Shameless plug, but we have a podcast around commercial real estate investing, a very popular investment type for passive income generation. We really have a big education focus:
Regardless of the platform, if you are considering direct real estate investment (versus a REIT), the most important thing you can do is educate yourself. Direct real estate investing can get very complicated very quickly: You have to potentially evaluate the sponsor/real estate company, the surrounding market, the assumptions being made that lead to the target returns, etc. Unfortunately, most "educational" material you find is really focused on the idea of "getting rich quick" versus real education. I'll shamelessly plug our podcast (https://www.realcrowd.com/blog/tags/podcast/). While we are a direct marketplace, we strive to make our educational material, including our podcast unbiased education and not a commercial for our platform. We have received a lot of great feedback.
You aren't wrong. I will say I do still find myself surprised that many sites don't test cross browser and I find that these frameworks can alleviate that.
I think you should leave the business. You have made a decision which could irreparably harm it. If both you and the girlfriend truly care about the business, you'll both sign "i won't sue" resignations and do whatever your friend needs to help the transition.
There is no trust in the co-founder relationship now and you've made bad decisions for the company. I do no think you can successfully carry on especially if this is a small company.
As for your friendship, I can only wish you luck. I don't believe I could accept this kind of betrayal but everyone is different.
I just want some computer company to focus on power users. I know its a relatively smaller market, but if someone (Apple, Dell, Lenovo, etc.) focused on high quality hardware and software that "just worked" for power users and less focused on the consumer-y features, that would be awesome. Macs have a great build quality but the OS seems less focused on improving the experience than assimilating you into their ecosystem (this is true for Microsoft and Google as well). Every new feature involves creating an account to more tightly couple you to the respective company. I get this strategy but would love to see someone concentrating more on the overall experience than locking me into _their_ world.
I played with SMS, SMS reply, and MMS. All worked well and as expected (I used a Google-Voice account for testing). Probably one of the easiest out-of-band login solutions I've used. For SMS a "link-or-reply" feature would be nice. Depending on the particular use-case it might be easier for me to press a link in the message versus typing something. Also perhaps eventually an app (swiping notification is enough to complete login)
I find it odd that a majority of the articles and documentation about React Native fail to mention upfront that Android development isn't available yet. While this article does mention that fact, it seems weird to me to push a cross-platform solution when only one platform is available.
iPhone 5S, 8.1.3. I'm using Safari directly. Clicking "Try It Now" opens a new window (apparently blank, but maybe a white canvas?) And I can't do anything. just a white screen. Just re tested. This is the same behavior on the iPad Air, 8.1.3.
I think the eventual solution will be a software subscription fee that ends up going to the carriers. They are motivated to get people to upgrade their phones right now, and unless they are legally obligated or financially compensated, I doubt they will change their practices to enable people keeping their phones.
I'm unfamilar with Backbone.js's implementation, but AngularJS checks to see if the current browser supports the new html5 "input" event. If it does, that is the event it listens on. The plugins however don't necessarily fire this event, instead using the older "change" event. It could be similar to that.
I can't speak with relation to reactive because I honestly don't have any experience with it. I have another tab open with you link though and look forward to reading about it. As for Angular, as I mentioned in the blog, by its very design it seems to guide you into making the _right_ decision. Its been the easiest framework I've found to keep a decent amount of separation between the view and controller logic. The binding-bits can reside in the directives. With the right approach, it is very easy to unit-test as well as A-B Test by easy swapping out views that are decorated. I definitely seed your point though that the mark-up can become a bit attribute-heavy.
https://www.realcrowd.com/blog/2018/01/podcast-best-of-seaso...