I wrote http://www.arxiv-sanity.com/ (code is open source on github: https://github.com/karpathy/arxiv-sanity-preserver) as a side project intended to mitigate the problem of finding newest relevant work in an area (among many other related problems such as finding similar papers, or seeing what others are reading) and it sees a steady number of few hundred users every day and a few thousand accou
We are a team of 12 developers in our local office plus five to six remote guys. How do you integrate remote developers? On a technical level (video conferencing, IM), but also on a social/personal level (team spirit etc.). I have worked remotely for 4 years.Start by creating a remote-first culture. Everyone should think "remote" first. Thus it should never matter if a local employee is working fr
Curious about scientific publications in your field that are worth sharing. I've been trying to read a paper a day since midsummer. These are a few of the interesting, for me personally, since then:Generating Sequences With Recurrent Neural Networks - http://arxiv.org/abs/1308.0850 Older one, but important to understand deeply since other recent ideas have come from this! Unsupervised Representati
I am a developer and I have a 40 hr/week job. It is a very good job and I put a lot of effort in it. But I have also my own ideas that I would love to develop, but I am struggling to organize time and material to develop something for me.I read a lot and have a lot of ideas, about little porjects to test new technologies or new patterns, but never find the time. I would love to learn the experienc
That's....a great point.As the saying goes, "If you don't like the advertisement, you're not in the target market." On Cloud Foundry we've found that we get buy-in from both operators and developers. Operators heave a sigh of relief: "Finally, I don't have to clean up after devs! They can't break the platform for everyone else! I don't get 3AM phonecalls to fix someone else's mess!" Developers hea
https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/table/fh-bigquery:hackernews.commentsThe dataset is up-to-date for October 2015 and uses the official HN API as a data source. (Unfortuntely, this includes the HTML formatting in the comments) Dataset is about 4GB total; since BigQuery allows for 1000GB processing for free each month, it is effectively no cost to analyze. Felipe Hoffa (who uploaded the dataset) ha
This is about three years overdue, but at least it's here.How close does it come to making PCI-DSS Level 1 attainable on Heroku? What about HIPAA? Would love to get a response to this. We are required to be HIPAA compliant and started out on Heroku. We basically only had a prototype built and didn't have any clients yet, so we didn't really care. After a weeks of paying for Heroku we got a very st
Rob Pike tweeted about it (the Android version) recently [1]. I ported [2] the app to the web within a few hours. The port involves ~70 lines of Go, 22 lines of HTML, and 24 lines of CSS [3].[1]: https://twitter.com/rob_pike/status/619995629566058496 [2]: https://twitter.com/shurcooL/status/620084337401171968 [3]: https://twitter.com/shurcooL/status/620343011671609344 Python seems faster than this
Go 1.4 starts to use comments as directives. I think that is a realy bad path to go on the long run. You see its beginnings in following 3 examples:# used to set a canonical import path for a package: //import "foo" # used to generate code: //go:generate bar # used to document the result of a example function: //Output: foo Comments should not be directives. Comments are free form, they do not hav
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