02:10 PM PDT We are investigating network connectivity issues affecting Direct Connect customers using the US-WEST-2 Region.
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Opened at: October 18, 2017 at 3:59:42 PM UTC-5
Network Connectivity
01:59 PM PDT We are investigating Network Connectivity issues in the US-WEST-2 Region.
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Opened at: October 18, 2017 at 3:59:00 PM UTC-5
EC2 VPC network health internet issue
Beginning at Wed, 18 Oct 2017 20:59:00 GMT, some instances are experiencing elevated packet loss between the us-west-2a Availability Zone and the Internet. We are now investigating this issue.
02:10 PM PDT We are investigating network connectivity issues affecting Direct Connect customers using the US-WEST-2 Region.
---
Opened at: October 18, 2017 at 3:59:42 PM UTC-5
Network Connectivity
01:59 PM PDT We are investigating Network Connectivity issues in the US-WEST-2 Region.
---
Opened at: October 18, 2017 at 3:59:00 PM UTC-5
EC2 VPC network health internet issue
Beginning at Wed, 18 Oct 2017 20:59:00 GMT, some instances are experiencing elevated packet loss between the us-west-2a Availability Zone and the Internet. We are now investigating this issue.
We're hiring a full time Python/JavaScript developer. We pay a competitive salary w/ full benefits, have an open vacation policy, sweet stock options, and provide you with whatever SW & HW you need.
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About You
You love:
- Python, Javascript, and exploring new technology
- Using 3rd-party APIs and figuring out all the fun little land mines their docs fail to mention
- Working with our sales and support team to keep things running smoothly
- Supporting our designer to make a clean and intuitive UX for our application
- Doing some Linux admin work
- Creating internal tools to make everyone’s life easier
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About Ordoro
We create user-centric, thoughtfully-designed software that’s helping merchants efficiently manage everything that happens after the order is placed on their webstore - tasks such as shipping, dropshipping and inventory management.
> Heat has generally been successfully extracted from the lower convective zone (LCZ) of solar ponds by two main methods. In the first, hot brine from the LCZ is circulated through an external heat exchanger, as tested and demonstrated in El Paso and elsewhere. In the second method, a heat transfer fluid circulates in a closed cycle through an in-pond heat exchanger, as used in the Pyramid Hill solar pond, in Victoria, Australia.
Registering my LLC for an iOS Dev account with D&B was a breeze. I filled out a form, waited a few days and picked up the phone. I registered right when Apple started requiring DUNS and this was posted to HN http://blog.metamorphium.com/2012/12/03/apple-duns.
tl;dr Programming has been ignored because hardware has a much more visible payoff. The impact of computers and the innovation in hardware will "be but a ripple on the surface of our culture, compared with the much more profound influence they will have in their capacity of intellectual challenge without precedent in the cultural history of mankind." That is, the intellectual impact of programming is more significant than the impact made innovation on the hardware side. At least thats what I think what Dijkstra is saying.
Some gems:
Test driven development, 1972.
Today a usual technique is to make a program and then to test it. But: program testing can be a very effective way to show the presence of bugs, but is hopelessly inadequate for showing their absence. The only effective way to raise the confidence level of a program significantly is to give a convincing proof of its correctness. But one should not first make the program and then prove its correctness, because then the requirement of providing the proof would only increase the poor programmer’s burden. On the contrary: the programmer should let correctness proof and program grow hand in hand.
For loops have brain damaged us.
Another lesson we should have learned from the recent past is that the development of “richer” or “more powerful” programming languages was a mistake in the sense that these baroque monstrosities, these conglomerations of idiosyncrasies, are really unmanageable, both mechanically and mentally. I see a great future for very systematic and very modest programming languages. When I say “modest”, I mean that, for instance, not only ALGOL 60’s “for clause”, but even FORTRAN’s “DO loop” may find themselves thrown out as being too baroque. I have run a a little programming experiment with really experienced volunteers, but something quite unintended and quite unexpected turned up. None of my volunteers found the obvious and most elegant solution. Upon closer analysis this turned out to have a common source: their notion of repetition was so tightly connected to the idea of an associated controlled variable to be stepped up, that they were mentally blocked from seeing the obvious. Their solutions were less efficient, needlessly hard to understand, and it took them a very long time to find them.
https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api2/demo