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3 votes
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How NASA does software testing and QA
9 votes -
Sixteen things that software testers wished they’d learned earlier
5 votes -
Notes on auth token persistence
5 votes -
What should be on a QA tester’s résumé? Here's what the recruiters say they want to see
10 votes -
Coding and Tracing Workflow Remix (feat. Dark)
3 votes -
What happens if (and when) Apple cancels WWDC 2020?
3 votes -
In search of the full stack testing team: What makes the best QA teams so good
4 votes -
Five things QA testers wish programmers understood
6 votes -
I spoke out against sexual harassment at Uber. The aftermath was more terrifying than anything I faced before
16 votes -
Hue Jumper - This entire game fits in a 2048 byte zip file! Made for 2kPlus Jam
19 votes -
From the QA trenches: Five signs of project success or failure
3 votes -
"Herein, a collection of more or less recent, decidedly epic software disasters. May they spark conversation that helps your shop to avoid more of the same."
8 votes -
Lorne Lanning discusses his journey to become a game creator, and how the mind-control mechanic solved Oddworld's narrative problems | War Stories
5 votes -
Cyan Worlds co-founder Rand Miller discusses the challenges of getting Myst to work on CD-ROM | War Stories
5 votes -
So you want to become a software QA professional?
6 votes -
Housemarque's 25th anniversary is this year, and they've put all other projects on hold to focus on finishing an unannounced game they've been working on for three years
4 votes -
A software engineer's advice for saving social media: keep it small
29 votes -
Five reasons why software testing needs humans
6 votes -
Web Developers! What personal projects have you made, and are proud of?
Time for some inspiration. I've been working on a few SaaS applications for the past 2-3 months, and have only really got into it full time recently, and I'm totally in code-mode now, so I thought...
Time for some inspiration. I've been working on a few SaaS applications for the past 2-3 months, and have only really got into it full time recently, and I'm totally in code-mode now, so I thought I'd ask to see what other people have created in either their spare time, or to earn some money.
Link your app/tool/product/service! What tools, frameworks, or services did you build it with? What does it accomplish? How did you express your creativity while working on it? What's next for what you're creating?
14 votes -
Facebook is working on its own OS that could reduce its reliance on Android
7 votes -
How to fight back against Google AMP as a web user and a web developer
28 votes -
Bytecode Alliance: Building a secure by default, composable future for WebAssembly
9 votes -
Surviving Software Dependencies
4 votes -
Robin Sloan: Three things I learned about games while contributing writing to Neo Cab
4 votes -
My thoughts and ideas for Tildes
I have lots of thoughts about Tildes that I end up forgetting. This post is my attempt to put them to good use. Some of those were already stated elsewhere. Introduction Just to make it very...
I have lots of thoughts about Tildes that I end up forgetting. This post is my attempt to put them to good use. Some of those were already stated elsewhere.
Introduction
Just to make it very clear: I am extremely happy with the way things are going on Tildes. If that was not the case, instead of drawing criticism I would simply not be here. So, please, let's be civil and avoid taking things personally ;)
I'm also a regular user, so please be gentle with my ignorance regarding the technical reasons why some things are either impossible or unpractical.
1. An Answer To A Common Objection
Some of these suggestions may encounter the following answer: "this should be an extension, not a core feature". To which I might respond:
- Extensions impact performance and it's good practice to keep them at a minimum
- Not everyone uses the same browser.
- Features implemented by the actual developers will probably be of a better quality
2. Golden Rule
Unless explicit or clearly unpractical, all suggestions should be interpreted as to be as optional (and preferably
opt-in
) as possible for the user. I'll also make frequent use of the imperative mood: please understand that those are still suggestions. The imperative mood is just more practical. Also, notice that this is not my first language.3. Suggestions
3.1 Keyboard Shortcuts
The majority of Tildes users would probably welcome a good set of keyboard shortcuts. I apologize if such keyboard shortcuts already exist: if they do, there should be a page listing them all.
3.1.1 Vim-like and Emacs-like keybindings
There should be Vim-like and Emacs-like (you could choose which one!) keys all around. Even with things like Vimium, not everyone uses them, and a well-thought-out set of keybindings would be extremely beneficial.
This also applies to text fields.
4. Open Calls For Moderators
Right now, I'm not sure what criteria are being used to give someone moderator powers. I think being a developer or contributor is the main criterion, which makes a lot of sense. But other participants might be up to the task, and giving them a chance could be beneficial.
5. Moderation Action Should Always Present Reason
This may seem obvious and even unfair, but I think when a moderator is in no condition to dedicate the time to justify their moderation action (such as locking threads, removing contents or banning users), then the moderator should wait until this condition is met in order to take action.
6. Heated Discussions Should Be Allowed in More Circumstances
I understand Tildes is, and should always be, a place for politeness, even affectionate discussion, but sometimes heated language, including irony and sarcasm, are necessary to stress a point and take the discussion forward. I understand that's a fine line, and that is usually better err on the side of caution, but I also feel the need to caution my fellow Tilders and Tildes administration against excessive moderation, which could stifle the discussion of sensitive subjects
7. There Should Be a Page Explaining How to Collaborate
This page should be short and to the point, with lots of links. I, for instance, wanna collaborate in the documentation, but the information telling how to do so was in a comment I cannot find anymore.
8. Table of Contents
Tildes markdown should support the automated creation of a simple table of contents, which would be very useful for longer posts. Preferably, there should be a limited set of options, such as:
- title of the table of contents ("TOC", "Table of Contents", "Contents" etc)
- numbered vs unnumbered
- depth of the numbering
9. Search own content
I find very hard to search my own content. Sometimes I must reference something I said earlier, or adapt a previous response to a question I already answered. On these occasions, I have to manually
Ctrl+f
page after page of my user page, which is tedious and inefficient.10. Sort my own content
I wish I could sort my own content in the same manner I can with other pages. This would help with item
9
, and also help answer faster to comments that were recently made.11. Notifications
I wish it was possible to
op-in
desktop notifications for Tildes to show me whenever I get an answer to a thread, a comment or a private message.Correction: I'm not referring to Email notifications, but desktop notifications. The ones that appear occasionally on your browser or screen.
12. There Should Be Space for Comedy
I'm not saying Tildes should become a place for lazy memes and endless puns, but comedy is valuable content and I don't like the idea of Tildes being a more conversational version of Stack Overflow. I fully agree with @deimos vision for a website for meaningful interactions with a focus on privacy. I just don't think comedy is necessarily a menace to this and all the other Tildes' stated goals. Right now, we're a very serious bunch of folks. There should be a place for humor in Tildes. How would that work? IDK. I leave this open for discussion.
13. Link to Excerpt
It would be awesome being able to link not just to a particular comment, but to a selection of that particular comment. After linking to the excerpt, I would go to the full comment, but the excerpt would be highlighted.
Conclusion
This is more of a collection of thoughts than an article, therefore I cannot offer a proper conclusion. But I'd like to kindly ask my fellow Tilders to give some considerations to my ideas. And please understand that they are not complaints. It's just may to contribute to this great community.
Cheers ;)
18 votes -
Why is Tildes not on Github?
Let me make a possibly unpleasant question: why is Tildes only on Gitlab? Do you self-host? Is it because of Microsoft? Or idealistic reasons (that I would totally 100% respect)? Github and...
Let me make a possibly unpleasant question: why is Tildes only on Gitlab? Do you self-host? Is it because of Microsoft? Or idealistic reasons (that I would totally 100% respect)?
Github and Microsoft may be "evil", but that's where everybody is. I'm 99% more prone to post an issue on Github than on Gitlab. I know it's "wrong", but that's also true and not just for me. Couldn't Tildes have at least some presence on Github? Is it possible for a mirror to get issues? (I really don't know, honest question). And why not just move to Github, mirror to Gitlab and have some super-reliable backup?
