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typeofnandev

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Ask HN: Have you created a profitable B2B SaaS product? If so, what's the story?

1 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·0 comments

Ask HN: What's the most outrageous over-engineering you've seen in the wild?

15 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·21 comments

If your refactors break a lot of tests, you may not be testing the right things

typeofnan.dev
5 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·0 comments

Taking pixel-perfect screenshots every time using Chrome Devtools

typeofnan.dev
3 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·0 comments

Ask HN: What lessons did you learn from your best or worst colleagues?

231 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·258 comments

It's better to be naive than jaded

macwright.com
3 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·1 comments

The Return of Fancy Tools

macwright.com
447 points·by typeofnandev·5 years ago·216 comments

comments

typeofnandev
·2 years ago·discuss
This is so ruby
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
MDN gets better, and better, and better. Their discussion on "Things to consider when using frameworks" is so on point and makes me happy to read. Back when I was hiring front-end engineers, I would often ask questions that are nicely answered in this article--things like what kind of problems do front-end frameworks solve, what are the downsides of using front-end frameworks, and digging into over-engineering (i.e., seeing if the person realizes that a front-end framework isn't always the right tool). Great stuff from MDN here, yet again.
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
The last sentence of this piece makes it for me, and it's this optimism that generally gets me through my day:

But I think we need to make a conscious effort to realize: every time is different. Even if you put the same effort in and make the same decisions, the world, the people in it, and you, have all changed. What worked before, might not work now. The idea that failed before, well - maybe its day has come.
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
>The problem with Jira (or at least used to) is that it has so much complexities that let people make it overly complicated.

I actually really like this take, because a lot of the times it feels like a tool's complexity is from what it lets you do. I feel like if Jira was "dumber" (i.e., less feature "rich") it'd be so much better.
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
If only it _was_ the case!
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
There's a lot of truth to this. I feel like I'm willing to really dig in and learn a tool if I can sense that the power of wielding that tool will be commensurate with the difficulty learning it.
typeofnandev
·5 years ago·discuss
https://api.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...