What Is the Most Valuable Thing You Can Learn in One Hour?
5 by soygul | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: How do I choose the right resource to learn CS fundamentals?
Ask HN: How do I choose the right resource to learn CS fundamentals?
3 by 8589934591 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I am trying to learn CS on my own. But there are so many resources available online for every course from many of the top universities. For example: For intro courses: * Computer science an interdisciplinary approach (princeton) * CS61A - UCB * Introduction to CS and programming (MIT) * Stanford * CMU Data Structures and Algorithms: * Princeton Algorithms * CS61B - UCB * Stanford Algorithms course * MIT Algorithms * CMU Apart from this you have multiple books on each topic - Data Structures/Algorithms, Discrete Mathematics, Theory of Computation, Operating systems, Networks, and so on. Apart from these you also have resources like teachyourselfcs, ossu, functionalcs.github.io/curriculum/. I am attracted by the resources/online/books posted by courses in UCB/Princeton/MIT/Stanford/CMU. At the same time I get boggled down and overwhelmed that I have soooooooooo many materials to cover. Intro courses aren't that big of a deal since I am able to recognize/solve most questions fairly easily in multiple resources. But my next step of Data structures and algorithms is overwhelming that I am unable to start somewhere. How do you recommend to choose the right resource (online/book) for each topic/course? Is it worth going through multiple university courses/books for the same topic?
3 by 8589934591 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I am trying to learn CS on my own. But there are so many resources available online for every course from many of the top universities. For example: For intro courses: * Computer science an interdisciplinary approach (princeton) * CS61A - UCB * Introduction to CS and programming (MIT) * Stanford * CMU Data Structures and Algorithms: * Princeton Algorithms * CS61B - UCB * Stanford Algorithms course * MIT Algorithms * CMU Apart from this you have multiple books on each topic - Data Structures/Algorithms, Discrete Mathematics, Theory of Computation, Operating systems, Networks, and so on. Apart from these you also have resources like teachyourselfcs, ossu, functionalcs.github.io/curriculum/. I am attracted by the resources/online/books posted by courses in UCB/Princeton/MIT/Stanford/CMU. At the same time I get boggled down and overwhelmed that I have soooooooooo many materials to cover. Intro courses aren't that big of a deal since I am able to recognize/solve most questions fairly easily in multiple resources. But my next step of Data structures and algorithms is overwhelming that I am unable to start somewhere. How do you recommend to choose the right resource (online/book) for each topic/course? Is it worth going through multiple university courses/books for the same topic?
Monday, December 30, 2019
Sunday, December 29, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Tell HN: Space Launch Now – Spaceflight News and Events
Tell HN: Space Launch Now – Spaceflight News and Events
4 by happy-go-lucky | 1 comments on Hacker News.
4 by happy-go-lucky | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Saturday, December 28, 2019
Friday, December 27, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: The Unix C library API can only be reliably used from C
The Unix C library API can only be reliably used from C
4 by jandeboevrie | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by jandeboevrie | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Thursday, December 26, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: How do those eMMC Windows laptops work?
Ask HN: How do those eMMC Windows laptops work?
4 by brundolf | 4 comments on Hacker News.
I was just shopping around for a low-end Windows laptop and discovered a new trend: machines that have 64gb or 128gb internal storage on "eMMC", which research suggests is similar to what's used in phones, and then they have a micro SD card slot for expansion (also like phones). I take it the OS lives on the eMMC and not something even weirder like a ROM chip? Do user programs and files go there too or can they only go on the SD? How does it all affect things like partitioning? Presumably this is a response to the Chromebook-pocalypse but it still feels very strange and mysterious to me for now
4 by brundolf | 4 comments on Hacker News.
I was just shopping around for a low-end Windows laptop and discovered a new trend: machines that have 64gb or 128gb internal storage on "eMMC", which research suggests is similar to what's used in phones, and then they have a micro SD card slot for expansion (also like phones). I take it the OS lives on the eMMC and not something even weirder like a ROM chip? Do user programs and files go there too or can they only go on the SD? How does it all affect things like partitioning? Presumably this is a response to the Chromebook-pocalypse but it still feels very strange and mysterious to me for now
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Merry Christmas HN
Merry Christmas HN
42 by duck | 8 comments on Hacker News.
I hope everyone had a great 2019 and an even better 2020.
42 by duck | 8 comments on Hacker News.
I hope everyone had a great 2019 and an even better 2020.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Monday, December 23, 2019
Sunday, December 22, 2019
Saturday, December 21, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Partial Bootstrap for a SaaS Startup
Ask HN: Partial Bootstrap for a SaaS Startup
3 by mozey | 5 comments on Hacker News.