This would give Tildes more exposure (maybe Tildes doesn't want more exposure right now. That's entirely understandable). But Github is where things happen, and I really want Tildes to happen. And, even if Github ever turns evil (or already is), couldn't we just fork/transfer/whatever to someplace else? Or just use the backup? What's the downside?
9 votes -
Red to green: The stark evolution of Christchurch's abandoned acres
12 votes -
Exploring the tech and design of 'Noita'
6 votes -
How scrolling textures gave Super Mario Galaxy 2 its charm
12 votes -
Director's Cut Part 1 - Destiny 2's game director on where the game has been over the last few months and where it's heading next
3 votes -
Dolphin Emulator dev diary: fixing the most curious Wii game
16 votes -
GitHub restricts developer accounts based in Iran, Crimea, and other countries under US sanctions
6 votes -
Deploying containerized Docker instances in production?
Hello! After spending many development hours in my past years running on Virtualbox/Vagrant-style setups, I've decided to take the plunge into learning Docker, and after getting a few containers...
Hello! After spending many development hours in my past years running on Virtualbox/Vagrant-style setups, I've decided to take the plunge into learning Docker, and after getting a few containers working, I'm now looking to figure out how to deploy this to production. I'm not a DevOps or infrastructure guy, my bread and butter is software, and although I've become significantly better at deploying & provisioning Linux VPS's, I'm still not entirely confident in my ability to deploy & manage such systems at scale and in production. But, I am now close to running my own business, so these requirements are suddenly going from "nice to have" to "critical".
As I mentioned, in the past when I've previously developed applications that have been pushed onto the web, I've tended to develop on my local machine, often with no specific configuration environment. If I did use an environment, it'd often be a Vagrant VM instance. From here, I'd push to GitHub, then from my VPS, pull down the changes, run any deployment scripts (recompile, restart nginx, etc), and I'm done.
I guess what I'm after with Docker is something that's more consistent between dev, testing, & prod, and is also more hands off in the deployment process. Yet, what I'm currently developing still does have differing configuration needs between dev and prod. For example, I'd like to use a hosted DB solution such as DigitalOcean Managed Databases in production, yet I'm totally fine using a Docker container for MySQL for local development. Is something like this possible? Does anyone have any recommendations around how to accomplish this, any do's and dont's, or any catches that are worth mentioning?
How about automating deployment from GitHub to production? I've never touched any CI/CD tools in my life, yet I know it's a hugely important part of the process when dealing with software in production, especially software that has clients dependent on it to function. Does anything specifically work well with Docker? Or GitHub? Ideally I want to be avoiding manual processes where I have to ssh in, and pull down the latest changes, half-remembering the commands I need to write to recompile and run the application again.
10 votes -
Former Microsoft software engineer charged with mail fraud for using test Microsoft Store accounts to steal more than $10 million in digital currency
10 votes -
MDN (beta) is now built with React
6 votes -
Microsoft admitted to private Linux developer security list
13 votes -
How To Build An App: Everything You Didn't Know You Needed To Know | Tom Scott
8 votes -
African leaders launch landmark 55-nation trade zone
21 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Sam & Max: Hit the Road
8 votes -
Software Architect as a Developer Pension Plan
11 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Day of the Tentacle
7 votes -
Apple WWDC 2019 livestream
18 votes -
Apple's audacity, and what yesterday's WWDC announcements demonstrate about their future plans
12 votes -
Apple to reveal glimpses of its next era of apps and services at WWDC
7 votes -
Oregon restricts solar development on prime farmland
5 votes -
Why Precompiled Headers do (not) Improve C++ Compile Times
4 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Return to Zork
5 votes -
After the rain: The lasting effects of storms in the Caribbean
3 votes -
Experimental Gameplay Workshop 2019
9 votes