brianm | 6 days ago | on: Warranty Void If Regenerated
brianm's comments
brianm | 6 months ago | on: A board member's perspective of the RubyGems controversy
brianm | 1 year ago | on: Rust library for building no-boilerplate CLI apps
verbose
show-machine-names
remoteshell ssh
forklimit 4
TBH, I quite like it. Less to memorize, easy to know what to override, etc.brianm | 1 year ago | on: Rust library for building no-boilerplate CLI apps
brianm | 1 year ago | on: Notes on Taylor and Maclaurin Series
brianm | 2 years ago | on: Old vs. new growth trees and the wood products they make
I'd need to break out my [Hoadley](https://www.tauntonstore.com/understanding-wood-2nd-edition-...) to confirm, but my belief is that you are trading modulus of elasticity for modulus of rupture.
brianm | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: How did yall meet your SO?
brianm | 2 years ago | on: What can I do as an amateur hacker to get the best programming job next year?
1) Shore up your formal learning in at least data structures, databases, and architecture. I took night classes at the local community college, but there may be better ways now.
2) Find something to hack on where you get useful critical feedback both on your design approach and code. Critical feedback on your work hurts, but it is necessary to grow. Open Source can work well for this, as long as it is some project you actually use for something real(ish) so that the contributions you make are driven by your actual usage.
3) Network -- join local user groups, go to meetups, be curious and engage with people there. Folks are usually thrilled to rattle on about the stuff they are interested in, listen, ask questions, care.
If you have a decade of experience in some domain, look for ways to leverage that experience in a transition into tech. My first job in this career was as a technical writer and trainer, because my previous career involved a LOT of writing, and I was good at it. My next job was at a company where I had a lot of domain expertise in their target market, so despite having limited technical experience in the role, I brought a bunch of domain knowledge to the table.
brianm | 2 years ago | on: OpenTF announces fork of Terraform
brianm | 2 years ago | on: Intel exiting the PC business as it stops investment in the Intel NUC
brianm | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: Could you share your personal blog here?
Kind of on pause for last few years, but not dead :-)
brianm | 2 years ago | on: The long life of Apache httpd 2.4
brianm | 2 years ago | on: The Staff Engineer's Path – Book Review
FANG and FANG-model (anyone copying FANG engineering/product model) companies do it well and have the bulk of success cases. Look for engineering-lead companies first, product lead companies second.
A key question when interviewing is "how is the roadmap established?" You want answers where senior leadership establishes goals (strategic or metric), product provides their understanding of opportunities, and engineering decides what to actually do. Even then, there will be the common failure model of EMs doing the roadmapping, not senior (staff+) ICs, but you can tease apart how that works, as it is always going to be a mix.
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Service Weaver: A Framework for Writing Distributed Applications
I was thinking of the EJB 1 & 2 era xml wiring of all the things.
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Service Weaver: A Framework for Writing Distributed Applications
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Have licenses ever stopped you from combining two FOSS programs?
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Why do new cars look like wet putty?
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Kill Bill – Open-Source Subscription Billing and Payments Platform
brianm | 3 years ago | on: Letters about Soap (1997)
brianm | 4 years ago | on: Apache PLC4X announcing end of community support due to missing funding