You (and others) may enjoy Adam Savage's new book. He was one of the Mythbusters guys. In one of the first chapters he writes about his love of lists and checklists, and the impact it makes on the process of "making." I'm only a few chapters in so far but it's been a fun read so far.
I'd be curious to hear more about this. Is there a certain time of year, is there a certain area you need to stay, what time of night, etc. Feel free to shoot me a link if there is already a good resource explaining some of this
The Northern Lights have been on my bucket list as well for quite some time but have always let the seemingly random chance of actually seeing them dissuade me from really planning something.
One of your side hustles is currently making 6 figures in revenue, but you're saying you haven't hit "escape velocity yet?" I'm curious if your goals are more ambitious, or perhaps 6 figures of _revenue_ isn't necessarily profitable enough to sustain you?
>But I said that about 2018, and 2017 too.
Rings so true for me as well, unfortunately! This tweet from Justin Jackson has been making it's rounds the last couple of days, maybe it will be encouraging to you: https://twitter.com/mijustin/status/1068773791952584704
It's kind of a shame that this is the most up voted comment where this guy is just sharing something cool he made, he's not saying it's the next big thing. It may not be worth spending the time to optimize for these other platforms unless he can get some initial traction.
I would be curious to know where the performance lies and what could be done to improve. I saw on another commend he mentioned how using a css blur was a big performance gain over canvas shadowBlur
That was it! Man completely forgot about that game! This is a great take on it, I was able to quickly have fun, especially once I was able to recognize the concept. I love that you can mod via JSON as well. Do you have the code open sourced anywhere?
Hey, something where my two cents might actually be valuable :)
I created the VS Code plugin for Optic: https://github.com/opticdev/optic-vscode-plugin. It was actually my first time writing a text editor plugin, but between the VS Code docs, Optic SDK, and Optic plugin spec, it was surprisingly easy. The information just gets sent through web sockets under the hood, but it was all just basic javascript callbacks and some VS Code specifics for finding ranges, etc.
Optic itself isn't particularly useful for me as a solo developer building small website frontends, but I must say I was a little jealous of those that this is geared towards because even developing the plugin gave me a couple of those "magic" moments. Getting to make a change to just some javascript object's property and then get to keep it in sync was pretty satisfying.
I'm also curious to see this. I think a lot of the really strong programmers I know do this instinctually where as I have to be more deliberate breaking things down. Perhaps some of it is that they are able more more naturally hold it in their minds than writing it out on a piece of paper like I do. Maybe they "learned how to learn" in that way better than I did when they were younger.
I had a similar fee when I tried to send a friend $30 of BTC to a paper wallet for Christmas. Ended up just walking him through setting up a Coinbase account and gave him $30 cash and he just link his own credit card (although he was never able to get past the pending account verification)
Thanks for highlighting this, I'm going to share with all of my friends investing/thinking of investing in the crypto space. Always good to get a reminder to take everything you read with a grain of salt. Also rarely get to see these almost short-term post-mortems, which give the (seemingly) whole picture of what happened with the price increase and following decrease.
Similar situation on El Capitan.. it doesn't crash the browser but gives a lot of "Safari Web Content quit unexpectedly." I felt like it had to be just me because how could something so glaringly obvious be the case for everyone and they not fix it?
It looks like there is an article talking about this specifically here on Wired if you want to dip your toes in: https://www.wired.com/story/adam-savage-lists-more-lists-pow...