u/TopArea6304

▲ 0 r/HowToHack+1 crossposts

How to learn Reverse Engineering

Hey, I'm interested in the concept of Reverse Engineering, I know very basic coding in python and c++. So how to learn this thing? The tutorial seems very hard and I've been stuck for the past 4-5 months. Need advice on this

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u/TopArea6304 — 13 hours ago

Anyone willing to take a complete beginner under their wing?

okay so I'll be honest, I'm a complete beginner. like genuinely starting from scratch. I know what an if else statement is and that's pretty much it.

I'm a second year CS student from India and I really want to get into software engineering, ideally land a remote internship with a US or EU company at some point. but right now I don't even know what I don't know, which is kind of the problem.

what I'm really looking for is someone who's already been through this and can kind of show me the way. not just "here's a resource list" but more like... actually guiding me, telling me what to focus on, what to ignore, what to do when I'm stuck. someone I can learn from by just being around them.

I know some people will say "you should be accountable to yourself" and yeah that's true, I get it. but I also think the fastest way to grow is being around someone better than you. not replacing self discipline with someone else, just having a person who can see where I'm going wrong before I've wasted three months going in the wrong direction. that kind of thing matters a lot especially at the start.

I'm consistent, I study every day and I take it seriously. I'm not looking for someone to hold my hand through every line of code. I just want someone who's willing to occasionally point me in the right direction and maybe chat once in a while about progress.

if you've been where I am and got out of it, I'd genuinely love to hear from you. drop a comment or DM me anytime.

reddit.com
u/TopArea6304 — 7 days ago

Anyone willing to take a complete beginner under their wing?

okay so I'll be honest, I'm a complete beginner. like genuinely starting from scratch. I know what an if else statement is and that's pretty much it.

I'm a second year CS student from India and I really want to get into software engineering, ideally land a remote internship with a US or EU company at some point. but right now I don't even know what I don't know, which is kind of the problem.

what I'm really looking for is someone who's already been through this and can kind of show me the way. not just "here's a resource list" but more like... actually guiding me, telling me what to focus on, what to ignore, what to do when I'm stuck. someone I can learn from by just being around them.

I know some people will say "you should be accountable to yourself" and yeah that's true, I get it. but I also think the fastest way to grow is being around someone better than you. not replacing self discipline with someone else, just having a person who can see where I'm going wrong before I've wasted three months going in the wrong direction. that kind of thing matters a lot especially at the start.

I'm consistent, I study every day and I take it seriously. I'm not looking for someone to hold my hand through every line of code. I just want someone who's willing to occasionally point me in the right direction and maybe chat once in a while about progress.

if you've been where I am and got out of it, I'd genuinely love to hear from you. drop a comment or DM me anytime.

reddit.com
u/TopArea6304 — 7 days ago

Which is the best driving school here in Mangalore?

I'm 20 now and still don't have a license. I want to join a driving school to learn both bike and manual car. They should teach me properly and also the test should be very easy. Can anyone suggest any good driving school in Mangalore? btw I'm from kerala

reddit.com
u/TopArea6304 — 7 days ago
▲ 2 r/introvert+1 crossposts

How do I build strong real-life powerful connections when I have social anxiety?

My mom has always told me that I should build connections with experienced people from different professions — like lawyers, doctors, police officers, politicians, businesspeople, etc. Her reason was simple: if something ever happens to her, my sister, or my family, we shouldn’t feel helpless or lost. She believes that having the right connections can help us handle difficult situations more easily.

For example, I’ve seen people get help quickly with just one phone call because they know someone experienced or influential. Even if they’re stuck in another state or facing some legal, medical, or personal issue, they have people they can rely on.

The problem is that I have pretty bad social anxiety. I barely have friends, and networking feels almost impossible for me. I’m not trying to become “powerful” or fake — I genuinely want to build real, trustworthy relationships with good and experienced people over time, both to grow as a person and to be able to protect/support my family when needed.

For people who were socially anxious or introverted:
How did you start building real-world connections and relationships?
What practical steps helped you?

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u/TopArea6304 — 8 days ago