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I've got a SQL card game

https://rowsandtables.com


> keep our children away as much as we can from tech stuf

How do you define "tech stuff" and why do you want to keep children away from that?


I consider tech stuff quite everything related to the use of electronic devices: I.e. the use of a smartphone or a smartwatch or the use of a computer.

Little kids, in my opinion, should focus on things that don’t require electronics, for example things such as LEGO, drawing with pencils instead of a tablet, reading books instead of watching tv or reading an ebook. They shouldn’t have a smartwatch distracting them during school lessons.

They will have time to be deeply involved with electronics but before they must acquire “material” experiences


Big barriers to entry: regulation, liability, and reimbursement/payment


Right?! Who's buying? Big businesses or regular retail? Or are they limiting supply to keep prices high?


The second one.

Businesses aren't buying this shit.


Wrong.

I watched a video yesterday from a german medical cannabis business where I recognized unifi APs in the building. Their camera system was (as one would imagine) unifi too.


> recognized unifi APs

Anecdote of course, but I see these everywhere.


[flagged]


As long as you dont provide any reasoning your are just another guy in the internet talking gibberish.


1. The throughput is inadequate.

2. The IDS/IPS is an inadequate Suricata instance with outdated rulesets and no SSL inspection.

3. There is nothing comparable to a WAF.

Gun to my head, I'd trust ASUS AI protect for a business router to substantially outperform Unifi's security offerings.

The ASUS at least knows what it is and what it can be: basically a glorified WAF. IDS/IPS don't even work well with up to date rulesets if they can't decrypt traffic.


“Inadequate” depends a lot on what you’re doing. I wouldn’t use any of this stuff in a datacenter but for a small business or branch office it’s totally fine.


What kind of small business actually benefits from an IDS/IPS or WAF?


Feel free to flog their network engineers. Most businesses (likely in the order of 99%) have precisely zero network engineers. So, it’ll be a pretty quick flogging.

Their products talk to those businesses.


You are forgetting that most business' needs are extremely minimal. By volume there are more bakeries, bars, gyms, one man doctor's offices, little car dealerships, hair salons than businesses that have actual IT needs. And for those businesses a dream router is fine if not a bit overkill.


Every small business within driving distance of me seems to have Ubiquiti WiFi on their walls/ceilings. Seriously, in the businesses where they provide free customer wifi these things are everywhere.


Likely UDM Pros and not Dream Routers. Businesses still want it to look professional with at least a 6u wall-mounted rack.


My climbing gym uses unifi, as one example. (I noticed it because I use them at home). Seems like a pretty reasonable choice for a small business.


Businesses ARE buying this stuff.

Remote access, decent ecosystem, reliable. What's not to like?

The only problem I have on occasion is stock.


I see unifi APs everywhere in businesses.


I dont think you understand SMEs, which is 90%+ of all business.




https://rinum.com

If nothing else it's a record of my failures :)


Introduction to Algorithms - Cormen et al.

- Kicked off learning about Big O Notation through this. The concepts completely changed the way I looked at code, especially being mostly self taught beforehand.

Numerical Analysis - Sauer

- Learned about Newton's Method from this book which blew my mind at the time and got me hooked.

Paul's Notes - https://tutorial.math.lamar.edu/classes/de/de.aspx


Very cool! I'd recommend simplifying it. I created a card game for SQL and kids were lost when there was too much work involved until I simplified it - https://rowsandtables.com


This seems really complicated for the age group (2-4 years old), and becoming a "real data scientist" might not be an aspirational goal for these kids


You're mistaking recommended age for number of players. Recommended age is 8+.


wow those look amazing!


SQL Card Game - https://rowsandtables.com

I made it to teach some kids, including my own. I've got it up for sale with $0 marketing budget. If it sells then that's great, if not then that's okay too.


What numerical year is yawm al qiyamah?

> The year 2050, Friday, the 19th of Dhu Al Hijjah

Well okay then


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