leishulang's comments

leishulang | 9 years ago | on: YC AI

I heard that nowadays it's possible to buy a laptop and a external GPU?

leishulang | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (December 2016)

Hello there, I think Singapore is hot! (Pun intended)

Location: Guangzhou China and/or Vancouver, Canada (Flying man) Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: Interested in: Clojure, ClojureScript, Core Java, Reagent/OM, Machine Learning. I personally love functional programming style. But JVM is also awesome. So ... Clojure!

Resume/CV: https://www.overleaf.com/read/ymjbknwrdsnt https://ca.linkedin.com/in/gzmask Email: [email protected]

leishulang | 10 years ago | on: Ubuntu on Windows

Just like IE finally giving its way to W3C, Windows is finally giving its way to POSIX.

leishulang | 10 years ago | on: SoundCloud could be forced to close after $44m losses

Soundcloud is so important for the programmer community that it is unthinkable that it will just disappear. All those background music I enjoy as I code, all those chip-tunes, livecoding musics etc. I hope they open some donation so that I can help.

leishulang | 10 years ago | on: Goodbye, Cameras (2013)

With the manual modes coming into Android and IOS recently, the weird "processing" delay will be gone and there isn't really anything to justify showing off your Leica in public.

leishulang | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (July 2015)

Location: Canada and Canadian

Remote: Maybe

Willing to relocate: Yes

Technologies: Interested in: Clojure, ClojureScript, Reagent/OM, Javascript, NodeJS, ReactJS.

  I personally love functional programming style. Did some Haskell too just for learning.      
  I was doing mostly PHP and Ruby on Rails in my early career and heavy HTML/JS related stuff. Good with Photoshop too.
Resume/CV: https://www.overleaf.com/read/ymjbknwrdsnt https://ca.linkedin.com/in/gzmask

Email: [email protected]

leishulang | 10 years ago | on: Clojure 1.7 is now available

Everyone who is learning Functional programming should be able to use map/reduce well. With that, understanding transducers is just natural.
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