geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: TextMate 2
You know about AckMate, right? It's indispensable. (No find/replace, but on the upside, it's ridiculously fast.)
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: The Yet Another Framework (Yaf), PHP extension for developing web applications
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: Show HN: Think Like (a) Git, a quasi-tutorial
Sweet! I'll add that to the resources page.
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: Show HN: Think Like (a) Git, a quasi-tutorial
Site author here. I welcome all feedback on the site!
[There's more I'd love to write, but I found I was losing motivation to work on it in my Copious Spare Time(tm), so I thought I'd try promoting it -- knowing that others are paying attention to it will help me keep mine focused on it too.]
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: Git Is Simpler Than You Think
I make daily use of GitX for visualizing the state of a repo, and it's got a pretty nice UI for building commits as well. (It's Mac-only, though.) Apparently there are several forks that have added new functionality on top of the version I use, but I'm comfortable enough at the command line now that I haven't bothered checking any of them out.
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: Git Is Simpler Than You Think
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: GitHub Flow
For those who enjoyed this talk, Corey Donohoe gave an awesome presentation at Cascadia RubyConf that goes into more detail about what they use Hubot for, and also mentions deploying branches to a subset of their boxes. It was one of the best talks of the conference:
http://confreaks.net/videos/608-cascadiaruby2011-shipping-at...
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: BankSimple moves to Portland
There seem to be enough of them to clog up I-5 on a daily basis.
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: Death Threats and Hate Crimes, Attacks On Women Bloggers Escalating
"Your honor, did you see the way she was dressed? She was clearly asking for it."
[Tags: sarcasm (if that weren't immediately obvious)]
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: BankSimple moves to Portland
I moved to Portland from California in 2001. I love it here, and can't imagine ever moving back. That being said, the big adjustment for me (and for many folks moving from further south) isn't the rain. It's that the days are so much shorter in the wintertime, and even when the sun is technically up, you can't see it through the cloud cover.
It's easy to love Portland in the summer (and, having grown up in Sacramento with weeks of temperatures over 110 degrees, I was very surprised to discover that I actually like summer now). The real test is whether you still love it in the middle of your second or third winter. ;>
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: We should be paying more attention to effort per interaction.
geeksam
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14 years ago
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on: We should be paying more attention to effort per interaction.
Effort per interaction will only be zero when interactions require no cognitive overhead. In which case, why are we bothering with them?
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: Groupon files for IPO
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: HN: I want to trade my finance knowledge for python/django mentorship
There's also hackerbuddy.com, which exists to pair up wannabe hackers with wannabe mentors. Might not help you find someone local, though. For that, user groups are the way to go. Looks like there's an SF Python Meetup group that meets somewhat irregularly, and BayPIGgies down in Mountain View (which makes for a late night on Caltrain, but maybe once a month that's okay?).
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Please review my app: Scheduling (employee scheduling software)
The last such place I worked was in a relay service call center. It was right smack in the middle of your retail/food service to office/cubicle continuum.
But yes, "organization" would work nicely for both. Also: "team".
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: Turn off ri and rdoc generation by default
I hadn't heard of "gem server" until you mentioned it.
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: At St. Paul 'wet house,' liquor can be their life - and death
How is it
not HN material? This reminds me of the 2006 Malcolm Gladwell piece about "Million Dollar Murray" that showed up here last summer (
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1582582 ). Both stories pose a problem that has a well-known set of "accepted" solutions, and describe a novel and counterintuitive solution for an edge case. Which sounds like one definition of a hack to me.
Granted, the approach described here is more morally ambiguous than Gladwell's piece, because it has the added dimension of allowing people to continue to harm themselves. But I think there are interesting arguments to be made in both cases, and I'm glad to have had this piece brought to my attention.
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: How would you characterize 10k monthly paycheck for a fulltime ruby-developer?
Is there a correlation between "quality of work" and "hours [...] put in"?
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: Introducing Copycopter: let your clients do the copy writing
If I had more upvotes, I'd give them to this statement. However, I'd be surprised if there weren't a nontrivial number of Rails developers who totally identify with that. The service is laughably simplistic for my day-job environment, but it isn't aimed at us. For hosting a four-hour app on Heroku, that for whatever reason needs to be client-editable, it's great.
geeksam
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15 years ago
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on: Internet Buttons: a page of buttons that make it easy to use the Web
Never mind that demographic -- I'm a web developer, and
I typed in the .com version when I tried to view the site on my iPhone. Doh!
(And then the page load took 20+ seconds -- iPhone 4 on wifi -- and I stopped looking entirely.)