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8 votes
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Like a Dragon: Yakuza live-action series announced for Amazon Prime Video this October
12 votes -
Stockholm is in a race to fix its traffic congestion – but will this $4bn super-deep road tunnel under the Swedish capital work
6 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
22 votes -
The Cleverlys - Walk Like an Egyptian (The Bangles bluegrass/country cover, 2020)
8 votes -
Mike Tyson in 2:00.00 (World Record)
19 votes -
The race for next generation bombers - Stealth, drones and the B-21, H-20 & PAK DA programs
15 votes -
Nvidia’s project G-Assist - AI game assistant
8 votes -
Cloudflare uses deceptive business practices to bully customers into unnecessary enterprise plans
18 votes -
It's weirder than I thought. How cicadas make noise (in ultra slow motion).
21 votes -
The real trap of consumerism
13 votes -
Game simulation programming: Continuous time
7 votes -
Eminem - Houdini (2024)
21 votes -
Seven things killing movie theaters (and how to save them)
13 votes -
Priest – Demon's Call (2024)
3 votes -
How reality cop shows make us less safe
12 votes -
The Philharmonik, 2024 Tiny Desk Contest winner: Tiny Desk Concert
6 votes -
Why 3D printing buildings leads to problems
3 votes -
The Goya paintings you aren't supposed to look at
11 votes -
The Washington Ballet's hardest dance moves
7 votes -
Ira Moon – Sleeper (2024)
2 votes -
Being a hater and the overexposure paradigm
5 votes -
Astrid S – First To Go (2024)
2 votes -
Magdalena Bay - Death & Romance (2024)
6 votes -
Miike Snow – I Was A Sailor (2024)
7 votes -
The oldest art in Greece is not what you think
5 votes -
Twenty minutes of good news around the globe
15 votes -
Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse: Moscow Tools (full special)
13 votes -
Advice on sharpening skills for career pivot
After spending a couple years in management I want to get back into more individual contributor roles. It's where I can apply the skills I actually enjoy. Preferably I'd work as a dev or data...
After spending a couple years in management I want to get back into more individual contributor roles. It's where I can apply the skills I actually enjoy. Preferably I'd work as a dev or data scientist, but what I want is to spend time solving technical/mathematical problems and less herding cats and politicking.
EDIT: US with ability to relocate; willing to take a paycut.
Background
- About 9 years as lead dev in a start up (2004-2013). It was the golden era of 2005 when we started and I got the role strictly on skills I developed as a teenager. The start up failed shortly after I left but an associated passion project has lived on. In this role I built video streaming software client side, server side, web apps, and iOS apps. I used C#, javascript/node, mongodb, redis, SQL, PHP, objective-c, and C++ as well as functioning as sys admin and webmaster. Pretty much solo dev except for a contractor or intern occasionally.
- Went back to school (homeschooled, no high school so I needed some pieces of paper), BS-MS-PHD, in mathematics (number theory) and published several papers. One of which launched a bit of a cottage industry for my collaborators. I haven't been involved post graduation but get updates when friends see me cited at conferences, etc. Wrote more domain specific stuff (Python, MAGMA, GAP).
- During my last year of grad school I got very jaded towards the grind I saw before me that more that likely ended with a job at a teaching school making less than I wanted. Pretty much as soon as I made my intentions public covid happened so I was job searching during 2020 while finishing my doctorate.
- Got my break early 2021, an entry level data analyst role for a major corpo. In this role I had a lot of time to just explore data, find patterns, test out some of the ideas friend in topological data analysis were thinking about, tested early ML models. Pretty much strictly Python and SQL. Went to manager in 2022 and then People Analytics Director in 2023.
Current plans:
- Attend more meet ups, there are a couple about an hour south of me. Hoping to build some connections with the local industry.
- Private server and website stood up, plan to host projects etc here for interested parties.
- Runs through exercism.io to refresh on some stuff.
- Find some open source projects to contribute on? There is also a local group of indie game devs, perhaps offer my services where possible.
So my question to you all is how would you go about sharpening skills and building up a portfolio?
11 votes -
What video games have had you taking real-life notes?
What are some games that have inspired you to break out a real pen(cil) and paper? How do you feel about games that implicitly or explicitly want you to take notes? Do you have any recommended...
What are some games that have inspired you to break out a real pen(cil) and paper?
How do you feel about games that implicitly or explicitly want you to take notes?
Do you have any recommended “note”-worthy games?
51 votes -
AI can ruin movies now, too - Aliens and True Lies on 4k
15 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
23 votes -
If you had US$50K and had to purchase a classic car, sports car, and daily driver for your budget dream garage, what vehicles would you pick?
I saw a video by Throttle House with this premise and thought it was a fun one. What three cars or trucks would you want in your budget garage? Let's assume that you can only buy vehicles legal in...
I saw a video by Throttle House with this premise and thought it was a fun one. What three cars or trucks would you want in your budget garage?
Let's assume that you can only buy vehicles legal in your country, but that there are no costs for importing. For instance, it might be illegal to import or drive a car with the steering on the opposite side as normal, so that's out. But you can import a legal car for no additional cost. Prices are today's prices, but if your prices are not in US$ then don't feel obligated to be exact down to the dollar/euro/CHF since exchange rates fluctuate. And to keep things easy, there is no VAT/sales tax.
