Here's his tweet where he links to them: https://twitter.com/pomber/status/1093600702071537664
Out of curiosity have you heard of Tildes.net? It's a non-profit site created by a former Reddit admin Deimorz (known for being the creator of /u/Automoderator, /r/SubredditSimulator...). It's currently in closed alpha…
In some way yes, especially when looking at comparing their time/memory complexities and weighing tradeoffs. A good starter would be to go through the classic: Cracking The Coding Interview book as a form of guide. Also…
I'm sorry if this is a naive question, but won't your games have a "PLAY/START GAME" button? If not, wouldn't adding one satisfy the requirement for user interaction on the page?
UI looks great; still wish we get the ability to organise our repos under subgroups like gitlab does.
Aren't there several sites that cache npm packages or redistribute over CDNs? Though I agree, over reliance on just npm can be a bad thing (the 2016 issue over kik)
Here's his tweet where he links to them: https://twitter.com/pomber/status/1093600702071537664
Out of curiosity have you heard of Tildes.net? It's a non-profit site created by a former Reddit admin Deimorz (known for being the creator of /u/Automoderator, /r/SubredditSimulator...). It's currently in closed alpha…
In some way yes, especially when looking at comparing their time/memory complexities and weighing tradeoffs. A good starter would be to go through the classic: Cracking The Coding Interview book as a form of guide. Also…
I'm sorry if this is a naive question, but won't your games have a "PLAY/START GAME" button? If not, wouldn't adding one satisfy the requirement for user interaction on the page?
UI looks great; still wish we get the ability to organise our repos under subgroups like gitlab does.
Aren't there several sites that cache npm packages or redistribute over CDNs? Though I agree, over reliance on just npm can be a bad thing (the 2016 issue over kik)