martin's comments

martin | 5 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2020)

Skytap | Full-Time | REMOTE (US/Canada) | Mid/Senior Full Stack Engineer (Ruby/Rails/JS/React)

Skytap, a cloud infrastructure startup based in Seattle, seeks a talented, mid-level or senior Rubyist for a full-time, remote opportunity as a Rails / full-stack engineer, anywhere in the US or Canada.

I’m the hiring manager for this position. My team of 5 (including this new opening) manages a product of our own that sits atop Skytap’s cloud platform and helps to drive one of the most important segments of Skytap’s business. We work closely together, wear lots of hats, operate with a high degree of autonomy, and are generally pretty awesome, if I do say so myself. :)

More info: https://jobs.lever.co/skytap/0d7943d0-a111-4ac5-a907-5fe0704...

Don't hesitate to reach out if you have questions or would like to chat: my HN username at skytap.com.

martin | 7 years ago | on: Open-Source Controller for the IKEA Bekant Standing Desk

Yep, I've had it for about 2 years. Biggest complaints are that the buttons are on top and easy to press by accident (although there's a lock button on the side), and the lowest setting isn't low enough for me (5'8"). All that said, I think it's great for the price. I'm thinking about upgrading to a big ol' Uplift Desk because I want to get an under-desk treadmill with enough room for a chair next to it.

martin | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Macbook Air + Remote Server = Macbook Pro?

If you wanted mobility around the house while avoiding WAN latency and reliability issues, you could buy a server and keep it in your house, rather than renting it and accessing remotely. Then get the Air and use that to RDP, SSH, etc. to the server.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Rent vs. Buy Visualization of Top 50 Cities

People who have equity in their homes don't typically foreclose, and owners in NYC typically still do. Two reasons for that. First, property values in NYC haven't dropped as much as in other areas. Second, co-ops constitute a very large percentage of the purchasable housing in Manhattan (and in some of the outer boroughs as well). Nearly all co-ops subject you to a very invasive board approval process where you need to reveal everything there is to know about your income and assets. They want to know that you're making more than enough money to meet your expenses and that you have sufficient reserves to cover yourself through any period of hardship. Co-ops also usually require a sizable down payment (almost always at least 20%, sometimes even 100%). If you seem risky, you don't get in. So there's definitely less of an opportunity for shenanigans with exotic mortgage products and the like than in other cities.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Google Launches Plugin That Fuses Microsoft Office With Google Docs

I was looking into this a while back, and I'm curious: does anybody know whether it's even possible to develop a sophisticated add-in for Mac Office? MS added VBA support back to Mac Office 2011, but VBA can only do so much. On Windows, sophisticated Office plug-ins are typically COM add-ins, which can be implemented in C++ or .NET and thus can pretty much do anything you want. Those are obviously not cross-platform, though. I believe Mac Office also supports AppleScript, but it's not clear to me whether that's any more powerful than VBA.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Debunking the duct tape programmer

Really? Since when?

http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/09/01.html: "FogBugz is written in Wasabi, a very advanced, functional-programming dialect of Basic"

http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/09/01b.html: "And since FogBugz goes back many years and was originally written in VBScript, Wasabi is 100% backwards-compatible with VBScript." (granted, VB != VBScript)

http://fogcreek.com/Jobs/Dev.html: "Today we happen to use Wasabi, JavaScript, xhtml and CSS, and C++ to build FogBugz"

martin | 15 years ago | on: Verizon iPhone is coming

I'm not saying that simultaneous voice/data isn't useful. I'm saying that decent network coverage is more useful.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Verizon iPhone is coming

I'm pretty underwhelmed by that argument, given that my iPhone 3G on AT&T's network in NYC can barely do voice OR data, let alone both at the same time.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: What do you want to tell Microsoft?

* Dual-monitor remote desktop! Please??!!

* What are you guys doing with Windows Installer (MSI)? You create this installation standard which everyone adopts, then you stop supporting it yourself, making people install Office 2007 and Silverlight with BS desktop startup scripts. WTF?

