1 - Your Minecraft Username: CodexTheDuplex
2 - Your Discord Username & ID: Codex10#0222
3 - Your previous experience, please do provide links if it's open-source, or if not talk us through it:
I've actually worked as a backend Java developer for the server SocoOp, not sure if y'all have heard of it but it was quite popular(at least 5 members on at any given moment). I've since compiled TFM for that server and got past a few errors that any of the other developers had the caliber to solve.
I've also gotten into Machine Learning, and I've built a website that can detect Coronavirus and other chest-related diseases including fractures from a trained X-Train model: https://xray-analyzer.codextheduplexa.repl.co. I've used tf.js(TensorFlow, not our server lmao) and shards to build this website. The frontend is just a simple HTML webpage that I used CSS Framework that I made to make it visibly appealing yet professional.
I've also coded a Discord bot in Discord.js
https://repl.it/@ArnavGhosh/CodexBot-Template
Of course, this is just a template because I don't want little kids forking my code and claiming it as their own! The actual CodexBot has much more features than this.
I've also coded a Port Scanner for my school that had their internet hit off by someone who goes by the name Akbar, and someone who goes by the snapchat name BlackHatHacker(LMAOOOOOOO).
This is the source code I used. https://repl.it/@ArnavGhosh/Port-Scan.
It takes a bit since I actually use a bunch of threads and the closed ports keep getting pinged for data, but it works.
4 - A short bit about why you want to become a developer for TF.
The development game has always fascinated me, really. What about it fascinates me you may ask? The thing is, actual code being produced fascinates me. How we're able to sit hours on end in a room, tapping away at a keyboard trying to make "untitled.py" or whatever the language case may be into something that could be used by the general audience while minimizing human error, something that is inevitible. Human error is always unpredictable. One day your software could be turned against society and your IP pinger could be used as a botnet. Your website source code to your stylish and sick video-game website could be hacked and people could start building hacked clients based off of it. I understand the magnitude of attentive detail when it comes to computer programming. One small bleep in your code that PyCharm or the IDE that you use can't pick up, you sell hackable trash to the audience. Just another target. I don't want the work I help out with TF or the code I write for the TotalFreedom server to be hackable trash. I want it to be server code that can be easily used by the audience and hard for attackers to get past. I normally average 120 Words Per Minute, so I can produce code pretty quickly.
Thanks,
CodexTheDuplex