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I maintain my own set of modern internet acronyms for it. Speaking of which, I need to merge a pull request for that.


There was a super helpful Internet jargon list maintained by one of the 3-letter federal agencies, obtained through an FOIA request I believe... I used to refer to it whenever I needed to decipher confusing twitter conversations.



I would love to merge that into Arch's wtf, but it is just a collection of scanned images. No text.


https://archive.org/stream/FBIGuideToInternetSlang/Internet%... has OCR-ed text, but the quality is poor.

https://github.com/matthewspencer/twitter-shorthand has transcription of the first 22 pages.


Are you talking about the Jargon File by any chance.

http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/index.html


The Jargon File is maintained by esr, which is 3 letters, but I don't think he's a federal agency. ;-)


We can neither confirm nor deny that he's a federal agency.


For a modern *nix equivalent of DESQview take a look at Twin: https://github.com/cosmos72/twin/


Nice. I'll probably stick with tmux+byobu, but I'll have a play with that the sake of play at least! Thanks for the link.


I've been doing that for years: http://kmkeen.com/c100p-tweaks/

Development doesn't require any more CPU than word processing. You're type stuff up, and there is a pretty strict grammar check. I don't get why people why people want to run huge things on a laptop. It is way more economical to shell into a beefy server when you need big iron instead of carrying it with you.


Some people still write code that is compiled.


And the people who do that tend to use super bloated Dev environments.


I've had the opposite experience so far. Eclipse IDE that uses 1GB+ of RAM? Compiles java code to bytecode instantly everytime you save. Sublime Text + gcc for a C++ project? Well, you have to live with the fact that sometimes a rebuild is going to take more than 5 minutes.

In other words it has nothing to do with how bloated the dev environment is and more with the fact that some programming languages have features that can cause excessive build time.


> super bloated dev environments

Care to give some examples of this? I've been using compiled languages for a while now and I've never felt my environment had been "bloated".


That's a pretty massive assumption.


and even if you don't, using a slow machine is still not a great experience.

Opening a shell, reloading a page, switching tabs, running git pull, decompressing an archive, linting, building etc.

All these things will take noticably longer to the point of being frustrating on a low-end machine.


I'm one of those people.


> Development doesn't require any more CPU than word processing

Please tell that to my local k8s cluster.


And how much horsepower do you need to shell into that cluster?


I'm not totally sure how to answer the question you're asking. The local dev cycle is much faster than deploying and running remotely.

Locally the cluster runs two main projects, both systems that handle user-defined tasks. One is a Kafka-based clickstream event processor, the other is an Airflow-based workflow ETL system built on Celery. Exact resource requirements depend on the requirements of the task of the moment and how fast you want it to run. Of course there is the related tooling and services as well such as ZooKeeper, Celery, Redis, Postgres, Grafana, Prometheus, etc.

I haven't tried this on a tmux type setup on a remote box for my "local" dev before. The cost to run it on a cloud deploy is non-trivial.


> not possible to make today with with unlimited budgets

The Lofstrom Loop is possible today for a few billion dollars. Though "catching" an incoming capsule with a Loop is going to take a while to human-certify.


What is a few? That is the in the range of infrastructure projects for many nations. China could create it for example.


On the other hand... if you wanted to quickly identify incompetent individuals, give them rope and let them cause damage.


Ignoring the BS about coriolis, I think there is something legit here.

Of course there isn't any power to be gained from the vortex. What you would gain is a lot of RPMs from very little head. It makes the system be high speed and low torque. The dynamos would be higher voltage (lower amperage), the wiring and inverters are cheaper with lower amperage, and the structure doesn't have to be as strong since the torques are lower. It might even automatically safe during floods, since too much water entering it would distrupt the vortex and halt the wheel.

It is more like a clever hydraulic gearbox that potentially makes all the other components less expensive. Or am I completely off base? The water is spinning around faster than it would be flowing out, correct?


This other company[1] built a prototype of a low-cost vortex in Chile, and claims it produces 15Kw consistently with a drop of 2-3m. If true that's fantastic. As suggested in their video, they could could build several of those in a row because they don't need a massive reservoir.

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gY3p2e1-kN4


Actually I think it is the opposite. This is very low speed at 10-20 rpm. A non-vortex hydro plant runs way faster with 1-2 meters of head, some fast enough that a high-pole-count generator can be directly driven.


What is the net weight of a package? (And why isn't it on the packaging?)


It is on the actual packaging. But, it's not on the photo of the packaging on our website because we used one photo and then you can select whatever size you want. All the packages look exactly the same except the variation in size. We need to update the photos. There are 1oz, 2oz, 4oz and 8oz loose leaf. The tea bags are 20 tea bags and it's 1oz of yaupon.


