Are there really people out there that read both versions of the possible chatgpt output and choose one of them?

I just pick the first one every time, ain't nobody got time fo dat

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u/kekski8 — 1 day ago

So how am I supposed to study for the PBQs for A+ 1201?

Is "journey to cyber" on YouTube any good? Please give me resources

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u/kekski8 — 4 days ago
▲ 28 r/omad

Losing weight eating double cheeseburgers and waffle fries

And a multi lmao

u/kekski8 — 4 days ago

How the F do you learn to build chords?

How do you make chords?

How do you hear a chord in your head and play it or put it in the DAW?

Apparently you cant hum chords?

You can only hum one note at a time?

Can you hear chords in your head?

If you cant hum chords or hear them in your head, how do producers know what to put in the DAW?

Is it just blind trial and error?

I really don't get it, and this chord stuff is really causing me to stagnate

Is there some sort of way to take a chord from your head and "find" it on your midi keyboard?

What do I do???

Thanks

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u/kekski8 — 8 days ago

Are Dion practice tests enough?

Are Jason Dion practice tests enough to pass the A+? If I'm getting 80-90% on Dion practice tests, without simply memorizing the answers, am I good to take the actual exam? Has anyone here passed A+ only with Dion practice exams?

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u/kekski8 — 8 days ago

Prof Messer practice exams are literally a joke compared to Dions

Like what the hell? Why is it in pdf format? It's not 2006 dude make it interactive like dions. Not sure what kind of business decision that was but it was a horrible one. I'm taking one of the Messer practice tests for a+ and I'm just getting frustrated at having to do it all manually. The fact that there's a link to the answer key doesn't mean anything bro

Dion practice tests are way better, im sorry. Interactive, you can mark questions, instant feedback. What more do you need? Messer seriously needs to take notes. I get they're on different platforms basically, but it doesn't matter. Making interactive practice tests that aren't on udemy can't be that hard

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u/kekski8 — 8 days ago

Three weeks in, I still can't come close to making the type of shit I actually wanna make lmao

Plus I feel like the pluck near the end is off beat and idk how to fix it aaahhhhhhh

u/kekski8 — 13 days ago
▲ 109 r/omad

You ever feel like fasting is freeing you of food addiction?

I've been fasting for almost 30 days now. Mostly 23 hour daily fasts. I know thats nothing and a bunch of you do like 100+ hour fasts all the time. But for me it's pretty insane. Lmao. So I'm fasting daily and nowadays, and I'm not sure if I'm imagining this or not, but I feel a bit free of food addiction.

​

I don't know. It's like the food addiction shackles are loosening or something. I don't know if this feeling is gonna stay forever, but I'm actually enjoying it. Not gonna lie. I've been so severely addicted to food my entire life and I've basically always been fat. So this is groundbreaking for me.

​

Tomorrow is day 30 and I've lost 22lbs. I don't see myself ever stopping. Hell yeah

Btw this post was originally made for r/fasting so it might be kinda off

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u/kekski8 — 18 days ago

Bought a flp then learned I need the plugins he used in order to actually hear it

Spent $$ on it too lmao. Only like $3 though so not that bad. I guess I gotta stick to studying fl demo projects. I really wanted to learn about spectrum - zedd though. Fml

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u/kekski8 — 19 days ago
▲ 16 r/CompTIA

To the people who did Dions practice questions and the actual exam for A+, how much easier is the exam?

I've been doing dions practice questions, and then I stumbled onto the official CompTIA practice questions. The ones on the CompTIA website, the practice questions, are way easier dude. It's insane. Like 50% easier. And I got all of them correct. The CompTIA website ones. It was actually insane to me.

​

So I ask to the people who have done both, is this true for the actual exam? Are dions practice questions harder than the exam? Thanks. Im honestly ready to schedule my exam after taking those CompTIA practice questions. But maybe it's false confidence. 🤷‍♂️

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u/kekski8 — 19 days ago

What is the actual part of the equation that makes you better at producing?

Do you know what I mean? Like people will say it takes years to become good or even just okay, but what is it actually that causes you to get better? Learning a bunch of little things that adds up and causes you to have an entire "producer toolkit"? Idk man. What do you think?

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u/kekski8 — 20 days ago

6 days of studying and I got a 76% on dions practice test. Am I ready?

I've been grinding like crazy, I don't think I've ever studied like this in my life not gonna lie dude. Im kind of a slacker a little bit so this is the first time I actually put my head in the books. I know 76% isn't that great but would you say I'm ready to take the real exam? I still have three more practice tests to do. Any advice?

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u/kekski8 — 21 days ago

Dehydrated - Short -11 pages

Title: Dehydrated

Format: Started out as a sitcom pilot but ended up a short

Page length: 11 pages

Genre: Comedy

Logline: Two friendless teenagers are pulled together by.... dehydrated foods?

Feedback concerns: Just curious to know what people think about it. Took me a couple days to write. What do you think about the dynamic between the two teenagers?

Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sB5ER4srLelVn7nOumpZ6P1sxXPtAjHu/view?usp=drivesdk

Thanks for your time

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u/kekski8 — 25 days ago

Three weeks of fasting complete... holy shit man

Its not even that hard. I just wake up, eat my shitty little meal and fast until the next morning. It's so simple and easy and it's getting easier over time for sure. It's less like I'm fasting and more like this is just how I naturally eat. In the beginning it was a bit harder. Granted it's only been 21 days.

​

Can't wait to see whats in the future. I've lost 19lbs btw. Pretty awesome. I love fasting man

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u/kekski8 — 25 days ago

I found a way to cry consistently

I have been trying to cry for like a decade, with no success. I tried so many things, reiki, acupuncture, pranic healing, talk therapy, crystals, fasting, eft, emotion code, a diffuser, candles, massage, MDMA, shrooms, xanax.

I literally tried it all. All to try to induce a "good cry". But none of it really worked that well. I mean I shed a few tears when I was next to a cat, which made me visit a few shelters in order to get one (never did), and a rose quartz crystal made me cry a little. But none of it was consistent.

I was trying to cry not just for the sake of crying, I was trying to release unprocessed stuff inside of me. You know how you hold in tears when you're a kid so you don't look like a baby? Those tears stay inside of you until you let them out, and them being in your body causes all types of problems, including just feeling low or down, and other things

But nowadays I have a consistent method to cry. To release these unprocessed tears. And it's just... music.

I turn on a playlist on Spotify, and I start to feel really emotional, and some tears come out. Although it's a bit annoying because I have to deal with "micro releases", as it won't all come out at once. Micro releases are just 2 or 3 tears coming out every time you turn on the music. Not a big, "good cry", just a little bit each time that adds up.

I'm trying to get it all out so I can be emotionally free if that makes sense. Just trying to feel lighter and better.

I don't get any money from telling you these playlists, I have no songs on them. But the playlists I use are "Peaceful Guitar", and "Peaceful Piano" on Spotify. It works for me and is very consistent. Tears come out every time. But obviously we are all different and it might not work for you

🙏🙏

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u/kekski8 — 2 months ago