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ryanlpeterman

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Show HN: Compose - Building a low-profile wireless split keyboard

read.compose.llc
1 points·by ryanlpeterman·6 mesi fa·0 comments

What to buy that improves quality of life

developing.dev
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comments

ryanlpeterman
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Went viral on Twitter since people liked this list, sharing since I hope it can be helpful to others too. There are no affiliate links in here, just a fun exercise I did last week
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Same. Coding helps us communicate with machines, writing helps us communicate with each other
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you :)

Absolutely, collaboration is much smoother if we write well
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
I agree, it’s much easier to hand wave in conversation
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
+1, knowing your audience is critical
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
I'm currently taking the approach of writing regularly. My thinking is that quantity will lead to quality

Also I'm eager to receive feedback on it. That's why I'm so grateful for the Hacker News community's comments!
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Perhaps that will make the engineers that have the skill stand out more. Only time will tell
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Reading is somewhat painful for people if it isn't entertaining. When I write things that are information dense at work, I try my best to condense it to be mindful of people's time. It has worked well for me
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Just picked it up, thanks for the rec!

Here's the Amazon link if anyone else is thinking about reading it - https://www.amazon.com/Writing-10th-Anniversary-Memoir-Craft...
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Agreed. The more I write for a public audience, the more I realize that keeping people's attention is hard

Humor sounds like a great tool to keep people reading
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Often both. After I write something, it feels like it's a free benefit to also share it with others. I'm grateful the Hacker News community is so giving with feedback (eventhough I've gotten torn to shreds a few times haha)
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for your kind words :)
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
That's a good point, I think Paul Graham has a similar line of thinking in the relationship between reading and writing. I linked this tweet in my article (https://twitter.com/paulg/status/1618747829975130115) but I've seen other places he's mentioned something similar as well.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
This was a great read, thank you for sharing :)
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
I do a similar thing. Especially helpful for long-running investigations that are difficult to root cause. Documenting the current state of the investigation allows people to jump in easily and helps everyone tell what the current conclusions are.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
This is an interesting take. Thanks for providing a perspective that isn't a technical class. I agree clear thinking is critical.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Networking is worth an honorable mention I agree.

> If you don't learn about grammars, lexers, parsers, ASTs,... you're at a huge disadvantage in many situations.

Can you get an example? I don't recall a time where I used this knowledge in the last 5 years as a systems generalist in big tech.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Yeah that's a fair point. There may be a lot of implicit understanding I have that I can't trace to a specific class that has helped me.

Still, I think I could cut out at least half of the classes which I'm confident didn't matter and still have similar thinking.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
Agreed, 100%. Eventhough most of the classes didn't matter for my career, getting the credential was worth it to help me get my foot in the door for interviews.
ryanlpeterman
·3 anni fa·discuss
I loved CS181 ("Intro to Finite Theory Automata"). I don't remember using much from what I learned there in the last 5 years as a SWE but wow that was a fun class!