* As alluded to by others here, stop making stupid UI changes for no reason. I've been using Windows since 1992, upgraded to Win7 a couple months ago, and STILL can't find anything. I'm in support, and it's basically impossible to lead a user through anything over the phone anymore, because (for example) getting to the screen where you uninstall a program looks different on almost every Windows version I support, often with multiple variations per OS.

* The .NET runtime gets corrupted ALL THE TIME for our users. This is at least partially because you release patches that fail to rollback upon unsucessful install (see http://blog.usabilitythinking.com/2010/06/root-cause-for-cor...). This was enough of a problem before you started bundling .NET with Windows so that now I can't even have a user uninstall/reinstall it without really messing with his OS.

* This may make me sound silly, but I miss VB6 -- not the language itself, but rather the ease with which you could easily throw together an executable and send it to a user and have it just work. Now, I have to build a whole installer unless I want to have issues with missing .NET versions or weird .NET security issues.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Ready for Zero (YC S10) wants to help Americans get out of debt.

Something like this is required as part of the recently enacted CARD act (in the US):

"Credit card issuers must disclose to cardholders the consequences of making only minimum payments each month, namely how long it would take to pay off the entire balance if users only made the minimum monthly payment. Issuers must also provide information on how much users must pay each month if they want to pay off their balances in 36 months, including the amount of interest." (http://www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/help/what-the-ne...)

martin | 15 years ago | on: Tell HN: Have a look at Varnish

This is a question that interests me as a Varnish user with a several-hundred-line VCL. We exclude certain URLs from caching altogether, drop certain cookies but not others, drop certain querystring params but not others, cache separate versions of the same page for mobile and non-mobile browsers, do limited caching behind basic auth, purge certain pages from cache when a post gets published, etc. VCL isn't the most elegant thing there is, but there's usually a way to do whatever I need. I don't know that Nginx isn't capable of just as much flexibility, but all the HOWTOs I've found are pretty simplistic and I haven't found the docs to be that helpful. If anybody has resources or experience to share regarding complex Nginx caching setups, I'd love to know about it.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Be happier: Rent Everything

Moving from car ownership to Zipcar does introduce other burdens, though, especially around scheduling. You have to make a reservation in advance -- in my neighborhood, a couple days in advance for peak times -- and you can't cancel beyond a certain time. You have to know exactly how long you'll be and your plans can't really change, and if you get stuck in traffic, you get to pay an extra $50 for being 5 minutes late. It's a great service for what it is, but it's not for everybody.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Is It Better to Buy or Rent? (NYT tool)

Also, people don't usually sell their house and buy a similar one in the same place -- they either upgrade or downgrade, or move to a different neighborhood or city, and in either case, the prices are likely not to have moved in the same direction at the same pace. In my neighborhood, 1-BR coops have dropped in price more quickly than 2-BRs, for example.

martin | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: What's your computer setup?

27" i7 iMac with 8GB RAM, attached to a 30" Dell display (3007WFP). I switched about a month ago from a MacBook Pro (attached to the same Dell display), and it's phenomenal. It's the first setup I've ever had that actually feels fast enough to run everything I need (iTunes, Word, Excel, and Windows running in VirtualBox, along with a few instances each of iTerm, Chrome and Textmate) without skipping a beat.

martin | 16 years ago | on: Advantages of a name-brand school

Yeah, a lot of companies do this. As somebody who went to a mediocre state school, I obviously don't care for this practice, but as somebody who does hiring, I understand. In addition to advertising our positions at good schools, I always post them at my alma mater as well (somehow I feel bad if I don't), and it's just depressing. Resumes I get from my school are routinely littered with embarrassing errors (how do you misspell the name of the college you're currently attending, anyway?) and are consistently weak on experience compared to their peers at the better-known institutions.

In general, restricting your candidate pool based on where they want to school probably really improves the signal-to-noise ratio. And since recruiting is a numbers game anyway, with dozens or hundreds of applicants applying to each position, it's not exactly an illogical thing to do.

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