece of paper you didn’t have to pay licensing fees, as it was tied to the antenna port. Funnily enough most everyone with a top box used the scart for television, so it didn’t really make a difference.


Oi! Do you have a license for that tv stick?


That’s a matter of some debate.
With all the various neurodivergencies and ways people are wired differently, language comprehension or barriers, not to mention physical or mental handicaps, a video might very well be easier to help someone absorb the information.
I wholeheartedly agree it’s not for everyone, but it is certainly for someone, and the more ways available to consume and process information, the better for us all as a whole. At least when it comes to educational and unbiased content, which seems to be the intention of this YouTuber.


At least someone is making informative content in an accessible format without trying to get me to buy whatever is the brand of the month.
I’d much rather watch that than the videos that should have been a paragraph.
For the second part of your question, it wholly depends on your input language and keyboard layout.
As a Norwegian user I’d rather shit in my hands and clap than using the plain us keyboard.
Mind you Nordic QWERTY is fairly similar to most other QWERTY variants.
As for a tool, most people I know in a professional setting are at around 75-90 wpm, and never learned touch typing specifically. They just type, a lot, and repeatedly. There are many on-line typing trainers.
When it comes to programming, it’s not about typing quickly. Unless you’re churning out the most mindless of boilerplate it’s far more important to consider how to solve a task and why, then quickly shitting out lines of code.
Mind you this is all based on my experience, and your mileage may vary. Best of luck!