I'm using a sit/stand desk (the aerotouch at work, the geekdesk at home),
and it's wonderful. Definitely +1 on the anti-fatigue mat: here's the one I
use:
http://www.amazon.com/Sublime-Imprint-Designer-Nantucket-Espresso/dp/B0049HA0K0/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=home-garden&qid=1304093100&sr=1-3
On Thu,
Alright, so here's the plan:
Aviary is just a few short blocks from the hotel, yay!
http://goo.gl/maps/lzWkL
a) We're going to try and get reservations for 8pm. That means that people
interested should follow the instructions here, 8pm, for a party of 4.
http://theaviary.com/
Email me off list i
me
other awesome bar and/or coming back to Aviary later on in the night.
Call me/text at 646-206-6418 if you want updates.
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 2:32 PM, James Stuart wrote:
> Alright, so here's the plan:
>
> Aviary is just a few short blocks from the hotel, yay!
>
> http:/
Hey, so apparently they're closed on Mondays. But open on Tuesdays. So
let's try this again.
Leaving crowne hotel lobby at 8:40p.
Hey there! Apparently, trying to get into a bar, yesterday, on Mardi Gras
day is a bad idea.
But we have reservations and assurances that getting there at 6pm will
be a good idea and that we'll just waltz right in.
Those of you who are going to Goose Island, you can totally come by for one
drink
I'll put a rec out for CodeSchool. They started mostly with ruby, but
they've expanded into a wide array of courses (only a few of which are
free). But they're slick, well thought-through affairs, and Try Ruby/Rails
for Zombies is still I think the best introduction to Rails out there.
http://www.
As far as python goes, this has a quick sense of pacing, and has a lot of
interactive exercises, while building something pretty useful in the end.
https://www.udacity.com/ (CS101)
It goes into a little bit more theory then I think is useful for some
folks, but it's still a great resource.
On M
255 * (point - data.min) / (data.max - data.min)
On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 11:57 AM, Nate Hill wrote:
> Here's a brain teaser for the mathematically inclined:
>
> I've got a set of values that I want to scale to the 0-255 range so that I
> can adjust colors in my CSS.
> Say I have the following da
I will totally (potentially) lead the vegetarians. Meet at 6 in the hotel lobby!
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 2:38 PM, Jason Ronallo wrote:
> Hi,
> I was really looking forward to having dinner with you all tonight,
> but I'm not feeling well right now. I'm uncertain whether I will make
> it out tonigh
I will also lead the vegans. Also, the vogons.
--James
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 3:05 PM, James Stuart wrote:
> I will totally (potentially) lead the vegetarians. Meet at 6 in the hotel
> lobby!
>
> On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 2:38 PM, Jason Ronallo wrote:
>> Hi,
>> I was r
We have the heavyduty solution (JIRA/Greenhopper), but there's a lot
of nice relatively cheap web stuff that I think might fit your bill.
Just one of the many, many solutions out there:
Github for documentation/lightweight issue tracking
getdonedone can link to your github and has a lot more featu
doing mobile web browsing
* the market share of iOS of students at college libraries is possibly
higher than in the general market.
--James Stuart
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 4:23 PM, Park,Go-Woon wrote:
> I am wondering if any of you can share wisdom of interpreting the mobile
> device usag
+1 and willing to volunteer as well.
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 5:28 PM, Frumkin, Jeremy <
frumk...@u.library.arizona.edu> wrote:
> Wholehearted support.
>
> -- jaf
>
>
> Jeremy Frumkin
> Assistant Dean / Chief Technology Strategist
> Uni
Also, one of the advantages for most anti-harassment policies is that they
define the behavior in terms of the recipient feeling
uncomfortable/threatened. You'd be surprised how many of the recent ugly
con situations in the geek communities had people whose defense was: "But I
wasn't being an assho
I think questions of proportionality are meaningful, but regardless of how
we're doing by that standard, there's still work to be done. I want to see
the tech community become a lot less white and male, and if that means that
the community spends a little time explicitly encouraging a more diverse
+1
At least in the speculative fiction community (and I see it elsewhere), PoC
(person of color) is the most in-use term for replacing the traditional use
of minority.
--James
On Wed, Nov 28, 2012 at 3:39 PM, Bohyun Kim wrote:
> ++1
>
> ~Bohyun
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Code for
As a preface, I fully support both of these changes in language.
That said, I think it's both important to balance the idea that sure,
sometimes people are idiots, with that sexism is a prevalent problem right
now at geek conventions, and that it's more than a 'bad and/or drunk
apples' problem.
T
I've 'audited' a bunch of classes on Coursera, just to get an idea for what
they're doing, and the CS stuff is definitely better suited for online
learning. (I think people are still trying to figure out the right model
for humanities classes through sites like this).
Specifically, I think the cou
Chicago is my favorite city to visit, and one of the reasons is the
absolutely amazing food/drink scene, and at the head of that bar scene is
Aviary, a bar which has a potential claim on the best cocktail bar in
America, and at the very least, it's certainly the craziest.
Fueled by a lot of fancy
ng for 10-drink flights. Since reservations
are made the afternoon of, I'll update the C4L list as we get/don't get
reservations with a more concrete plan.
--James
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 11:14 AM, James Stuart wrote:
> Chicago is my favorite city to visit, and one of the reasons is the
> a
I think that a voting process which involves working both with github, the
issue tracker, and presumably using the network map of branches seems a bit
ornate, puts a barrier to contribution up, and is likely to be confusing.
I think that if a /whatever policy is developed for "how does C4L decide
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