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Stories from October 10, 2009
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1.Answers.OnStartups.com -- StackOverflow for startups (onstartups.com)
98 points by smartbear on Oct 10, 2009 | 49 comments
2.The Universal Law of Leverage (defmacro.org)
90 points by JBiserkov on Oct 10, 2009 | 13 comments
3.Ask HN: Little things/tools that improved your work or life lately?
75 points by rokhayakebe on Oct 10, 2009 | 139 comments
4.How to Become a Design Genius: Take Time Off. Lots of It. (fastcompany.com)
73 points by wgj on Oct 10, 2009 | 16 comments
5.The real Ajay Bhatt, co-inventor of the USB port (engadget.com)
73 points by siculars on Oct 10, 2009 | 32 comments
6.Chile Wants Your Poor, Your Huddled Masses, Your Tech Entrepreneurs (techcrunch.com)
62 points by davidw on Oct 10, 2009 | 37 comments
7.Microsoft/Danger lose Sidekick user data in server failure (t-mobile.com)
60 points by bensummers on Oct 10, 2009 | 69 comments
8.New instrument scales musical heights (bbc.co.uk)
59 points by acangiano on Oct 10, 2009 | 47 comments
9.Codepad.org | a pastebin that executes code for you (codepad.org)
55 points by Luyt on Oct 10, 2009 | 35 comments

"I love it when twenty-something engineers take such a hard-line position on something they have so little experience with, like hiring."

Uhm, the author graduated from college 3 years ago. It took me about 2 minutes of searching to find out that the "twenty-something" he's referring to (raganwald) is about 20 years older than him.

http://www.linkedin.com/in/teddziuba

http://reginald.braythwayt.com/RegBraithwaiteGH0909_en_US.pd...

Yes, I do and I love what I use - I'll tell you which one it is in the comments below
50 points | parent
12.A catalog of wealth creation mechanisms (rondam.blogspot.com)
45 points by lisper on Oct 10, 2009 | 21 comments
13.Hating What You Do (economist.com)
44 points by riffer on Oct 10, 2009 | 15 comments
14.GitHub discontinues building gems (github.com/blog)
41 points by jseifer on Oct 10, 2009 | 23 comments

After reading this and its complacent I've-learned-as-much-as-I-need-and-besides-I-have-kids attitude, I'd say he does a good job making a case against himself being a very good programmer. His mechanical analogy (socket wrenches) for "computer code" (sic) is particularly revealing.

Ironically, none of this has intrinsically to do with his not liking to program on Saturdays, yet ends up reinforcing the notion that, for whatever reason, there is a correlation.

I know at least five guys who have small children and hack in their spare time. Yes, it's a struggle, but they all do it. I also know quite a few with small children who never do that. They never did before they had kids, either, but the kids furnish a nice excuse. Kids are handy that way. (Edit: notice how the author plays this card, even though he already said he almost never programmed outside of work or class.) Anyway, my point is that the first group are really good programmers and the second are, by and large, not. Anecodotal though this may be, I buy the idea of a correlation.

P.S. Another trait that good programmers tend to have is not seeing themselves as good enough and not getting defensive about proving how good they are. Exercise to the reader.


For all this person claims to be wise and experienced, this is a very contentless and juvenile blog post. The tone is condescending and reeks of insecurity.
17.Turn stairs into piano = 66% more people use them (todaysbigthing.com)
33 points by dzlobin on Oct 10, 2009 | 9 comments

This industry has an unhealthy obsession with youth.

It's a royal pain in the ass.

Like everyone else in the world, I already have a well-established workflow for managing usernames and passwords. My favorite tool is 1Password for the Mac. It works seamlessly with the majority of websites. It doesn't work well with Stack Overflow. Most sites log me in with one keypress; Stack Overflow now takes two keypresses and a mouse click, and that's after I carefully set it up by hand, because the auto-learning feature doesn't work with OpenID.

