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Looks pretty cool. I see some similarities with Mint language https://mint-lang.com/


I’ve tried it and really enjoyed how it works. I’d like to suggest a small UX improvement: for a typing app, it would be much easier to avoid using the mouse. When a practice ends, the user should be able to press the RETURN key to move to the next practice. (instead of clicking the Continue button)


Hey - thanks for trying it out :)

That's a good point - we actually do have keyboard shortcuts but their discovery is definitely lacking! Using the return key as the default seems more intuitive - thanks for the suggestion!



https://archive.ph/YtPLb

The site is not available for European visiotrs due to legal reasons:

>>> We recognize you are attempting to access this website from a country belonging to the European Economic Area (EEA) including the EU which enforces the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and therefore access cannot be granted at this time.


For websites with specifically-American audiences, it can often be easier to only allow people from their intended readership access than to correctly understand and implement compliance to a foreign law. In this case, it's a local news website.


It’s not that complicated. Just don’t collect any private/profiling information and you’re good.

They’d probably rather stay with a more limited audience that keeps their ad CTRs up, than dilute the numbers with unmonetized visitors.


Why would a local news site care about GDPR compliance? It's not like enforcement is even feasible.


I can relate. A few years ago, I wrote this piece: Why hackathons are for wankers! Or how to hack a hackathon? [1]

[1] https://medium.com/@mispronounced/why-hackathons-are-for-wan...


> I wrote this piece: Why hackathons are for wankers!

Do you know the meaning of a wanker?


Yes. It is meant to be taken as satire. I have contributed in a few myself.


This is excellent. Does anyone know a similar resource for Mac or Linux?


I haven't compared them, but another reverse engineering resource:

https://beginners.re/


This looks amazing, thank you!

A few posts up, melvinroest suggested starting a study group for the (Windows-based) course in the original post -- would anyone be interested in doing the same for this Linux-based course?


I am all in to form a peer group to study RE (Windows or Linux)

I am more interested in memory patching and binary modification of software (including games) than malware analysis


Yes I'm interested into Linux systems too, I work for embedded sw dev and sometimes I struggle with core dumps in gdb, this would help me :)


My email's in my profile -- shoot me a line :)


Ok, awesome! I'm pretty much an exclusively Linux guy, so that's the path I'm planning on going down -- my email's in my profile. I'd love to discuss further!


Wow, I was just about to go looking for something like this. Much more comprehensive than the OP. Really excellent, thanks!


How about SSR, and how routing is setup?


YOU ARE AWESOME! Thank you very very very much!


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