MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: I'd like to use the web my way, thank you very much Quora
MrMatters's comments
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: Empathy among students in engineering programmes
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eric-barker/which-professions-...
It makes sense because doctors require a high level of empathy whereas surgeons need to be better under pressure, be able to hold longer focus, etc. which are qualities of psychopaths.
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: Empathy among students in engineering programmes
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: A Tor of the Dark Web
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: Wikipedia Redefined
I still think it should remain mostly as it is, though. I didn't like their changes to it.
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: Sal Khan responds to critic
"Below is Khan’s e-mail to me, which I shared with the author of Monday’s post, Karim Kai Ani, a former middle school teacher and math coach who is the founder of a company called Mathalicious. He said Khan is wrong. This won’t be the end of the debate."
It was part of the recap, I understood it to mean "Khan responds to this guy who posted the other day who said Khan was wrong" and then "stay tuned for his response to Khan's response" rather than "And then he replies Khan is wrong in his response. Stay tuned."
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: The Terrifying Background of the Man Who Ran a CIA Assassination Unit
For trying to get away from the story book evil sounding-ness of an entity named "Blackwater", they sure didn't do very good with "Xe", which sounds even more mysterious and potentially evil-doing IMO.
Academi sounds a lot better though. And they do a lot US LE/gov't/etc. training which is probably what they would rather emphasize than their being a "private mercenary company".
MrMatters | 13 years ago | on: Heroku is down again
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Laravel : A New PHP Framework
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Worst VC Firms' Websites
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: How I survived a plane crash
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Outsmarting Yourself for Success
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: The 160sq ft apartment
>Or for any modern city dweller for whom home need not mean much more than where you wake up and go to sleep.
Unless it costs less, it'd be just as easy to use a regular sized wake-up-and-go-to-sleep place, wouldn't it? I'm just baffled.
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Poll: When did you start programming in your free time?
I started getting more and more interested in the things I saw like the way the chat programs worked (they were java applets), exploring them as a user and mod and learning how to "hack" them. It wasn't long before this lead me to communities where I was also shown HTML and I started learning about it.
When I was 10-11, I got into modding boards like the InvisionFree ones, which taught me a lot more about HTML and exposed me to JavaScript as you only had limited access to them so that's how all the modding was done, and a lot of those communities intersected with ones about making your own forum systems and/or modifying forums you had more access to (like hosting your own phpBB or IPB forums) which got me interested in PHP and MySQL.
By that point I'd heard a lot about C, etc. too and I was a lot more curious about computers than I was my schoolwork so I'd spend as much time learning about everything I could as possible. I started migrating to more general programming and hacking oriented communities when I was 12 and would stay up literally all night most nights and make up the sleep on the weekends, and I haven't had a proper sleeping schedule since.
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Gigabit Internet for $80
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: A "Moneyball" statician predicted Jeremy Lin's success 2 years ago
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Show HN: We made an addictive way to browse pictures on reddit
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Dear Comcast, I'm leaving you because...
From there, you'll have to check on each of their sites to see if they service your address or not. Hopefully you'll find some that do. I've tried dozens in my general area, and none of them did.
Awhile ago I got so desperate I nearly resorted to T1, but it's hard to justify for my purposes... and generally my internet connection through Comcast is pretty reliable, but for about a month or two back then they couldn't/wouldn't figure out whatever was causing it to be nearly unusable.
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: The Pirate Bay Wants You To Really Download A Car
MrMatters | 14 years ago | on: Megaupload down, FBI Charges Seven With Online Piracy
This is all anecdotal and I probably agree with you that the average user most likely just used it to download music and pirated content, but I do think you're overlooking a ton of legitimate usages as well.
1. Third party statistics sites like Alexa and Compete are horribly untrustworthy indicators of reality.
2. Growing traffic isn't the best way to foster a community. I believe pg has written about this a few times, with regards to communities in general and HN.
I think the Quora community is amazing. It's very populous and the quality of answers is generally on par or better than specialty interest sites/forums from a wide range of topics, all in one place. Of course, it has its strengths and its weaknesses - for example, a strength would definitely be reading an answer from an actual CIA [something] analyst, former Foreign Service Officer, doctor, etc. on a relevant question, but it falls behind in areas like technology IMO.
The site is annoying and I hate a lot about the community (surprise, it turns out "mature adults" can use shitty memes just as much as the teens everyone blames for them on reddit), but I think they've done a great job at fostering the kind of community they want so far. If anything, it's being threatened by the pressure of growing.