I resisted using OpenID for months because I didn't want my login on Stack Overflow to be tied inextricably to my Yahoo or Google identity. I can change a password, and on well-designed sites I can even change a username, but I can't change my OpenID on Stack Overflow by any means that I can find.

(Yeah, I know I could have used some kind of identity-forwarding fu to use my own domain as an OpenID, and then forwarded the actual task of running an OpenID server to some other entity that I could change at will. Whatever. I don't want to have to read a goddamn FAQ in order to log in to Stack Overflow, of all things. Even the Treasury Department, which has the most baroque login scheme I have ever seen, involving a personalized plastic card and an onscreen keyboard, doesn't make me read a manual in order to use their site.)

(And, yeah, I know that there are honest and hardworking startups dedicated to providing me with an OpenID. Not to put too fine a point on it: If my Stack Overflow ID is going to be inextricably tied to somebody else's website being up, I'm going to pick a website that has been up for at least one decade, and promises to remain up for as many future decades as possible. If my identity can't be made to live as long as me, I've got a problem.)

So I finally gave in and signed up with my Yahoo OpenID. I have no idea why I picked them over Google. I doubt it was for their track record of preserving user privacy.

But the pain did not end, because I proceeded to forget which ID I had used. In their zeal to ensure that everyone on Earth is pre-provided with an OpenID, the standard's proponents have created a monster: My OpenIDs outnumber my uses for OpenID by an order of magnitude. I have a bunch of Google accounts, and I tried one or two of them, and then I just decided that I had better things to do than write that post on Stack Overflow. If I hadn't happened to have left another machine logged in to the site with a very long-term cookie, my username would be gone forever. (They can't email you a hint, because they don't capture email addresses.) At least now I've taught it to 1Password, and if that fails me I can Google up this rant. ;)

Sadly, all of this has had the Pavlovian effect of making me feel really angry every time I see the login screen at Stack Overflow, a truly useful and even inspiring site which I read fairly often. Never a second chance to make a first impression, I guess.

20.C graffiti (boingboing.net)
31 points by ca98am79 on Oct 10, 2009 | 13 comments
21.The "free electron" programmer (jasonsupdates.posterous.com)
29 points by j_baker on Oct 10, 2009 | 13 comments

I worked with Ted at Google. Trust me, even though his articles have a certain sarcastic tone to them, he was definitely enjoyable to work with and clearly did like solving hard problems in development.

His point in this post is that you can do a great job at work but then enjoy your life outside of work.


Exercise. Seriously, it keeps you healthy, gives time to think (away from a computer) and keeps your mind fresh.
24.Ten Teen Entrepreneurs To Watch (techcrunch.com)
28 points by edw519 on Oct 10, 2009 | 26 comments

This isn't a response to Raganwald. It's a response to this Reddit thread:

http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/9s3ww/would_you...


On the topic of France Telecom, 24 suicides in about 18 months is a shocking number being used by unions and activists to make their case.

It's shocking that they could be so dishonest by presenting a statistically normal suicide rate as high. The suicide rate in france is 26.1/100,000 for men and 9.4/100,000 for women. France Telecom has about 100,000 employees, so in 18 months we'd expect about 26 suicides (assuming it's 50% men, 50% women).

http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/suicider...

Further context: most of the workers at France Telecom can't be laid off and are simply being moved from one job to another as part of a reorg. This causes stress, because workers might have to learn something new! Sacre bleu!

A chart of working hours by nation (look who is 4'th from the bottom):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Yearly_working_time_2004.j...

27.Riak - web-shaped data storage system (highscalability.com)
27 points by aatif on Oct 10, 2009 | 21 comments
28.Users don’t want rich (neilmiddleton.com)
27 points by toni on Oct 10, 2009 | 20 comments
29.BBC Ends Its Use of RealMedia for Streaming Audio (bbc.co.uk)
26 points by rg on Oct 10, 2009 | 16 comments
30.Netflix boss says DVD has two years left (yahoo.com)
25 points by mjfern on Oct 10, 2009 | 32 comments

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