darth_mastah
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6 years ago
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on: Google Is Eating Our Mail
If this is your personal take, then who is that "we" you keep saying?
darth_mastah
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6 years ago
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on: Commit messages guide
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Microservices Are Something You Grow Into, Not Begin With
I mostly agree with the article except the part where the author plays down the architectural considerations during project inception.
> Right now it’s just me working on the project, and you can be sure I just cracked open my code editor and started writing code on day 1.
It's definitely fun to start with writing code, but in my view it may be more efficient to pause for a moment, understand the problem and find the right solution for it. Then start writing PoC code, which can be refactored at a later stage. That's just pragmatism - lots of code will go to the bin anyway, but at least we give ourselves a chance to have a longer and happier run with it before that happens.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: The Best Article Ever Written About Bragging
> I have a bunch of really smart friends who do really interesting things and when we meet up its like what are you up to? Nothing much. Nothing interesting. Later you find out that they just visited Mongolia, another is learning Russian and the other built renewable power system for a holiday house they just bought, but they're too worried about bragging to bring it up.
I love it how you used "Reflected Glory Bragging" (point 9) right here! It's great, I'm upvoting your comment :)
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: In defense of functional CSS
I've been working with the front end for over a decade now in small and big teams, with different approach to CSS. I've seen things go horribly wrong for all the seemingly good reasons. Bloated CSS, people fearing to make any changes to existing "semantic" classes, people making changes to existing classes and introducing unforeseeable bugs in remote parts of the application, you name it. In my view nothing beats functional CSS. It's simple, pragmatic, easy to read and understand. And most importantly it'd hard to introduce hidden bugs with this approach.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Tailwind: A Utility-First CSS Framework
> holy hell this is the worst thing I've ever seen
Not really :) It might have been my reaction some 10 years ago, but right now I think it's quite good. I've done BEM, the atomic crap, OOCSS and what have you but to be honest nothing beats composition when it comes to rapid development. I used Bootstrap in the past, it was heavily customised for the project, and I ended up making it look very similar to your approach. It makes sense when you have 20 Devs working on a website and you don't want to end up having separate stylesheet for every page. Because business hates consistent design and always wants this and and that to stand out just on this one page. It should be easy, right? I look at your framework as an embodiment of understanding business driven development in a big team.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Dear Apple, We Need an Affordable and Upgradable Mac
> Switching to Linux isn’t an option due to all the design, legal, and other such documents I need to work with frequently for my startup. I can’t risk using alternative open source tools to edit such important documents because the professionals in those areas, are set in their ways and are not going change just for me.
Excuse me, what? Since when editing such important documents can be done only on Mac? That's the dumbest thing I've read all day.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Chrome 69: “www.” subdomain missing from URL
To be honest, I want to see the actual domain I'm on in the location bar, and not some obscured version of it. In what universe is hiding part of the domain an usability improvement? What does it improve? Confusion? Misinformation? Lack of trust in the location showed by the browser? It's so stupid I had to check the calendar to make sure it's not the 1st of April today. I didn't check it in Chrome though, for fear that some days might have been hidden away as they have been considered trivial.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Show HN: LambdaNews.io, an HN client built with Vue
Nice twist with the live updates.
I believe the transitions still need some tummy rubbing. Traversing pagination causes current / next page to appear stacked up and then the current page disappears. Also, navigating between categories (new, show, etc) causes the whole list to disappear and reappear.
On the assets front, nearly 1MB is a bit much for this app. Http2 is a plus, as well as gzip, but the js should really be uglified, there is very little excuse one can make for shipping source code without minifying these days.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Show HN: Find an Expert on Hacker News
> The accuracy would be higher, but there are limited number of comments on HN.
Could you elaborate on that?
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Docker cannot be downloaded without logging into Docker Store
So you have to log in to Docker Store on Windows and on Mac. I sort of get the frustration. Using one of these systems for development is a painful experience on its own, no need to make it more miserable.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Slack Is Buying HipChat from Atlassian
I would agree with most of what you said except for the point about Linux and OSX. Yes, it used to be like that some 10+ years ago, but not anymore. However I can still find this myth repeated here and there nowadays. These days Linux works out of the box, with no more tweaking or settings up than what is required for OSX.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Why Gov.uk content should be published in HTML and not PDF
The paying tier are customers (sort of). All the rest are product. It's quite a specific product, because it has to be seduced and tempted by perceived benefits to forfeit its privacy, but still a product it is.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: WebAssembly is more than the web
> Is this an IT thing, or is this phenomenon known in other areas, too?
This phenomenon is certainly known in fashion and, looking at the boom of populist and nationalist politicians around the world, most probably in politics too. I would even risk saying it's imprinted in human nature.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: The Great Apple Keyboard Cover-Up
Apple cast away Steve Jobs and then came begging for him to come back. He did and steered the company from the verge of collapse to a massive worldwide success. Since SJ passed away, Apple is getting worse each year. I guess this might be Jobs' spirit fading away and people thinking they could do better than him. Clearly, they fall short.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: The open-plan office is a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad idea
I'm sorry, what criterion other than the commute time do you use to determine who "needs to" work from home? Increased productivity while working from home does not simply stem from lack of commute. It's all in the article.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Reasons not to use Netflix
I have great respect for Richard Stallman, but frankly this text seems a bit paranoid. So what if they know what I watch? Is it too bad if I can have a list "continue watching" to pick up where I left off? Is it that terrible, that they can suggest to me other content I may be interested in? Is it a crime that they want to know how their service is used in order to stay attractive? I think not.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: Slow Reading: the antithesis of speed reading
I've always been a slow reader. There was a time when I considered that to be a fault. I tried to learn faster reading a number of times, but each time I found it unnatural and not very enjoyable. I have also noticed that reading slowly allows me to focus better and gain deeper understanding of the text. At some point I stopped trying to become a fast reader and now I'm just a slow, happy reader.
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: European parliament committee approves vote on ‘disastrous’ copyright bill
Maybe I don't understand the Article 11, but does it essentially mean problems for Hacker News?
darth_mastah
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7 years ago
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on: How to Hack Hacker News
The author draws conclusions based on a sample dataset of 4000 submissions, whereas currently there are 2,962,457 submissions (stories, askHN and showHN combined). Seems a bit risky at best, unless the sample was designed in a very clever way.