Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | simianstyle's commentslogin

One of the only 2 web apps, and only Y-Combinator based app, that I pay for. Great work guys.


is it a web app?


It is and it isn't - you can use either the desktop client or web app by themselves, or use them together.


What other app do you pay for?


Get outside of your comfort zone and experiment with things that would otherwise seem 'ugly' to you.


I just use digital color meter (mac) or colorpix (windows) instead of colorpix. Less browser overhead :-)


Whenever I smoke marijuana I just want to eat and watch movies. So even though it's impossible to measure, for me it has an absolute negative effect in terms of coder productivity.


Maybe that's just the way you grew used to smoking, just sit down and relax. If you try doing other activities while high you'll probably see some interesting results.


Invest in a favicon :-)


Turn the Y upside down, presto!


Each to one's own - it's not like CSS isn't publicly accessible by anybody.


Beatport is mostly an outlet for electronic music, thus satisfying a particular niche. I'm not saying it's a bad thing, as I've bought music from Beatport before, however I think it's a bit harder in the general sense to sell music online.


jhhkhloo


Doesn't bug #4 eliminate supposed bugs #2 and #3? The intent for the author of the code would have produced bugs #2 & #3, however since that isn't the case, there are only really 3 bugs.

Either way, this rant doesn't really offer any insight on the programs context, and what the author should have done. Nothing to learn here folks.

PS - Can we stop using "epic fail" and other internet-fanboy like colloquialisms in our titles please?


Can we stop using "epic fail" and other internet-fanboy like colloquialisms in our titles please?

It's not our title. That is the title of the post. So for example, if Joel's next article is entitled "The Cat Pictures Were an Epic Win For Suzie's New Startup", then that's a completely valid HN submission title.


Of course, in this case, the author of the post was also the submitter, so it truly was his title, but in general, sure.


Ah, gotcha.

... But it really was epic just how horribly that line of code failed, though. 5 bugs in just 48 characters; or 1 bug every 9.6 chars. The rest of the system was probably equally epic.


May I suggest that _epic_ is not synonymous with _severe_. Epic suggests scale in both time and place. To me, an epic bug would affect a large number of people over a very long period of time. Perhaps something to do with IE security would be epic by virtue of its world-wide and decade-long impact.

On a smaller scale, epic might describe something that brings an entire company down, perhaps (if you believe some of the rants) the decision to rewrite the Netscape browser from the ground up.

JM2C on "epic"...


Since your reply may possibly reshape the way in which "epic" is used on the internet, affecting a large number of people over a long period of time, would you consider it to be an "epic reply"? And if so, does that imply we're currently in an "epic debate"?


That the line has a bug where it doesn't do what the programmer (apparently) intended yet correcting it so it does would cause two other bugs to appear, makes it worse not better, I think.

Also the rant does say what the program should do - if it can't write to the folder, raise an exception and alert the user.

Also, whether there is something to learn depends on who you are and what you know, it's not an objective property of the information you're looking at.

PS - "epic fail" is very descriptive and fear-of-being-called-a-fanboy-peer-pressure shouldn't be what stops you from using it.


This may sound a bit shallow, but the only thing that's ever worked for me is I always ask myself the question: "What is the next step that I can do right now to make me the wealthiest man on this planet?"

This usually leads me down a path of questions that result in me having to teach myself something to build something to solve a particular problem which fulfills a need. I know that this may seem vague, but try it in your own context of life and see what answers it yields you.


"This usually leads me down a path of questions that result in me having to teach myself something to build something to solve a particular problem which fulfills a need." - but better make a quick post to hacker news first.


Did it work for you?


I guess not, unless he is Warren Buffett


lol @ div#prophylactic


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: