The screenshot might be more compelling if it were of something like a tooth chart. Based on my interactions with doctors, I'm not sure they care about what their schedulers' screens look like.
Where are you based? Are you hiring?
> @ville, Our first concern is to perfect the application, making money will come later. That doesn't sound consistent with the "100% FREE, ALWAYS" banner. By charging money from the get-go, you'll attract more serious…
It's common and encouraged on SO to answer your own question. The comments on the question address the reasons why.
I'd also like to see Clojure or ClojureScript support. It would bring me back a lot more often.
They look great. I think there should be a bigger distinction between tap and hold, and a larger emphasis in general on the gesture rather than the hand. If you zoom out to 50%, that's about how big I would expect them…
It was unlocked a week later.
I agree with this. I could see myself signing up, getting one kit, and cancelling. Repeat every couple of months when I actually find time to do the brewing.
I've been using fogbugz. It's free for teams of 1 or 2, and it's a full-featured bug tracker that doesn't feel too heavy for one-off projects. http://www.fogcreek.com/fogbugz/
Convergent evolution?
Is there a reason that in clojure.core/map, the second type declaration uses (U nil (Seqable a)) instead of (Option (Seqable a))?
>Even a person as well versed in induction and deduction as Arthur Conan Doyle believed that the death of Lord Carnarvon, the patron of the Tutankhamen expedition, may have been caused by a pharaoh’s curse. I'm not sure…
Agreed, I shouldn't have to constantly move the mouse around just to read the page.
Overall I like it a lot, but I don't like that the sides of the capital M are so slanted. It sticks out a lot in the third screenshot: http://mozorg.cdn.mozilla.net/media/img/styleguide/products/...
When is "no offense" ever attached to a compliment?
But with classes with "green" and "blue" in the names, you're still mixing meaning and presentation and hurting maintainability. See: http://thecodelesscode.com/case/95
This reminds me of a Twilight Zone episode called Valley of the Shadow (1963) [1]. A small town possesses a device that rearranges atoms to create or fix anything. The scientist who gave it to them told them to keep it…
It sounds like it's close to hurting performance for legit users. Also, since we don't know what the botnet operator's planning, it's probably safest for Tor to try to stop it.
> In practice, Morwen and Gerard adhered to policies regarding transgender people that have been in place for nearly a decade, and advocated a course of action that is straightforward to anyone with even a passing…
If anyone else wanted to know what a flat spin looks like: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=qvg...
Unfortunately at my company we don't get to use the fancier Caché features. We have to stick to ANSI M. We do make a lot of use of indices, though. Finding records can be incredibly fast.
I wouldn't. It's not a terrible language to work with on the job, but I don't think I've gotten anything out of it in the same way that I did from learning OCaml or Lisp.
For one thing, there's not much of an incentive to port hundreds of thousands of lines of working legacy code to a different language just to make it more readable. Its age isn't a relevant issue either - sure, MUMPS…
I think we may work for the same company. Does it rhyme with 'Shmeppic'?
One UI thing that's bugging me: the "Browse Patterns" dropdown has a text cursor instead of a pointer.
The screenshot might be more compelling if it were of something like a tooth chart. Based on my interactions with doctors, I'm not sure they care about what their schedulers' screens look like.
Where are you based? Are you hiring?
> @ville, Our first concern is to perfect the application, making money will come later. That doesn't sound consistent with the "100% FREE, ALWAYS" banner. By charging money from the get-go, you'll attract more serious…
It's common and encouraged on SO to answer your own question. The comments on the question address the reasons why.
I'd also like to see Clojure or ClojureScript support. It would bring me back a lot more often.
They look great. I think there should be a bigger distinction between tap and hold, and a larger emphasis in general on the gesture rather than the hand. If you zoom out to 50%, that's about how big I would expect them…
It was unlocked a week later.
I agree with this. I could see myself signing up, getting one kit, and cancelling. Repeat every couple of months when I actually find time to do the brewing.
I've been using fogbugz. It's free for teams of 1 or 2, and it's a full-featured bug tracker that doesn't feel too heavy for one-off projects. http://www.fogcreek.com/fogbugz/
Convergent evolution?
Is there a reason that in clojure.core/map, the second type declaration uses (U nil (Seqable a)) instead of (Option (Seqable a))?
>Even a person as well versed in induction and deduction as Arthur Conan Doyle believed that the death of Lord Carnarvon, the patron of the Tutankhamen expedition, may have been caused by a pharaoh’s curse. I'm not sure…
Agreed, I shouldn't have to constantly move the mouse around just to read the page.
Overall I like it a lot, but I don't like that the sides of the capital M are so slanted. It sticks out a lot in the third screenshot: http://mozorg.cdn.mozilla.net/media/img/styleguide/products/...
When is "no offense" ever attached to a compliment?
But with classes with "green" and "blue" in the names, you're still mixing meaning and presentation and hurting maintainability. See: http://thecodelesscode.com/case/95
This reminds me of a Twilight Zone episode called Valley of the Shadow (1963) [1]. A small town possesses a device that rearranges atoms to create or fix anything. The scientist who gave it to them told them to keep it…
It sounds like it's close to hurting performance for legit users. Also, since we don't know what the botnet operator's planning, it's probably safest for Tor to try to stop it.
> In practice, Morwen and Gerard adhered to policies regarding transgender people that have been in place for nearly a decade, and advocated a course of action that is straightforward to anyone with even a passing…
If anyone else wanted to know what a flat spin looks like: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=qvg...
Unfortunately at my company we don't get to use the fancier Caché features. We have to stick to ANSI M. We do make a lot of use of indices, though. Finding records can be incredibly fast.
I wouldn't. It's not a terrible language to work with on the job, but I don't think I've gotten anything out of it in the same way that I did from learning OCaml or Lisp.
For one thing, there's not much of an incentive to port hundreds of thousands of lines of working legacy code to a different language just to make it more readable. Its age isn't a relevant issue either - sure, MUMPS…
I think we may work for the same company. Does it rhyme with 'Shmeppic'?
One UI thing that's bugging me: the "Browse Patterns" dropdown has a text cursor instead of a pointer.