If you'd prefer to spec out a wishlist for a country you'd like to live in (like Japan or Germany) you may do that instead, but same import rules apply. :)
For instance, my garage might look like:
Daily Driver: Subaru Outback 3.6R (2014) - $17,500 ... I'm not too familiar with the pros and cons of this spec, but this seems like a decent fit for commuting needs, unless I should look at a newer car with a lower trim?
Sports Car: Mazda RX-8 40th Anniv. (2008) - $13,000
Classic Car: Chevy Corvette (1969) - $17,500 ... I'd prefer pop-up headlights, but it says it has under 6K original miles???
Total: ~$48,000
18 votes -
Apple's never-released iPod Tetris game discovered on third-generation prototype
9 votes -
Russia's Kharkiv offensive and leadership purge - Sergej Shoigu's removal, Kharkiv and what next for Ukraine?
13 votes -
Harry Mack freestyles for Will Smith and Martin Lawrence for Bad Boys: Ride or Die
5 votes -
Eastern Air Lines | Bankrupt
4 votes -
Why is there a tiny bit of Italy inside Switzerland?
9 votes -
Potentially world's hardest trad route - Bon Voyage E12 (9a)
3 votes -
Randy Travis sings again, courtesy of AI
9 votes -
Kerbal Space Program 2 development history
20 votes -
"Recommend a nonfiction book" - Book reviews
A couple months ago I made this post asking for nonfiction books to read. I read several recs from there, here are my reviews! Kingbird Highway: The Story of a Natural Obsession That Got a Little...
A couple months ago I made this post asking for nonfiction books to read. I read several recs from there, here are my reviews!
Kingbird Highway: The Story of a Natural Obsession That Got a Little Out of Hand - what a fun book! I read mostly spec fic and this felt a lot like an epic quest story. It was also interesting (and sad) to see the background effects of climate change with birds constantly moving farther northward. Recommended if you want some light reading and to get extremely excited about birds, vicariously
The Ascent of Money - A really interesting history text that also explains a lot of financial market concepts. The author is center-right and I disagree with some of his opinions on particular developments being good or bad, but there's a ton of information here and I think it's a great book to have better financial literacy, but I'd still categorize it as "satisfying curiosity" and not "everyone should read this."
The Perfectionists - A bit disappointing tbh, it started out strong but then it started being a bit esoteric in what it covered. I watched Longitude after it was mentioned here, and discovering that movie was the best part of this book so I recommend watching that and maybe not reading this.
Sleepwalkers: How Europe went to war in 1914 - My favorite recommendation from the post! It's very long and a bit dense, and there's no way I would've gotten through it if I hadn't been both reading a physical copy & listening to the audiobook at the same time. There are too many names to do just audiobook, but having both was a great experience. I wrote some notes about this to hopefully make your life easier if you read this too, and you should, I highly recommend it!!!
I also read a couple books recommended by HN in various threads:
- The War That Killed Achilles: The True Story of Homer's Iliad and the Trojan War - tbh I have no interest in reading The Iliad itself, but this is a fantastic secondary source and I'm glad to feel somewhat familiar with the text after reading it
- Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Character - another secondary source about the Iliad, although this one is a bit more distant from the text. Enjoyed quite a bit & it's very interesting, but it's emotionally difficult to get through.
- Two Wheels Good: THe History and Mystery of the Bicycle - this was not fantastic and had maybe two chapters total that were actually the history of the bicycle, the rest was "random anecdotes from my life or vaguely-bicycle-related topics that I personally find interesting." Some sections were interesting, mostly I felt lied to by the title.
- The Trouble with Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science and What Comes Next - I had read The Elegant Universe in high school, and this book is in some part a response to that one. I found The Trouble with Physics a weird compromise between not being too technical but still providing detail about the state of the field of physics, and it didn't work for me too well, but I was a math major and took several physics courses in undergrad so maybe that's just how it is to read a popular science book in a field you have some background in. I didn't necessarily want equations, but some actual math terms would've been nice instead of just saying "haha it has nice math properties." Anyway, if you're interested in the state of the field of modern physics it's maybe worth reading but also you could just watch this YT video instead which my friend linked to me after I told him I was reading this.
- Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology - this was the book that actually inspired me to make the post here, everyone should read this. Semiconductor manufacturing is one of the most important supply chains in the world today, and I didn't know anything about it prior to reading this book.
19 votes -
This American Civil War submarine vanished for 136 years
3 votes -
Rabbit gaslit me, so I dug deeper
33 votes -
I made the world's blackest flipbook
11 votes -
The Canterbury Tales, or, how technology changes the way we speak
14 votes -
Inside the peculiar world of Farming Simulator eSports
27 votes -
Logan the Wolf: A Wolverine fan film
7 votes -
Linn Koch-Emmery – Borderline Iconic (2024)
3 votes -
California High-Speed Rail Spring 2024 construction progress report: Trainsets, construction, stations, and more
6 votes