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jamesog commented on If you're remote, ramble   stephango.com/ramblings... · Posted by u/lawgimenez
majke · 22 days ago
Let me share a personal story. Back in 2014 when I was working at Cloudflare on DDoS mitigation I collaborated a lot with a collage - James (Jog). I asked him loads of questions, from "how to login to a server", via "what is anycast" to "tell me how you mitigated this one, give me precise instructions you've run".

I quickly realised that these conversations had value outside the two of us - pretty much everyone else onboarded had similar questions. Some subjects were about pure onboarding friction, some were about workflows most folks didn't know existed, some were about theoretical concepts.

So I moved the questions to a public (within company) channel, and called it "Marek's Bitching" - because this is what it was. Pretty much me complaining and moaning and asking annoying questions. I invited more London folks (Zygis), and before I knew half of the company joined it.

It had tremendous value. It captured all the things that didn't have real place in the other places in the company, from technical novelties, through discussions that were escaping structure - we suspected intel firmware bugs, but that was outside of any specific team at the time.

Then the channel was renamed to something more palatable - "Marek's technical corner" and it had a clear place in the technical company culture for more than a decade.

So yes, it's important to have a place to ramble, and it's important to have "your own channel" where folks have less friction and stigma to ask stupid questions and complain. Personal channels might be overkill, but a per-team or per-location "rambling/bitching" channel is a good idea.

jamesog · 21 days ago
> I collaborated a lot with a collage - James (Jog). I asked him loads of questions, from "how to login to a server", via "what is anycast" to "tell me how you mitigated this one, give me precise instructions you've run".

Hi, that's me! There were definitely a lot of fun conversations.

I liked that a culture of internal blogs became a thing too. It was good to see people brain dumping their experiments and findings. I think people learnt a lot from following all the internal blogs.

jamesog commented on Murderbot, she wrote   wired.com/story/murderbot... · Posted by u/lastdong
georgeecollins · 9 months ago
Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky is also very good imo.
jamesog · 9 months ago
Children of Time needs to come with a huge content warning for those with arachnophobia. I got through it, but I didn't enjoy it, for that reason.
jamesog commented on Cloudflare.com's Robots.txt   cloudflare.com/robots.txt... · Posted by u/sans_souse
jsheard · 9 months ago
This is what happens if your robot isn't nice

  > curl -I -H "User-Agent: Googlebot" https://www.cloudflare.com
  HTTP/2 403

jamesog · 9 months ago
That's not from robots.txt, but their Bot Management feature which blocks things calling themselves Googlebot that don't come from known Google IPs.
jamesog commented on Origin of 'Daemon' in Computing   takeourword.com/TOW146/pa... · Posted by u/wizerno
bbor · 10 months ago
Fascinating! This is why I stick with nice, clean structural linguistics, this applied stuff gets sticky. I just confirmed on Youtube that the (some?) British people do indeed pronounce "Aesthetic" as "ah-stet-ic" not "ee-stet-ic", and upon diving a bit, it seems that the rule is "don't ask for a rule, you fool! It's 'e' now except for when it isn't." Thanks for the interesting tidbit!

  The letter æ was used in Old English to represent the vowel that's pronounced in Modern English ash, fan, happy, and last: /æ/. Mostly we now spell that vowel with the letter a, because of the Great Vowel Shift.
  When æ appears in writing Modern English, it's meant to be a typographic variant of ae, and is pronounced the same as that sequence of vowel letters would be. So Encyclopaedia or Encyclopædia, no difference.
https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/70927/how-is-%C3...

Highly recommend the protracted arguments in the comments, that's a wonderfully pedantic StackExchange. Big shoutout to someone in 2012 defining "NLP" as an unusual word -- how the world has changed! It's only a matter of time before they open an AP/IB course in NLP...

jamesog · 10 months ago
"Aesthetic" gets even stickier! In the UK I tend to more commonly hear it pronounced as "es-thetic".

The Great Vowel Shift indeed makes written English much more confusing than it perhaps should be. English is already a messy hodge-podge of a language, then our writing system started to get standardised (or standardized, if you're American!) right as pronunciation started to change, leading to the written version of words suddenly no longer being anything like the pronunciation.

jamesog commented on Origin of 'Daemon' in Computing   takeourword.com/TOW146/pa... · Posted by u/wizerno
lagniappe · 10 months ago
because it's spelled encyclopedia
jamesog · 10 months ago
US English spells it as encyclopedia, British English spells it as encyclopaedia.
jamesog commented on Origin of 'Daemon' in Computing   takeourword.com/TOW146/pa... · Posted by u/wizerno
twobitshifter · 10 months ago
Do you pronounce it as demon or like Matt Damon?
jamesog · 10 months ago
It should more properly be written as dæmon. The æ ("ash") character is usually pronounced more like "ee", as in encyclopædia. I've never heard anyone say "encycloPAYdia" :-)
jamesog commented on Ask HN: What happens to ".io" TLD after UK gives back the Chagos Islands?    · Posted by u/MrsPeaches
ethbr1 · a year ago
.im
jamesog · a year ago
The Isle of Man isn't part of the UK, but rather a Crown Dependency, as are Jersey (.je) and Guernsey (.gg): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_Dependencies

u/jamesog

KarmaCake day483May 27, 2013View Original