Three metrics you pointed out:
1. Linter
2. Cyclomatic/halstead complexity
3. identifier naming convention testing
Are those really things that candidates can get a negative ding for? Those are things that can/should be handled automatically by libraries or your CI/CD (ex: Rubocop)
More importantly, how do you get more details/nuance over things like naming or cyclomatic complexity.
I actually really value the naming metric. I'd value a dev who looks at other classes to to see what the convention is rather than just adding their own personal form of camel-case. It shows a sense of collaboration.
Tinkergarten is on a mission to elevate childhood. We’re growing a technology-enabled network of leaders that bring families together in a natural place in their community for classes where kids learn through play. [ early childhood education ]
We're looking for a software engineer with at least 2 years professional experience. Our stack: Ruby/Rails, ReactJS, Mysql, AWS
Tinkergarten is on a mission to elevate childhood. We’re growing a technology-enabled network of leaders that bring families together in a natural place in their community for classes where kids learn through play.
We're looking for a software engineer with at least 2 years professional experience.
Our stack: Ruby/Rails, ReactJS, Mysql, AWS
>Cathy O'Neil wrote a book called "Weapons of Math Destruction" -- interesting read
+1000. That book should be required reading for anyone working in machine learning. Written by a former Wall Street quant who has the math down cold.
What she knows about rampant bias in allegedly politically agnostic machine learning circles is that the formulation and production of answers is trivial when compared to the formulation and production of questions.
Super-relevant to this thread is her work on recidivism risk scoring algos run on prisoners and defendants. The feedback loops that these algos spur are seriously damaging the lives of huge numbers of persons in the criminal justice system far beyond proportionality for the offenses that brought them there.
To me this is the primary challenge of outsourcing your client side tracking -- you risk a wholesale block of your analytics if the Segment file gets blacklisted.
I think their value over the long term is similar to tripadvisor/yelp - while anyone can come in a create a repository of home sharing they wouldn't have the reviews/reputation data as AirBnB has. Going into someone's home / letting someone in your home, just like hotel reviews or restaurant, reviews/ratings can matter in the decision making process.
The difference being that tripadvisor and Yelp own the reviews. They own the underlying core value. The value of Airbnb is the real estate which they do not own or control. Sure reviews help, but that's like saying only Amazon can sell something because they have reviews. Not to discount your point entirely, I still think there's value to reviews that validate hosts, but it's not he core value.
Haha, this thing is hilarious. Great job. I wonder if the author manually went through images locating the finger or there was some automated way of doing it. I did notice that if you move the pointer is certain ~20x20 areas the same picture appears. I'm guessing the set of images is small enough to just manually do it.
If the image resolution software isn't good enough, and there's a lot of images, you could mechanical turk it using the reverse site. Show on image and have the user click on the finger (or none).
Violating the lease is probably the biggest issue imo with Airbnb. I think part of it is that we so often gloss over legal contracts and the concept of airbnb where you can just "rent out a room" doesn't FEEL like anything wrong. If as a tenant you know it's wrong, it FEELs like a petty offense which you shouldn't be penalized for or it FEELs like a broken law.
Saw this on product hunt in the morning and been playing around with it. Everything automatically gets saved in local storage and after I fullscreen/desktop the app, it makes it super easy to switch back and forth from what you're working on. I've been using good ol "data:text/html, <html contenteditable>" for simple note-taking so this is definitely an improvement.
Suggestion: Would be cool if CMD + ` could switch between different tabs/sections.
I hope Mr.Hiroshima writes a blog post detailing what happened. I'm particularly interested in whether Twitter has implemented any changes in the way they handle high value handles/or all to prevent others who've experienced this with their Twitter account.
He did write a pretty nice article about the process of the handle being stolen[1], but I'm pretty sure that's not what you're talking about.
I, too, would like to hear about the process of actually getting the handle back. Apparently I don't read HN enough(something I thought was impossible) so this story is news to me as of this evening.
Are those really things that candidates can get a negative ding for? Those are things that can/should be handled automatically by libraries or your CI/CD (ex: Rubocop)
More importantly, how do you get more details/nuance over things like naming or cyclomatic complexity.