I'm an average full stack developer working freelance. I've got some experience managing myself, and mentoring other developers, running a business not so much. Currently I have the luxury to spend about a third of my time working on side projects. I would like to try use this time to bootstrap a startup. The focus will be enterprise software for a specific industry, unrelated to my other work. However, I do have some insight, and connections to this industry. I want to manage the project as a single developer and eventually sell subscriptions to SaaS. One model for funding is a single client that pays upfront (at discounted rate), with the understanding that it's my product, and I'll eventually on-sell it. This is not practical in the industry I want to focus on. My product should be impartial, not associated with a single player. An idea only will be too hard a sell, I'll need a MVP to generate some interest. Another approach is to pay for the project with my time, maybe also spend some savings paying contractors. I'll be invoicing myself for developer time. It occurred to me that I can give people the opportunity to buy in by paying a part of the cost. Maybe even pay for specific features. As incentive, rather than shares in a business, I would offer future profit sharing. Investors can buy in at any time and pay as much or as little as they want. The profit share is determined by the fraction of dev time that you've contributed, or paid for in cash. Does this make sense, am I using the right terminology? Am I just describing a specific type of share ownership in different words? Anyone tried this before, any tips or recommendations on how to structure such an agreement? Tbh, I imagine the subscriptions only making a modest amount of profit if the project is successful. I'm fairly confident the bootstrap cost can be kept to a minimum. If costs start spiraling, or subscriptions just don't sell I want to walk away and continue doing contract work.
3 by mozey | 5 comments on Hacker News.
I'm an average full stack developer working freelance. I've got some experience managing myself, and mentoring other developers, running a business not so much. Currently I have the luxury to spend about a third of my time working on side projects. I would like to try use this time to bootstrap a startup. The focus will be enterprise software for a specific industry, unrelated to my other work. However, I do have some insight, and connections to this industry. I want to manage the project as a single developer and eventually sell subscriptions to SaaS. One model for funding is a single client that pays upfront (at discounted rate), with the understanding that it's my product, and I'll eventually on-sell it. This is not practical in the industry I want to focus on. My product should be impartial, not associated with a single player. An idea only will be too hard a sell, I'll need a MVP to generate some interest. Another approach is to pay for the project with my time, maybe also spend some savings paying contractors. I'll be invoicing myself for developer time. It occurred to me that I can give people the opportunity to buy in by paying a part of the cost. Maybe even pay for specific features. As incentive, rather than shares in a business, I would offer future profit sharing. Investors can buy in at any time and pay as much or as little as they want. The profit share is determined by the fraction of dev time that you've contributed, or paid for in cash. Does this make sense, am I using the right terminology? Am I just describing a specific type of share ownership in different words? Anyone tried this before, any tips or recommendations on how to structure such an agreement? Tbh, I imagine the subscriptions only making a modest amount of profit if the project is successful. I'm fairly confident the bootstrap cost can be kept to a minimum. If costs start spiraling, or subscriptions just don't sell I want to walk away and continue doing contract work.
Friday, December 20, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: The INQUIRER reaches end-of-life
The INQUIRER reaches end-of-life
24 by FpUser | 1 comments on Hacker News.
The Inquirer is closing the curtains. This is sad, I loved their style. https://ift.tt/2PVFlgA
24 by FpUser | 1 comments on Hacker News.
The Inquirer is closing the curtains. This is sad, I loved their style. https://ift.tt/2PVFlgA
New top story on Hacker News: Show HN: Unifrost – Stream PubSub Messages to the Browser
Show HN: Unifrost – Stream PubSub Messages to the Browser
4 by rajveermalviya | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by rajveermalviya | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Thursday, December 19, 2019
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: How Can I Learn Music Theory
Ask HN: How Can I Learn Music Theory
15 by deanstag | 3 comments on Hacker News.
I self taught myself a few things over the years and I can play my way through a lot of songs. But I'd like to dig deeper into music theory and have never been able to sift through a vast array of music theory blogs and tutorials to find something that made sense. I want a different perspective from the HN crowd. How did you teach yourself music theory?
15 by deanstag | 3 comments on Hacker News.
I self taught myself a few things over the years and I can play my way through a lot of songs. But I'd like to dig deeper into music theory and have never been able to sift through a vast array of music theory blogs and tutorials to find something that made sense. I want a different perspective from the HN crowd. How did you teach yourself music theory?
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Monday, December 16, 2019
Sunday, December 15, 2019
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