enginnr | 10 years ago | on: On Being Smart (2009) [pdf]
enginnr's comments
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Gmail, We Need to Talk
There are countless other standards this article overlooks which have been implemented very well in recent years in Gmail, so why does it lambast the lack of Schema?
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: What is Ethereum? – A high level intro to the problems Ethereum can fix
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is Skype safe to use?
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Do you stalk Facebook profiles?
Slightly tangential, but what's to stop me flipping one bit in a JPEG and uploading it again. JPEGs are renowned for being fault tolerant to even the most aggressive mangling of the file structure, as long as the header is intact it will preserve some integrity
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Cuckoo hashing
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do I stop comparing myself to others?
Money is a trophy. Marriage is a trophy. Dissolve the trophy and focus on what you need instead of what you want. Most of what a person needs is fairly rudimentary and easy to attain. Be careful with validation (a basic need) because it's usually sought in the most egregious places
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Twitter Sees 6% Increase in “Like” Activity After First Week of Hearts
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: The Problem with GitHub Pages
Slightly disagree. What I always loved about pages is every commit is on record and auditable by the public. This makes coders accountable for their actions if they introduce malicious code to their users. Take for example:
`something.js` being served from RawGit (https://rawgit.com/). In all likelihood the asset can be trusted because we can inspect the repo where the asset resides and audit it.
The same cannot be said for private GH accounts, because it's impossible to view the source. People actually pay Github money to conceal their source code. Gasp
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: An open letter on side projects
The only person who can sustain a side project long into the future is the creator. Not the people who support it via donations, or buy an item...You and only you are responsible for its shelf-life.
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Million Dollar Shack
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBjXUBMkkE8
> Our family has been priced out! Has the Bay Area gone crazy? Real estate prices have doubled in the last few years, a tent in the backyard can rent for $900/month, foreign investors are driving up prices, evictions and rent hikes are everywhere, people are commuting longer than ever, the middle class is disappearing, empty investment homes are everywhere, and locals are leaving in record numbers.
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: What project are you most proud of?
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: What project are you most proud of?
I could keep making these, but it's do or die with side projects. You either commit to them with a full heart, or they begin to bit rot.
Currently I just maintain the projects and promote them the only way I know how (Hackernews and Twitter). There are other outlets for promoting your projects, but they tend to be very niched and specific.
You can see the Twitter accounts here:
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is 30 too old to be a digital native?
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you browse Twitter?
There are so many ways to do it, and there is no 'one way' to browse Twitter, apart from deliberately being serendipitous.
Here's some lists I made:
https://twitter.com/enginnr/lists/true-hackers
https://twitter.com/enginnr/lists/twitter-dna
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Universal DNSSEC: Secure DNS for Every Domain
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Is Dublin Airport tracking passenger phones without their permission?
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Is Dublin Airport tracking passenger phones without their permission?
http://blog.higg.so/2015/11/03/look-at-my-invention/
> I just want to bust open the false narratives surrounding phone culture and speak about the long term implications of having a computer in your pocket at all times that talks to the public Internet.
It's as if the article was designed for the likes of what I wrote in my article. The Big Brother narrative is a false narrative.
> Big Brother gets the brunt of the blame, and not the citizen. In the worst case, the citizen identifies with the aggressor and feeds the narrative: "I am not in control, Big Brother is. I willingly submit my data to third parties". But, you are in control, and you should never forget that. Perhaps you need to work hard at being in control, or challenge more assumptions about that, but in a free and democratic society, we are in control (and empowered) more than we have ever been.
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Amazon Should Implement 2-Factor Authentication for It's Non-AWS Customers
enginnr | 10 years ago | on: Encryption ransomware threatens Linux users
An utter waste of time and not relevant to the real world. That is why I dropped out.