I've been a customer since 2006 and just cancelled my account. Not sure, where I'll move, but I need a provider that supports .de domains. I'm leaning towards uberspace.de, but will consider Hetzner as well.
Pascal is an interesting language choice. I think it is the 1st time I see an open source project that is actually used in production written in Pascal.
I doubt that Google prioritizes Wikipedia deliberately. Wikipedia has tons of backlinks, authority, trust, typically a high text to html ratio, probably a low bounce rate. Moreover, it is fast, works well on mobile and on and on. It's is just a very well done and useful site for users and search engines.
Having done a similar project[1], that also includes affiliate links to Amazon and being called a spammer by some people because of that, I really appreciate your stance, that if a project adds value, monetizing it is okay.
Moreover, I'd like to add that affiliate links are less intrusive and dangerous wrt to malicious code and user privacy. I wonder why Adsense et al rarely get called out, but affiliate links do. Maybe it's my confirmation bias or it's because people don't see those other ads, because of using an ad blocker.
I wanted an easy way to search HN, especially limiting results by number of comments/points and to restrict them to sections like "Ask HN". This is what I came up with for now, maybe some of you find it useful as well.
Apache server. I know it is not a hip choice, but I've used it for more than 15 years to serve static and dynamic websites. I've changed tech stacks from perl to php to python used different data bases and Apache always just worked.
It's harder to get interaction done with canvas compared to SVG, but for large graphs the performance gains are huge. Curious to dive into the other new features.
Thanks for this incredible piece of software mbostock!
I've used robobrowser for a project, where I needed to log in to a website and subsequently access pages as a logged in user. It worked well and I like the API. For "simple" scrapers that require authentication or some form of user interaction this is a good tool. If I need to scrape many pages from a site as fast as possible, I'd probably go for Scrapy though.
I just tried the query myself. The result set contains this URL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_law_of_headli..., which does not work when entered in the browser. It appears that OP merged this URL with the working URL, that occurs on rank 49. Also notice, that a URL variant pointing to this page occurs on rank 89 again.
Does it make any sense to you to compare a particular group to the general population then? I think it does, the insights you may draw from such a comparisons are obviously different than comparing two sub-groups, e.g. programmers vs. doctors for example.
Also the article doesn't judge the differences of incomes, the "overpaid" is your interpretation.
I see the case for having a disclosure section that informs about affiliate links and don't mind adding that. But quite frankly, everyone who knows about affiliate programs can see that the links to Amazon contain that tag. No redirects or whatever fishy techniques I've seen to hide that.
Yes, that is probably the case. Quoting from the post
"Amazon is often the goto website for referring books, but many books have dedicated homepages as well as pages pages on their publisher's website. Moreover, many freely available are referred frequently in comments, but are not considered in this ranking."
The approach used here has limitations, I hoped to make that clear by pointing them out and choosing titles and headlines accordingly.