Check this hard against all our tendency to have "imposter syndrome". I've suffered from it in the past, and eventually I found my groove. Now I lead teams.
That said, you could also pursue engineering adjacent paths. Things like project/product management, QA engineering, sales engineering, etc.
Just loaded mine into my Arturia DX7 VST, and its rad. Threw some juicy reverb after it, and found a couple patches in my pack that will defintely be putting into a track.
Why none of the top comments on a site called Hacker News are about the fact that this is far from anything that could be used for software development surprises me. Only feasible way to use this for dev would be using a cloud IDE, since I have no access to the OS or ability to install dependencies.
I love the idea of the iPad becoming something that could replace a laptop, but for me I wait for the day when I can at the very least have sandbox access to the filesystem, and OS kernel to be able to set it up for local development.
Why Apple continues to refuse support for BSD Jails or the sort confuses me.
Agreed. I guess what I was getting at was, given her particularly less than favorable views on deregulation and hyper free-market views in other respects, I find her opinion on this interesting.
Rent control is a failed experiment. All it does is force land lords to massively increase rent amounts when someone moves out to account for multi-year market increases.
Basically, if the real market price of an apartment is ~$3,000/mo, but in 5 years it realistically would be $5,000, they will simply list it for $5,000 now, to mitigate the loss.
My mother-in-law is a land lord in Los Angeles (a very fair one at that), and is also about as bleeding heart liberal as you can get. She is a staunch opponent of rent control.
Exactly! And if the day came where this because an issue, for 1/10th the cost of actually retaining a lawyer and reasonably going after Facebook for a patent, you could rewrite your app in something else.
I get that, but still no access to params and the ability to change them is still a boon for me. I often will use stand to store some basic state for deep linking certain views. For example a data grid and the sort or filter options. I was able to very elegantly execute this with redux-router and its full exposure of the entire route object and API pairity to pushState and replaceState
This library lack some of the super powerful features that really made me fall in love with redux-router. Being able to get access to params was huge, and having action creators to pushState and replaceState was also huge.
That said, you could also pursue engineering adjacent paths. Things like project/product management, QA engineering, sales engineering, etc.