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Quote: Has it always behaved this way for you?
Yes, but I have only been using it for 2 or 3 months.
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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I can't stand stuff like that. I use Android Studio quite often & have used it for at least 5 years so I've been thru a lot with it.
It is probably some setting in your idea.properties file -- found wherever you've installed Studio (c:\program files\etc)
Here are more details that may help you find an answer: Advanced configuration—IntelliJ IDEA[^]
But, there is another thing (that could mess up your installation) that could help.
There's a setting to tell it that this is a first-time run (since installation) to make it "configure".
You can disable that by adding this line as the last line of your idea.properties file:
disable.android.first.run=true
Then start it up & see what you get.
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Thanks. I have added that last line to idea.properties.
Now we will see!
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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OK. I found the cause of the problem:
If you start an emulator and shut down Android Studio without shutting down the emulator: That is when it happens! Next time you start AS it runs in the background and you don't see a user's interface.
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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I've never had issues running AS on Linux (my regular desktop) but had many issues running on Windows.
However, just updated AS a couple of days ago (on Linux) & I had an issue where I started the Emulator and then I needed to stop it but it wouldn't stop. But a similar problem where the emulator window was nowhere to be found.
I had to go and kill all the processes to be able to start it again.
I think this all may be due to the way the emulator "runs inside" AS now, where it used to be a separate process & window.
It's quite annoying.
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My first thought…
Whichever impostor web site you loaded it from is trying to run crypto mining software in the background. 😊
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No. Task Manager shows there is almost no activity in the background.
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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Picked up this book, Refactored: My attempt at breaking into tech during the rise of the boot camp[^], at the local Barnes & Noble & read it in 3 days.
It is the author's experience of joining TechElevator[^] ($15,000 - $20,000 USD) 4 month boot camp which promises 92% placement with job of average $58,000 / yr salary.
That's shocking to me, since a CS degree would cost far more & take 4 years.
The author had no tech experience before going to boot camp (worked at B&N & grocery store).
Spoiler: The author does indeed get a job offer (and accepts) for $60K / year!
I'm a bit shocked because I have (some college education) & it took me quite a few years to work to an equivalent level.
Additionally, the skills they learn in 4 months are very limited & you can tell the author did not have a "full-grasp" of what he'd learned. Just a surface level.
What do you think? Is that expected kind of salary for entry-level IT?
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I don't know if it is expected salary for entry level, but I would think that cost of living now has sky rocketed and even $60K seems like too little to me. Mortgage/rent, car/gas, food, medical, etc. on less than $60K? yikes!!
My first gig was in the mid-high 30K per year but that was like 20 years ago. Food prices have doubled here in NY in less than 1 year. $8 omellete now costs $14-$16 dollars. 3 bags of groceries now costs $240 where it used to be $130.
I can go on and on, but why bother...
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Yeah, I started out making $5/hour building computers, then, 1 year later (1992) moved on to tech support making $24K/yr.
3 years later (1996) I moved into QA & moved to a new place. I told the hiring VP that I'd like to make $27K (I was doing QA test automation (via SQARobot) before most people knew it even existed. The VP said, "no, we'll pay you you're current salary." I accepted bec. other software company was moving to another state.
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That's about where I started too. I didn't stay in that bracket very long though. I didn't really have a taste for testing, so I just did my time until they realized I could code.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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my daughter just completed a SQL course/certification, with some guidance from dear old dad(me). She started her first job about 2 months ago as a SQL 'programmer' report writer etc... she is making nearly 50k. Middle of Iowa decent income here actually.
I recommend to every young person who asks me about how to get into this field. First do you like sitting in front of a computer all day typing? Second do you like problem solving. If so then go either to a two year college and get a trade school type degree or go self study and get a certification in any programming language you like. It works. It works for my daughter and it has worked for a few of her friends who are in the field.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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I feel the same way -- I'm a self-taught dev with almost 2yr CIS degre (I'm missing Mgmnt 205 class & COBOL III) and I'd have a degree.
