b1twise
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10 years ago
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on: The Madness of Airline Élite Status
I used to skip the lounge access also, but its a nice perk. It has decent internet, some snacks until I eat on the plane, and foremost comfortable seating. I don't like a lot of noise around me as well, so its a break from the rest of the airport bustle. I fly business when available because many of my flights are 13hrs-ish. I'm oversized, so I literally have to fold myself up to fit within my space in coach. That's fine for 2hrs, but not more. I can't sleep sitting up. That's a long 13hrs staring at the seatback display of the plane going around the world.
I scored a mid-level membership once. I didn't go out of my way to do it. Nothing super good about it.
Oh, your luggage gets a priority tag and comes out first. In certain airports that can save an hour of your life.
But mostly its about accumulating miles on trips I'd be taking anyway. Essentially free upgrades, or entirely free flights. Just for joining their silly program. Why not?
I do the same with hotels.
b1twise
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10 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Is Braintree as evil as PayPal?
PayPal isn't so bad--doing millions through them a year has caused no problems that couldn't be worked out.
I looked at Braintree before the acquisition and they seemed really cool. I was able to hang out in their IRC chat room and watch them work.
b1twise
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10 years ago
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on: Show HN: Pomodoro in Your Terminal
Yeah, its not in your terminal at all. Fails to mention dependencies.
b1twise
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10 years ago
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on: How to Use Varnish Cache as Secured AWS S3 Gateway
I think this is mostly a solution without a problem. Just to hit a few points--S3 might (and I'm not sure I agree) be expensive. However, it gives you HA and multiple copies of your files on the backend for safety. If you're serving a lot of images, owning that hardware can be very costly. Also, when cloudfront was tested the results were pretty good. Easy to implement, not much more expensive than S3 alone. Our EC2 costs dwarf S3, and our site is very image heavy.
b1twise
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10 years ago
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on: The problem of OS X hardware in 2016
In the past years I've gone from a 15" MBP to an 11" MBA and most recently the 12" MB.
I hate the MB. The key travel is way too short and have seen no signs of adjusting. The lack of expansion ports is criminal. Just one more. It's the little things--like no led to indicate charging/charged. I use it for testing for work, but that's about it.
My MBA plugs/docks into my cinema display. Keyboard and mouse are plugged into the display USB hub. Ethernet on the other USB port. When I travel it's super light.. no complaints.
Just for reference, the MBP was just too heavy and hot. Lugging around the 15" in a backpack around airports all day was not comfortable.
I wasn't happy with the Lenovo laptops, so I went Apple. Now? Not sure where to go.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Working Remotely From A Tropical Island In Thailand
I work remote, and worked even more remotely for a year. Yeah, this was just a 2mo bit of fun. Great. But longer stays in Thailand quickly run into immigration law.
If you're having power outages or brownouts, you want voltage regulators and UPS'. Bad power will wreck your electronics. It's good to have a backup internet connection as well. I've had outages lasting up to 3 weeks, and what are you really going to do about it to motivate a telephone company to work faster?
The 37signals people created a short book about working remotely. At about the same time as I was having problems with someone not overlapping their hours with the rest of the team, their book pointed out the same issue. If you don't overlap, people will become isolated in a very bad way. If you hire someone you just have to clarify the expected hours upfront.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Amazon Elastic File System
S3 is going to be a lot cheaper. It isn't perfect, but it's pretty reliable. Then you can look at cloudfront. And they did recently release cross-region S3 replication. Then you can be really safe and keep a backup copy at a whole other location.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Amazon Elastic File System
This would be big for us. When we initially looked at the problem of sharing or keeping a large number of files in sync, the prospects were dim. DRBD? etc. So we ended up using Gluster. Gluster has been temperamental at best. We've been able to move some data out and into elasticsearch, but not all. So, I've nudged my AWS rep and signed up already. Reliable NFS is good for me.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Tabvention – Manage Your Browser Tab Addiction
I recently switched back to Firefox exactly for this reason. Firefox has tab overflow so that I can actually tell what an open tab is. Additionally, Firefox can be set to ONLY load the current tab on startup. Have you ever been to a hotel and opened your browser only to be presented with a captive portal? With Chrome all of your other tabs are now going to that page also. It caused me lots of sadness once.
I maintain a work and personal instance of firefox. When things seem a little sluggish I move open tabs related to projects into a wiki. Or, if its just something I wanted to 'read later'... I read it.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Minimalist Living: When a Lot Less Is More
Any time I move, I try to divest myself of at least half of everything I own. I've moved with only what I could fit into luggage. The take on it that I'm more comfortable with now is--if I want it, I want something really nice. I work for a site that specializes in antiques and collectibles and such. If I want something, I go searching for a special example of that thing. It sheds at least part of the disposable nature of things.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: I got my Facebook Ad in front of 8k people with 0 sales. Why?
So, you're an expert with Google's tools and want to set up a workshop... so of course your first choice is to go use Facebook...
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Ask HN: What are your unused domain names?
I like spy.co. If you were planning to let that one lapse or had an interest in letting it go.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Notes on my full-time testing of 7 Dropbox alternatives
I've been using cyphertite after giving up on SpiderOak. It's been nice so far.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Ask HN: What do you use for 2FA?
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Stop Using LinkedIn
Plaxo!
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: SPRINT declaring war on Adderall
So because they studied CS they're qualified to design drugs? I didn't see any testing/trials in their plans. I also think the drug they're fighting is probably Modafinil--not Adderall. And I don't care how the jar feels in my hand... fancy packaging is money wasted.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: I'm thinking of going full code-hipster and learning Tcl
http://www.rubylane.com/info/careersWe'd love to hear from you if you're interested in coding for Naviserver and have HTML/CSS/JS skills. We're working to launch www.rubylux.com now.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Tcl for Web Nerds
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Does a real anti-aging pill already exist?
It reminded me of Print Shop from the 80s. I felt an urge to print it out on colored paper to read. The web devs over at bloomberg must have plenty of cocaine.
b1twise
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11 years ago
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on: Read scientific papers on your Kindle
I ended up using a Nexus 10 for reading technical stuff. The kindle is too small and you lose the page formatting. I really wish they'd bring back the Kindle DX format.
I scored a mid-level membership once. I didn't go out of my way to do it. Nothing super good about it.
Oh, your luggage gets a priority tag and comes out first. In certain airports that can save an hour of your life.
But mostly its about accumulating miles on trips I'd be taking anyway. Essentially free upgrades, or entirely free flights. Just for joining their silly program. Why not?
I do the same with hotels.