Looks like the actual article only mentions spiders rather than all arachnids, but I wonder what the total would be if they tallied mites' consumption as well?
Having never heard of Aurelia before, I was curious how this compared to React and found this interview with the creator/lead, Rob Eisenberg, with his thoughts:
We’re a small, well-funded, early stage startup tackling the $50B+ market of residential real estate looking to bring on our third engineer.
Node backend, React + Redux + ES6 + etc frontend. We're looking to hire an experienced full stack engineer who is excited about a collaborative, inclusive environment to produce high-quality code. Learn more about our technical thoughts and approach on our eng blog here: https://engineering.haus.com
Anyone have a good summary of the language feature changes & APIs (either standards or standards track) that are in the version of V8 that ships with Node 7 vs Node 6?
Is there a security statement about this? I don't immediately see any dangerous operations, but code sharing should always be suspect. If this catches on, it won't be long before someone asks for something that would open vulnerabilities.
All that being said, this is a really interesting approach and having a language for shared, declarative logic is often useful.
We’re a small, well-funded, early stage startup tackling the $50B+ market of residential real estate looking to bring on our third engineer.
Node backend, React + Redux + ES6 + etc frontend. We're looking to hire an experienced full stack engineer who is excited about a collaborative, inclusive environment to produce high-quality code.
The example given in the readme (API pagination) seems better suited to an observable or stream to me, but it left me curious about applicability to other use cases with Promises.
One is retries on failure or timeout. The other is waiting for something to execute a certain number of times. The latter is something I've used only in tests, but it might have other uses I'm not thinking of. I've implemented both of these in the past with recursion, which is great, but scares some folks, esp when mixed with promises.
We’re a small, well-funded, early stage startup tackling the $50B+ market of residential real estate looking to bring on our third engineer.
Node backend, React + Redux + ES6 + etc frontend. We're looking to hire an experienced full stack engineer who is excited about a collaborative, inclusive environment to produce high-quality code.
If you haven't run into this on a recent build of Chrome, just try hitting backspace a couple of times and you'll get a toast telling you how to go back. On Mac, that's ⌘+←.
It does however make me reflect that I would do something like this on my "day off" too. And by "this," I mean I would feel the need to create something, post something, or otherwise turn my relaxation into some kind of output.
Recently I've tried actively not creating and just allowing myself to relax without being conscious of it.
I should note that I'm not presuming anything about the author. Writing may well be their way of relaxing. I just wanted to share a self-realization that I hope may be helpful to others.
Is anyone aware of other, non-automotive applications being discussed? I might have missed it in the article but it seemed like they only alluded to any. Construction? Maybe even aerospace?
TL;DR the tolerance in length of pool lanes doesn't allow for thousandth of a second timing resolution. That is, one swimmer's lane might be shorter within the margin of error that allows them to finish faster by a few thousandths of a second.
We’re a small, well-funded, early stage startup tackling the $50B+ market of residential real estate looking to bring on our third engineer.
Node backend, React + Redux + ES6 + etc frontend. We're looking to hire an experienced full stack engineer who is excited about a collaborative, inclusive environment to produce high-quality code.