esila | 15 years ago | on: New Facebook Feature Empowers the Dangerous "Comment Nazis"
esila's comments
esila | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you concentrate?
Figure out if you're a "morning/mid-day/late-afternoon/night" person when it comes to your brain activity. Some people, for the life of them, can't get their brain functioning when they get up. Others can't seem to concentrate until they've gotten lunch and feel "established" in the day.
Figure out your natural cycle and make sure you attempt to get good quality coding time in during your best times. If this is not possible, then apply the other response suggestions and hopefully you can increase the range of your concentration time.
esila | 16 years ago | on: Use an Old Linux Computer to Put your Baby to Sleep
It was a sysadmin's story of how one of the servers needed a manual reboot every so often and it could only be done with someone physically being there to push the reset button. He set an old computer up with the CD drive directly facing the server's reset button. From there, he set up a cron job to send the "eject/close" command remotely whenever something went wrong with the other server.
Story ends saying that they no longer use that server, however that other computer just sits in the corner, faithfully ejecting/closing its CD drive to this day. Hopefully someone here can provide the link :)
esila | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: What language do you think in?
-The Matrix 1999
esila | 16 years ago | on: The programmer's wife
esila | 16 years ago | on: Disney to Acquire Marvel Entertainment
Form a party of Sora, Donald, Wall-E, and Wolverine and watch as Wolverine guts Ursula while Silver Surfer sings 'Under The Sea' with Ariel.
esila | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: What do you think makes a good teacher?
The OP sparked a story that Teddy Atlas (boxing trainer for Mike Tyson, Michael Moore, Golden Gloves champ) once told at a book signing.
While training Michael Moore, he had to gain a certain amount of trust / respect from him. One particular instance that stood out in his memory was Michael's fondness of going to the shooting range and firing guns. Teddy never fired a gun in his life but accompanied him to the range.
At the range, Moore and some of his friends shot at the targets and eventually started to egg Teddy on. Teddy finally gave in, took the gun, walked right up to the target, and shot at the bulls-eye at point blank range.
He then turned to Moore and said "THAT's how I fire a gun".
Teddy told the audience he could remember a shift in Moore's behavior and demeanor when he later trained him - looser, more accepting of Atlas's advice. Teddy did what he had to do to bring the better boxer out of Moore.
Moral of the story - go shoot guns with your students :)
esila | 16 years ago | on: Holograms That You Can Touch and Feel
Once they show that same demo but being able to tap from above, side, bottom, and even "poke" the ball and watch the paper crumble under the resistance - well then that would just wreak of awesomeness!
esila | 17 years ago | on: Why it is so hard to stay focused these days—and what to do about it
esila | 17 years ago | on: The present and future of Perl in the job market
Hi and sorry for the provocative title of my post :)
One of our customers is doing a detailed review of a mason/modperl ERP app we've built for them since 2001. Prodded by some buzzword-compliant consultants they are expressing concerns that the app's underlying technologies - perl, modperl and mason - are becoming obsolete. They feel that a web application framework must have 'rails' or some other buzzword in its name.
But their main argument is that perl is declining as a web developement language. Also they rightly feel that competent perl developers are becoming harder to find.
What arguements could I use to address these concerns and convince them that their initial investement in perl is still safe and won't be obsolete in 10 years?
The client's local developers (who maintain the app we've built) feel that mason gives too much freedom to write messy code and badly structure a web app.
Indeed mason has very little constraints, maybe just slightly more than straight modperl. So it requires experienced, self-disciplined devs, which are few and far between.
So my second question is, what perl web development framework should we recommend to our client? Catalyst looks like a winner, but maybe there are others?
Thanks for your insights,
--
This is not really about Perl in the "jobmarket" - just in web development and how it seems to "be behind" against all the cool buzzwordy frameworks out there.
esila | 17 years ago | on: Most time management is rubbish
http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596007836/
This is a wonderful system focusing on goals, priorities, proper breakdown of tasks, stress management, relaxation, maintaining focus, etc. It gives a wonderful breakdown of how to manage planners, and this system has been working for me for years now. Hope you find some value out of this!
There was an online petition and a massive cry of dissent from the users. There was even a moderator who tried to justify Blizzard's position by posting his real name and saying he "didn't care". Much of his personal life information was displayed and if I remember correctly he had to change his FaceBook account due to all the trolls.
Blizzard did not put this idea into effect.
Associating identities with views online can have massive repercussions regardless of how much "integrity" that person has. Trolls and stalkers would have an absolute field day due to the loss of anonymity.
And now, for some humor to wash down the pessimism, s/fb/blizzard or vice versa:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NgAkWxcPBE