Thankfully there are still some apprentice-ship type jobs in IT that if the person simply has the skills then they can do the work -- and not have to pay $75K for a 4 year degree.
Also, congrats to you & your daughter. Very smart choices.
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Location? 60k in NY or LA are below poverty threshold. I'd get 1.5 times my current salary here in Italy, and my salary is already high for Italian standards.
GCS/GE d--(d) s-/+ a C+++ U+++ P-- L+@ E-- W+++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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den2k88 wrote: 60k in NY or LA are below poverty threshold.
That is a sick situation. Big cities are ridiculously overhyped and overpriced.
The author is in Pittsburgh so the salary is more "mid-west" baseline & to me is a high range for intro. dev.
Reading the book has opened my eyes that I'm underselling myself a bit. I have 30 years of IT & 22 years of Software Development with growth -- always focused on new tech & learning more.
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Tech is different. In the 90s when I started, the smart companies like Microsoft valued the ability to whiteboard a problem over degrees and even sometimes experience.
Maybe I am an outlier case? But anyway, that's how I managed to go from being a homeless teen with a GED to working in Microsoft at the end of the 90s.
Tech is the great equalizer, in some respects. If you have raw talent, the rest is up to you, so it doesn't surprise me at all to see companies offer alternative paths to dev employment
Honestly I think it would be better as a vocational style craft, but we hardly do that kind of thing anymore, at least in the states.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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Yep I agree 100%
I'm a self-taught dev with almost 2yr CIS degre (I'm missing Mgmnt 205 class & COBOL III) and I'd have a degree.
I worked into QA, went into Capacity & Performance Mgmnt (load testing, etc) and finally, in 2000, got my first Dev job & have been doing development since then.
Thankfully there are still some apprentice-ship type jobs in IT that if the person simply has the skills then they can do the work.
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I think a voc tech craft type placement would be better for this industry as well. It is just simply amazing to me the number of juniors I have taught the basics too. But it has also been very rewarding.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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60k/year is less than any entry-level salary in engineering in Germany (I am not talking net worth here, so take another 27% down if net worth) by about at least 15k. Probably 20k if IT.
Note that the current job market is literally craving for IT competencies, so with or without boot camp, if you can put two lines of code together that pass testing, you'll easily get a job for more than 50k/year.
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location, talent pool and I hate AVERAGES without clarity of data as extremes will skew.
My main bit is lack of the middle, daily, its a job type worker.
As such junior/entry seem to be placed into that middle position very quickly, but the expectation that 3 years experience is greater then other fields of 20 years experience, in salary terms at least.
Boot Camps, yes. Give Sally in HR a 6 week boot camp, and if proves useful, will be self improving the HR, minor things, the little daily routines that could be automated, if was less intimidated by that Excel macro, or some batch script, or even low-code to allow them to spend time on other tasks.
And if business care, would pay for this training, and give a significant salary boost
Need someone to engineer a mission critical health product, 6 week boot camp, plus the 5 years before self learning, and 10 years earning a living wage within doing health related product, sure.
Many can learn to make a shelf and hang it "suitably", not everyone needs to know how to use and own a furnace and smelt their own nails.
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IIRC my brother's girlfriend got around that in Pittsburgh PA 3ish years ago after completing a bootcamp.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
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Very interesting. So this all seems quite real. I'm amazed.
Bootcamp would've been great for me. Instead, I took about 8 years of bootcamp in my first roles in the IT industry. I got shoved around a lot.
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The problem I suspect with bootcamp only backgrounds is going to be getting your 2nd or 3rd jobs. They give a very narrowly focused education without the background needed to support growing into more advanced roles. Obviously not impossible, but much closer to a self-taught career path where you need to do a lot more learning on your own time as you go.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
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but those other skills can be learned outside and on the job. Heck in fact many organizations have their own versions of softskills training that helps foster growth in people. (At least they say it does)
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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