Cheat Fast Finger

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Tinisha

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:41:26 PM8/3/24
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10fastfingers.com is an awesome application let you play typing game with your friends. Nothing is funnier than beating your friends by your extremely fast typing. But if you can't type fast, a little cheating is harmless. Moreover, learning the new thing while you make a cheat is a wonderful way to learn new knowledge. Now let start


Yeah, it works. But how can we defeat other people with we need to paste the code and enter so many times, this process is even slower than your typing, we need to make this code run continuously.

In this tutorial, we have just learned the way to inspect element, retrieve the data as well as the way to trigger an input event to simulate the user action. Moreover, we also learned how to create a loop which has the gap between each turn by using Promise comes with await. For deeper learning about Promise, you can visit Promise and Await and async. Please take your time to do this cheating by yourself and learn the new thing. See you soon in the next post

My thought is similar to above where I was putting my index finger a little higher to touch the third string lightly. I suspect it is a matter of making sure neither of the first two strings falls under a joint crease.

Hi Rogier, I have no problems to play the full barre, only my changes are not fast enough yet. So I neglected the mini F for now, because that little bastard annoyed me. Is it worth to force to learn it on the long run, is it needed later for embellishments or things like that? Maybe you know that as you are more experienced than me.

I would recommend learning the full barre F it is the first E shape Barre chord which also means you can start learning it up on the 5 fret (this is an A barre chord) where it is easier and work you way back to the F.

What you had to do was lick your finger and then rub it on the joystick port. IIRC A picture of a mouse (I believe he was a character from another game) would appear which would flap his arms as you rubbed the port, and eventually he'd turn grey to indicate the cheat was active.

Originally intended for use with paddle input devices (and, like everything else on the C64, since exploited to the limit), the C64 has A/D converters readable from code exposed on the joystick ports. It also has power rails exposed. Combine that with the lowered resistance of a moist finger and it is absolutely possible to read changing resistance values off the A/D converter when touching the port; I remember doing this gimmick for a demo back in the day.

IIRC the official way to enable this cheat was to wiggle the joystick left and right, which moved the creatures arms. You had to do this at an extremely rapid rate and at such time the cheat would activate.

We had a disassembled joystick and discovered that if you just held down the left and right microswitches at the same time the cheat would activate instantly. I suspect the wiggle detection code was written in such a way that this was interpreted as the required fast wiggle.

Coming back to the original question and as alluded to in one of the other answers, it's possible that the wet finger shorted pins on the port in a similar way to having both left and right directions activated, and thus enabled the cheat.

It could very well be that the cheat mode is activated by detections from the joystick ports of conditions not achievable with a normal joystick (like, for example, opposite directions triggered). This would, in game development, normally have been triggered by specific port adapters (a "dongle") that connect those "impossible" joystick lines by wires or switches, or even active components.

I've been playing guitar for about a month following Justin guitar's beginners course and I could do some basic chord changes quite fine but I find myself really struggling when I'm trying to change from a G chord to a C chord.

The answers given so far offer excellent and accurate advice on learning chord changes in general! But I will offer a tip that will help many beginning (and some experienced) guitarist with the specific change from G to C which is what your question is about.

From this G fingering - you must flip flop your entire hand from top to bottom to get to the most common first position C chord (pictured above). With this G fingering - your first finger is at the bass end of the fretboard and the other fingers are below it and with the standard common C in first position your index finger is at the treble (opposite) end of the fretboard and the other fingers are above it.

This complete reversal requires a great deal of movement (fingers travel a great distance between chords) and although it is a very common transition, it may be one of the more difficult transitions to master effectively at any modicum of speed.

For that reason, I teach my beginning guitar students to play the G chord using their pinkie on the 3rd fret g of the high e string instead of their ring finger. Your middle (2) and ring (3) finger are used to fret the two bass strings as shown in the diagram below.

When playing the G in this formation, you can hold your first finger directly above the first fret on the B string so that when you transition to the standard first position C chord you only have to move your first finger to the string and move your middle and index finger south by one string each. Transitioning from this G fingering to the C chord requires very little movement and can be done very rapidly.

Note that from the position shown in this picture, you can very easily transition from G to G7 or vice versa by alternating between your first finger on the first fret of the high e and your pinkie on the 3rd fret using an almost imperceptible amount of movement. Also notice that the first, second and third fingers are aligned the same way as they will be when playing a standard C chord and going from G to C will require only a slight shift from this position.

It is a little more difficult to play any chord using your pinkie in the beginning because the pinkie is a finger that we rarely use in every day life so it is weaker and less coordinated. But the sooner you learn to start using your pinkie in chords, the faster you will progress as a guitar student.

One other "cheat" I often teach beginners to help get them playing two and three chord songs quickly so they are more encouraged to continue guitar lessons - is using the Cadd9 chord (as a substitute for C major) to G chord transition using a third way to play the G h. This cheat only requires a very slight movement of two fingers to change from C (Cadd9 substitute) to G.

From this G you can easily transition to the Cadd9 (pictured above) simply by moving your first (index) and second (middle) fingers down slightly from the E and A string to the A and D string. Don't remove your 3rd (ring) and 4th (pinkie) fingers from the strings - just leave them right where they are.

The G to C / C to G transition described above (using a Cadd9 as a substitute for C major) might be one of the easiest transitions a beginning guitarist can learn and can get them playing two chord songs in the key of G or C right out of the gate.

First finger the C chord. Take as much time as you need. Then move your fingers up and away from the fretboard and refinger the chord, trying to get all of your fingers hitting the frets accurately and all at the same time. Start with a short distance and then gradually increase the distance until you can do it with all of your fingers fully extended at the beginning. When you can do it with your fingers fully extended, then learn to do it as fast as you can.

When you have mastered playing the G and C chords this way play alternating G and C chords with your fingers fully extended each time. Then decrease the starting distance between your fingers and the fretboard until your fingers barely rise above the fingerboard.

Analysis: For the first parts you are learning to hit each chord with all fingers at once instead of thinking about the placement of each finger. Then you are transitioning between ending the first chord with your fingers fully extended and beginning the second chord with your fingers fully extended, something you've already mastered. Then you learn to transition between chords with your fingers close to the fretboard, which now is giving you difficulty because you're having to stop and think about it. With the chords firmly residing in muscle memory, your thinking block will be broken.

A few thoughts for you. Learning to play chords on guitar doesn't really fit the mechanics that most people are used to with their hands. Having difficulty with some chords (or chord voicings) after one month is not surprising or uncommon.

You could try arpeggiating the chords (playing out each note of the chord individually). This would allow you to practice placing each finger individually. You would want to make sure that you end up with all of the appropriate fingers held down at the same time so that you're not just practicing individual notes. I would recommend doing this from the bottom up and the top down. You could even do it from the middle outward, it's just a little less intuitive. Ideally this will help your hands get used to the shapes and be more easily able to build them on demand; it's not intended to make the switching faster so much as the ability to form the chord faster, which will make it easier to switch quickly.

You can also try to slow things down a bit, which will give you a little more time to get your fingers in place. In general, teachers always suggest moving the tempo around to get a better understanding of things and ingrain each aspect a little better by having a different context. This is most typically applied to playing certain rhythms or fast melodic lines but could certainly be used in this setting as well. They always say that if you can't play it slow, you can't really play it.

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