just wired up the mmwave and light sensors to support my kitchen undercabinet lighting. unfortunately found that mmwave seems to have difficulty penetrating the solid wood cabinet doors, so i'll have to build a junction box to hide the circuitry in the backsplash
just speak with anyone that works in the creative industry. trust me on this, it's wayyy better to cram some knowledge and pass a test, vs dealing with the color of the sky, alignment of planets, your interview showcase was actually just free work for them, etc
leetcode style interviews kinda are janky, sure. but it's the best solution we have right now and is actually a decent signal for good engineering candidate.
it's 2024, almost anyone that wants to code knows how to do it. it's down to whether or not you are willing to work hard.
if ~hour of work for a couple of months is too much work, boy will you be surprised when you actually start working. a lot of people would kill to do that to make 150k+
gone are the days of showing up to eat free catered lunch and then going home, it's time to earn your salary
this project was initially an art project but now that i'll be installing CT clamps to measure all of the 120v circuits throughout my house i'll be using it to display some power metrics alongside the subpanel, and then also probably as controls by my new LED strip installations
i got a 4.0" lcd with touch support rendering text and tracking touch points using a raspberry pi pico. the next step is learning how to build a UI in c++ lol. i was hoping there'd be something like react that compiles to c++