> The Koolhaasian moment in design began to fade, as one might expect, with the coming of the 2008 global economic crisis; since everything in architecture takes longer than in any other field, the full-on rejection is…
> But, while technically innovative, with a carbon-fiber body, the i3 is essentially a very expensive hatchback. Yep. When people buy high performance or luxury cars, part of the mystique is that it is the latest…
Or less complicated, like piles of CSV files.
> [H]ow much does someone care about a topic when they choose to make money by not talking about it.... She didn't choose to make money by not talking about it. She took the money, then talked about it. It's one way of…
It is free money until Lambda School actually gets it back. It's up to Lambda School to decide the if money and/or the precedent are worth the public relations cost of fighting about it.
> That's hardly symmetrical to the fear of losing the money that you have already invested... It's pretty symmetrical. Choosing not to buy is not as easy as it looks, when you are under pressure to do so. Madoff took…
They exist to stop any participant, human or electronic, from going haywire.
Piling in on the buy side because of a fear of missing out counts as panicking.
I get the impression that the people running Robinhood actually don't understand how difficult it is to implement what they want to offer, both on the reliability side (outages) and on the logical side (infinite margin).
> Industry isn't a culture, it's a combination of skill sets and infrastructure. China is the world's second largest economy... It's interesting to see those two statements adjacent to each other. China is a tremendous…
Just because it is common doesn't mean it's not shady. And depending on what the "pseudo-activist role" entails, that could be a massive conflict of interest. If a person at Company A is steering business toward Company…
You're right. I'd correct my original post if I could. I stand by my point but I chose a terrible example.
My point is not that I'm better at it than some specific library, it's that choosing a library would take more effort than writing some straightforward code. EDITED TO ADD: In fact getting LAPACK into the build if it's…
To be precise, the author isn't simply saying "Do what you love", he's saying "Do what you love in your leisure time". I think that's an important distinction. He's not giving diligent work short shrift, just trying to…
> Your handrolled solution is likely worse than the library anyway This assumption led to a lot of O(n^2) left-padding happening over the years, via left-pad from node.js. Ideally libraries would be well-tested and of…
I don't know why everyone is eliding the gunfire here, to me that's the most important aspect of the story. If he was merely a shoplifter, there would be little harm in just issuing a warrant and looking for him later.…
The New York Times doesn't have ads in its printed edition anymore?
The piece does contain one bit of advice, "young healthy people should try to avoid getting Covid-19 for as long as possible."
I don't think the two situations are comparable at all. In the ATV case, it was the police who escalated, inappropriately, in pursuit of someone who was mainly a danger to himself. In the destroyed home case, it was the…
Waiting out a suspect who has already shot at the police is dangerous. Any mistake that left a person exposed to be shot at could be fatal. Protecting life is a higher priority than protecting property.
So if a shooter sets up in a sufficiently expensive property, the police have to sit there passively and risk being shot because they don't have the money to pay for the damage caused by going in? That makes no sense.…
A shoplifting suspect who barricaded himself inside someone else's home during the pursuit and fired gunshots at the police.
Anecdotally, I was recently cramming a lot of "Leetcode medium" questions to prepare for job interviews, and after a couple of weeks, I was drinking Starbuck's coffee and solving those problems like a machine...…
> If sites needed their users to pay them, the quality of the content might go up dramatically What do you mean by "if"? There are already many sites that require users to pay them (e.g. The New York Times) but everyone…
I was thinking more about investigative reporters and news outlets than buggy-whip makers.
> The Koolhaasian moment in design began to fade, as one might expect, with the coming of the 2008 global economic crisis; since everything in architecture takes longer than in any other field, the full-on rejection is…
> But, while technically innovative, with a carbon-fiber body, the i3 is essentially a very expensive hatchback. Yep. When people buy high performance or luxury cars, part of the mystique is that it is the latest…
Or less complicated, like piles of CSV files.
> [H]ow much does someone care about a topic when they choose to make money by not talking about it.... She didn't choose to make money by not talking about it. She took the money, then talked about it. It's one way of…
It is free money until Lambda School actually gets it back. It's up to Lambda School to decide the if money and/or the precedent are worth the public relations cost of fighting about it.
> That's hardly symmetrical to the fear of losing the money that you have already invested... It's pretty symmetrical. Choosing not to buy is not as easy as it looks, when you are under pressure to do so. Madoff took…
They exist to stop any participant, human or electronic, from going haywire.
Piling in on the buy side because of a fear of missing out counts as panicking.
I get the impression that the people running Robinhood actually don't understand how difficult it is to implement what they want to offer, both on the reliability side (outages) and on the logical side (infinite margin).
> Industry isn't a culture, it's a combination of skill sets and infrastructure. China is the world's second largest economy... It's interesting to see those two statements adjacent to each other. China is a tremendous…
Just because it is common doesn't mean it's not shady. And depending on what the "pseudo-activist role" entails, that could be a massive conflict of interest. If a person at Company A is steering business toward Company…
You're right. I'd correct my original post if I could. I stand by my point but I chose a terrible example.
My point is not that I'm better at it than some specific library, it's that choosing a library would take more effort than writing some straightforward code. EDITED TO ADD: In fact getting LAPACK into the build if it's…
To be precise, the author isn't simply saying "Do what you love", he's saying "Do what you love in your leisure time". I think that's an important distinction. He's not giving diligent work short shrift, just trying to…
> Your handrolled solution is likely worse than the library anyway This assumption led to a lot of O(n^2) left-padding happening over the years, via left-pad from node.js. Ideally libraries would be well-tested and of…
I don't know why everyone is eliding the gunfire here, to me that's the most important aspect of the story. If he was merely a shoplifter, there would be little harm in just issuing a warrant and looking for him later.…
The New York Times doesn't have ads in its printed edition anymore?
The piece does contain one bit of advice, "young healthy people should try to avoid getting Covid-19 for as long as possible."
I don't think the two situations are comparable at all. In the ATV case, it was the police who escalated, inappropriately, in pursuit of someone who was mainly a danger to himself. In the destroyed home case, it was the…
Waiting out a suspect who has already shot at the police is dangerous. Any mistake that left a person exposed to be shot at could be fatal. Protecting life is a higher priority than protecting property.
So if a shooter sets up in a sufficiently expensive property, the police have to sit there passively and risk being shot because they don't have the money to pay for the damage caused by going in? That makes no sense.…
A shoplifting suspect who barricaded himself inside someone else's home during the pursuit and fired gunshots at the police.
Anecdotally, I was recently cramming a lot of "Leetcode medium" questions to prepare for job interviews, and after a couple of weeks, I was drinking Starbuck's coffee and solving those problems like a machine...…
> If sites needed their users to pay them, the quality of the content might go up dramatically What do you mean by "if"? There are already many sites that require users to pay them (e.g. The New York Times) but everyone…
I was thinking more about investigative reporters and news outlets than buggy-whip makers.