A simpler way of achieving the same thing is to duplicate the layer, blur the top layer heavily, and then set it to "divide".


interesting trick, thanks for sharing ! [edit] Quick test here : https://imgur.com/a/6xOz1


I think that test illustrates it'll take quite a lot more to achieve what the tool in the article did...


Really? Do you care to explain? What is the dividend and what is the divisor? Why can dividing a image by its low pass filtered version (or vice versa) be used to "clean up" the image, i.e. subtract the background, find main colors and cluster similar colors with k-means? What if the divisor has pixels near zero?


Areas of low contrast become whiter and areas of high contrast become more saturated.

It is also more robust than k-means. The author's algo will only work on scanned images. Photographed pages from a book will often have a slight shadow on half the page from the curvature. Blur-divide will clean this up. K-means will think you've used a lot of gray and not figure out that there are multiple background colors.


I can confirm that the author's approach doesn't work well for photographed pages. I took a photograph[0] of a page of notes, and due to the shadow, the results[1] were very unsatisfactory.

[0]: https://i.imgur.com/CLZHshT.jpg

[1]: https://i.imgur.com/rrwca0m.jpg


How did we both do this at exactly the same minute? You botched up something with the encoding though.


This is absolutely infuriating to read because they've made it so that items are chosen randomly. Instead they should be using a shuffle. That way you don't have any repeats until you've seen everything, at which point the deck should be reshuffled. As it stands you're basically playing cookie clicker trying to find that last one. So here's the lot of them:

* Create a Crunchbase page

* Share your website on Startupli.st or Erlibird.com

* Share your pre-launched website on Betalist.com

* Respond to unanswered questions in your niche on Quora. Look for questions with a lot of people waiting for an answer.

* Submit a free press release using a service like PRlog

* Message meetup coordinators and ask for speaking gigs at local events

* Film your speaking gigs and share videos of your talks on your blog

* Send personalized E-mails to your existing users, ask for referrals or their help promoting your company

* Create an infographic, share on free distribution sites like Visual.ly and Pinterest.

* Write a post called "Our competitor vs Our Company" - This will attract search engine traffic looking for reviews of your competitor

* Submit a presentation or slidedeck to Slideshare

* Giveaway a free ebook, and let users download it in exchange for their email address

* Write a "how-to" guide on Medium for something that is difficult in your industry

* Promote your product in your email signature

* Sponsor a newsletter on Upstart.me & promote your product to other people's lists

* Submit your product to Producthunt.com

* Create a free online course on a topic related to your product

* Reach out to relevant bloggers and ask to write a guest post on their blog (don't forget to include a link to your project)

* Update your Linkedin status and link back to your website

* Grow your social media follower base by following the followers of your competitors

* Create relevant Youtube videos and add relevant keywords in the title and description

* Run Facebook Ads

* Run Google Ads

* Run Twitter Ads

* Run Linkedin Ads

* Subscribe to Helpareporter.com and provide quotes to journalists

* Reach out to podcasts to get interviewed

* Start your own podcast

* Let your first 100 users pay with a tweet, to sign up in exchange for a share

* Create a Facebook page

* Make your UI remarkable and shareworthy

* Run Stumbleupon ads

* Get an Instagram influencer in your niche to promote your product

* Get a Youtube influencer in your niche to promote your product

* Get a popular Facebook page in your niche to promote your product

* Add screenshots of your product to a Pinterest board

* Create a profile on Angel.co

* Ask your friends to share it with their friends

* Sponsor a hackathon

* Sponsor an event by offering a service (instead of money) in exchange for promoting your product

* Go live on Periscope and talk about your product

* Engage in online forums where your target audience is hanging out

* Write on-topic comments on Reddit.com where your product seems to be a solution to the discussion

* Start a Facebook group

* Post articles to Reddit.com in relevant subreddits

* Submit your project to ShowHN on Hackernews

* Comment on industry blogs

* Host giveaway contests on social media

* Offer discounts in exchange for sharing your website

* Create a free Slack community for your target audience

* Host a webinar

* Start a daily email newsletter where you link to relevant news that your audience might be interested in

* Giveaway t-shirts with your logo & website on them

* Create different landing pages with different messages, that all link to your main website

* Attend conferences and talk to as many people as you can

* Be the bonus in someone else's product. Let a different company promote you to their audience in exchange for a commission

* Got a beautifully designed product? Apply for design awards.

* Create a course on Udemy.com

* Advertise at conferences


Nicely done, I was thinking you had created your own list, but it's all here. https://tiiiny.com/js/index.js

What about a way to crowdsource this so other people can add their own ideas. That would blow this away.


I find it interesting that their “growth hacking” has pissed someone off enough that they took the time out of their day to give us the content without bullshit :)

Cheers!


It was faster to do this than reading the content the way it was intended. Because they were using random selection you'd have to click 370 times to have a 90% chance of seeing all 59. It is nearly impossible (like 7 nines impossible) to see all of them in under 120 clicks.


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