I'd love to know what "super fast" means. Are we talking about ETL jobs that would take hours? We run our batch file processing jobs in Python. It's not the fastest. But in a world where we can bring up more instances/containers to help process the work faster, I'd love to know how much faster COBOL is at these jobs that it'd be interesting to consider against the alternatives.
Thanks for the info. The Carbon looks really good, so it's good to know someone's already successfully put Linux on it without issues. Two questions: have you tried hooking up two monitors to it and if you connect an external monitor to the laptop and then close the lid do things work as expected?
I've tried that and it just feels incomplete. The VM competes for resources with the host machine. And then it's a bit awkward where the focus of the mouse is. When you run Linux natively you can get fancy with window/tiling managers (I really want to play with i3). Life is just better when things are simpler.
Evite | Los Angeles, CA | Python Full Stack Developer or Senior Frontend Developer | Full-Time | On-Site
We’ve got a small, but strong team solving problems at scale. There are lots of cool projects coming down the pipe, including a bit of real-time web work (yes, you can finally play with WebSockets). As it is, we’ve got a pretty varied mix of projects, including a bit of machine learning that we’ve currently been solving using Orange.
* Code stack: Python, Django, CoffeeScript (soon to be ES6), Backbone, Sass, Bourbon, ...
While what the AlphaGo team has accomplished is nothing short of amazing, I'm not sure if everyone's thinking about this in the right context. While playing there's a "super computer" behind the scenes with these specs 1,920 CPUs and 280 GPUs [0]. Then consider all the machines used to train this neural net. I'd say Sedol's brain is pretty freaking powerful. Also, with that much computing power I would expect AlphaGo to win with the right team and the right approach to solving the problem. It would be very interesting to change the rules and limit the processing power of the computer playing a human.
Evite | Los Angeles, CA | Python Full Stack Developer | Full-Time | On-Site
We’ve got a small, but strong team solving problems at scale. There are lots of cool projects coming down the pipe, this is probably not the right venue to get into much too much detail, but let’s just say we’re looking into PubSub, WebSockets, and push notifications. We’ve got a pretty varied mix of projects, including a bit of machine learning that we’ve currently been solving using Orange.
* Code stack: Python, Django, CoffeeScript (soon to be ES6), Backbone, Sass, Bourbon, ...
This is the first I've heard of Falcon. Have you used it for a "real" project? It'd be interesting to know the tradeoffs when considering it against something like Django Rest Framework. Looking at the benchmark figures on the Falcon site, it's sad that Python 3 underperforms Python 2. I wish Python 3 had the slightest performance win, it'd be an easier sell. Hate to shift the topic to Python 2/3 talks, but I've wanted to switch for a while now, and it's still not the simplest sell.
While time will tell if we ever actually see this drones in action, imagine how cool it must be for the people working on this project. They get to go to work each day playing with some really fancy model airplanes. Plus, this is Amazon pushing yet another aspect of technology forward. They may overwork their employees, but cool things are coming out of those offices.
I really wish we as a community just set a date and ported. As it is right now there's almost zero chance that the project I'm working on will get ported to Python 3. I'm not sure what it'll take, but I really wish we were passed this stage.
Wanted to wait on my own response so as not to influence peoples' responses. I'm a software developer and I've recently been thinking that one of the skills that I'd like to improve on is writing. Never late to work on, but it would've been great to put a little more effort into it earlier in life.
As a developer with a fairly interesting background, I've been getting messages from recruiters for years. As Aline's post elucidates, most of the messages are completely impersonal. I had been ignoring these e-mails for years. I then got a message from a recruiter that was really well written and completely geared towards me. I was shocked that someone took the time to actually read my resume. That recruiter got a response from me. He then lined me up with a gig. His approach also got four other people hired at the job he lined me up with.
Tyler, as someone who constantly thinks about different avenues of working on my own, it's really informative to hear stories such as yours. Plus, your story is usually the one people gloss over. We usually hear about the two projects a year that make billions and the ones that completely fail. It's refreshing to hear about an app that made money and gave you the financial stability to take a couple more risks. Thanks for sharing!