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Hi! I'm William (Bill) Claytor, Senior Software / Quality Engineer with 25+ years of experience transforming manual QA into scalable automated systems, currently working on AI-assisted Dev/QA workflows.

  Location: Arizona / Maryland, US or REMOTE
  Remote: Yes
  Willing to relocate: Yes
  Technologies: Ruby, Python, JavaScript, C#/.NET, Java, Selenium, Playwright, Jenkins, Azure, AWS, AI-Assisted Dev/QA workflows
  Résumé/CV: https://wclaytor.github.io/assets/resume/william_claytor_resume.pdf
  Email: wclaytor@fastmail.com


I have also barely avoided a large ladder in the middle of the lane. Don't follow closely so you have more time to see what is ahead and react.


> Always stay in the middle of the lane

This is wrong. Use the whole lane to be in the best spot to see and be seen. Use lateral movement to increase your visibility in driver mirrors.


Setup is a huge factor. I got a $300 parts "Telecaster" on Craigslist and took it to Bill's Music (https://www.billsmusic.com/) for their premium setup and it definitely took it to the next level in terms of the electronics, frets (especially worn and / or protruding), intonation, etc... So if you have a guitar you want to love that isn't quite there, consider getting a pro setup by a shop you trust.


I have been playing for 50 years at this point. I'm currently playing something similar to this (0) bought at GC for $329 and while the knobs and jack could stand to be replaced (especially if you are performing) it plays and sounds great. You do not need to spend more than $500 to get a solid electric guitar these days. You can definitely spend a lot more for a top tier brand like Fender, Gibson, PRS, Suhr, etc... but there is a lot of good value between $250 - $500.

[0]https://www.guitarcenter.com/Gretsch-Guitars/G5210-P90-Elect...


That price range will suit most players and many of these contemporary lower end guitars even have decent pickups with a sort of jack of all trades compromise, massive improvement over the low end pickups of the past. The next notch up in quality mostly is improved hardware and pickups tailored more to a style/sound, instruments for the performer who plays a lot and these instruments are generally a good value for those sorts. Above that it is questionable but there are some amazing instruments that justify their price, spending $2k on a guitar is not that expensive in the grand scheme if it is the right guitar for you and is the one which will be with you for life. We have a great range of instruments to pick from these days.


Ok but I think we're talking $400 not $150. And there are lemons in every price range, which a beginner can't really detect. Correct me if I'm wrong.


$150 guitars (from the reputable brands) tend to use about the same quality of hardware as the $400 guitars, they just use plywood and synthetic fingerboards and uncool woods which are generally uncool for stupid reasons. Add in a cheap paint job, a thousand fewer turns of copper on the pickup coils maybe made up for with a cheaper stronger magnet and you are getting into the $150 range. Setup and playing wise they tend to be about the same as the $400 guitars.

There are lemons in every price range which no one can detect, it is the nature of wood.


Agreed! If you have an Apple device GarageBand is the best way to get started.


Once you start getting into many tracks and advanced routing it seems like the choice (for me at least) is Logic Pro or Ableton Live. And I find Ableton much more fun to use when I want to jam, whereas Logic feels more like programming which is also great. FL Studio is also lots of fun. Try various options and see what fits best with what you are trying to do.


I use Logic but I should try Ableton again. It's been years.


Ableton Live is very intuitive and there is a lite version that is bundled with some interfaces (https://www.ableton.com/en/products/live-lite/features/?pk_v...). It has been years so I don't remember which interface / version I started with but I quickly fell in love and upgraded to the full version. The time I have spent learning it has been fun and worthwhile, so maybe give it a try.


For my last several Amazon returns I did not have to use the original (or any) packaging, nor did I have to print a label. I did have to initiate the return through the app and take it to a UPS Store, where they took the unpackaged item, scanned the provided QR code on my phone, and gave me a receipt.


However, using the industry accepted term for the topic of the discussion is fine.


Why would you bother typing "I don't know what an ATS is" into a Hacker News comment rather than typing "What is an ATS" into a Google search?


I didn't type that.


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