> I think EU should make it easier for US citizens who get any job here to move over.
I'm pretty sure that any employable american can achieve that without hard efforts, and AFAIK most welfare is granted to salaried people, except for unemployment allowance. Same with education, some countries are equal (very low) tuitions no-question-asked.
For hardly employable 'hard worker' american, I'm pretty sure that are plenty of hard working immigration candidate to fill that. And there's no reason that low wages jobs will end better life condition for americans than others, and end up to the same problems that often comes with poverty : crime, social resent and injustice, just like home.
If you think that americans will work harder and paid better that an struggling immigrant, I think you are highly delusional, low wages hard just enough to live, and nobody will pay more for the same job.
I've very mixed feelings with all the craze around deep neural network and learning. On one side, some results brings so much magic it's astounding and really looks promising. On the other side, anything that is not a use case of convergence from general to specific, like hand writing recognition, but general to general, like qualifying pictures with vocabulary, fails miserably (in a very entertaining way).
And the slip from neural networks to artificial neural networks to artificial intelligence we see on the broad news, really make it look like expert systems all over again. At first, it's said that it can solve any kind of problems, and then, we end up with a very narrow set of problems it solves reliably.
To those who don't want to be tied to a specialized library, you can architect an app like that way (unidirectional data flow) quite easily if you use KVO properly.
> However, it's a fact that they lead to more conversions, more signups and more sales.
I wouldn't jump to conclusions. Maybe you have expertise on this, I don't, but I've seen nothing that could make me lay a definitive conclusion like this.
The article incision is on the fact that some people needs analytics to back up evaluation of the web site trying to know if it's doing good or not, regardless of revenue. So you end up to those techniques that drives irrelevant numbers up, that can even damage potential revenue, but it's ok, you're doing the right things, look at those good numbers. You can't test such things with A/B testing or anything else, it's long term relationship with the audience, and those analytics are not measuring this.
Can't find source but I remember reading here the story of a payment business that competed with VISA and was taking off until VISA started threatening his client, making them fear that their payment wouldn't be processed at some point, and they would be subject to fines, if not worse.
I remember reading other stories on the same line, about visa using shady approaches to frighten people to preserve their monopoly, but a quick search can't bring any up. Search terms are too generic.
I deeply agree for the facebook case, I just wanted to point out that there is no known general solution for a centralized resource access control for web backend that will fit all use cases properly.
Well actually you can look at it exactly like a kernel, where the backend is the kernel and http clients are the processes, and access control is done at resource level access, by the kernel. The things is, you couldn't even model facebook access with unix perms, and if you've played with acl, I think you realize that the problem is not solely due basic soft architecture.
That said, Facebook should have addressed this problem seriously by now.
There's also rustlex [1] that have been around for a while and provides rust stable v1.0 support through syntex [2]. I use it for a handlebars implementation [3].
To me, the problem in choosing the "better" way of doing something is that I can't stop comparing diverging design choices.
I like to think that the best way to choose between seemingly equally advantageous designs is to start with the one whose first step(s) is(are) the most straightforward. The thing is, while I prepare myself for implementation of that first step, I've a background loop in my mind that constantly checks against other implementations choices. What I am losing here, what I would gain otherwise.
In the end, I never really make definitive decision before starting. I start with that background brain noise on the “most simple first step design”, and when the background noise stops and the raw pleasure of coding kicks in, I known I'm on a good track.
Oh, yes yes, I can relate so hard that I actually have to take care of not getting mad after my SO when she breaks in those optimized routine she can't possibly have any clue of.
My favorite hypothesis is that the saudis want to punish the US for investing (and subsidies) too much in oil production. It put them in debts, and destroys their margins, but they can afford it, while the US cannot really afford to invest in oil rigs that have a too long ROI.
Break it down to small, high level abstractions for properly crafted, high yield components.
It requires experience, vision and talent. It's perceived as very difficult because it's basically the same approach as academic research, but instead of being applied to general problems, it's a general approach for a set of very specific technical constraints.
Oh, and most people screw it up badly on most occasions.
I'm pretty sure that any employable american can achieve that without hard efforts, and AFAIK most welfare is granted to salaried people, except for unemployment allowance. Same with education, some countries are equal (very low) tuitions no-question-asked.
For hardly employable 'hard worker' american, I'm pretty sure that are plenty of hard working immigration candidate to fill that. And there's no reason that low wages jobs will end better life condition for americans than others, and end up to the same problems that often comes with poverty : crime, social resent and injustice, just like home. If you think that americans will work harder and paid better that an struggling immigrant, I think you are highly delusional, low wages hard just enough to live, and nobody will pay more for the same job.