kallus | 8 years ago | on: Dark Site Finder: tracking light pollution to find locations for stargazing
kallus's comments
kallus | 10 years ago | on: Youtubify, a Spotify clone with YouTube as back end
kallus | 10 years ago | on: Why Red Hat Acquired Ansible
I guess the choice of license can get really important in this situation? Are there any old decisions by the founder that now turn out to be especially important?
kallus | 13 years ago | on: The Background Noise Was Louder than I Realized
No, not really. There is usually ~1 article each day where I get interested in reading the discussion. When that happens, it is often disappointing to find the discussion high-jacked by a top-voted comment that goes in a direction that doesn't interest me. I'm sure there are interesting comments further down the page, but on this site it's hard to find them. I think Slashdot handles this a little better by letting you set a point threshold.
In the even fewer cases when I want to join the discussion, it is pretty meaningless to add a comment to the bottom of a page which is more than a day old.
> I think the issue isn't curation, since Slashdot is technically an editor curated news service, but the timing. That is, how do you have a good discussion when the timescales are so large rather than over the course of a few hours?
Yes! That frames the question much better.
> Sites like MetaFilter - http://www.metafilter.com/, Edward Tufte's forum - http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a?topic_id=1, QBN - http://www.qbn.com/ - and numerous blogs have solved this problem to a great extent, IMHO, and intriguingly are all single threaded (or in the case of blogs, most, but not all).
Haven't used those sites, and it was hard to get a grip by taking a quick look. How do they solve it? I think single threaded is great, but in my experience it breaks down when the number of comments get too large.
Manually or semi-automatically curated discussions would probable be very valuable.
kallus | 13 years ago | on: The Background Noise Was Louder than I Realized
The downside though, is that it gets close to impossible to join in on, or even read, the discussions. When I see articles usually ~24h after they were posted, the discussion page is so full of nested questions that it's really hard to find anything more than the highest voted comment. How can curation be combined with possibility to discuss, in a better working way?
kallus | 13 years ago | on: US Government: You Don't Own Your Cloud Data So We Can Access It At Any Time
kallus | 13 years ago | on: US Government: You Don't Own Your Cloud Data So We Can Access It At Any Time
kallus | 13 years ago | on: Whatever It Takes: Visualizations in E-mail with d3.js
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Visual-Display-Quantitative-Informat...
I'd say, yes numerical is often just as good, but not always. Also, in my opinion, whether information is displayed numerically or visually, the key is to be as minimalistic as possible.
kallus | 14 years ago | on: Show HN: keyzen - my touch typing trainer geared towards programmers.
kallus | 14 years ago | on: Is there a proper etiquette for quitting your job?
No, there should be a clause in the contract specifying a mutual minimal time of notice for ending the employment. Also see this great post http://www.kalzumeus.com/2011/07/08/business-psychology/