What's also bad about this incident is that it was hidden from the public during a weekend because they were having a Moto GP that weekend and didn't want the publicity.
This is a great article, it got me thinking on better uses of the iPad and the whole setup on a virtual machine using terraform, docker, etc is also a good way of thinking on how to work remotely. Thank you for sharing.
I love this post, I was at Gophercon and met several gophers. This post shows how the Go community is made and how we're going forward. Thank you @codegangasta.
I second this. The people I met at GopherCon were among the top group for any community built around a language.
I spoke at length with someone there about Martini, and had pretty much the same take on it as Jeremy now professes. The stuff he did with the dependency injection was really solid, but as he admits, it is not very idiomatic. I applaud his new effort while maintaining the existing project that so many are using.
Not really, Zendesk has being there since Aug 2011 and the block between 6th and 5th is way better. I walk this block everyday and it changed, for good.
Twitter is between 9th and 10th street, so comparing the changes between 5th/6th isn't really describing what's happening around Twitter. The whole article talks about some transformation that hasn't happened yet. 5th/6th isn't really that safe anyways. Maybe during the day and when work gets out around 5-6PM, but I wouldn't recommend staying out there after 8PM
Well, in Brazil 10 percent is already included in the check, it's "optional" but everybody accepts it. Usually that's not related to good or bad service, it's the common practice. And this money doesn't go to the server but to the 'proprietor'.
That's especially interesting to me, as it's generally considered bad form in the US to tip the proprietor, and even worse form for the proprietor to accept the tip if offered.
I'd say go before it's too late. Being there, done that. After 3 years I realized that the founders wouldn't change their M.O. And that was after writing 3 products, developing the team, deploying the thing. There are plenty of good start-ups to work. Take that lesson as lesson learned and move on.
As I see they are not taking care of their customers. If just have a retention policy of the data after the cancelation, let's say for 3 days, or a week, the problem could have being avoided. Win-win situation.