Yep! C# is on our roadmap, coming up next after we ship support for Ruby. I recently joined the engineering team at Stainless and this was one of the first questions that I asked. I'm a C# enthusiast and worked at Xamarin back in the day, so I'm pretty excited for this feature.
> The Alaska captain said that, as for many things in aviation, pilots routinely use an acronym when they do the pre-takeoff “sanity check”: TLAR, which means “That Looks About Right.”
I found it to be very interesting from a statistical perspective. The language used does feel outdated, but I quite liked having a real world (tongue in cheek) example to make the math relatable.
Removing the genders (perhaps using the second person 'you'), and using 'partner' instead of wife may be the modern way, and would probably be just as relatable and compelling, while also being inclusive.
I'm wondering what negative effect this article could have for women in tech though?
My partner, a woman in tech, frequently tells me there is one type of person she feels holds her back professionally. It's the type of person that treats her like she is weak and needs to be coddled and protected from anything that could be perceived as threatening. I certainly don't have any real idea on what effect this article or your comment has, but I do think women are plenty capable of not only handling, but maybe even enjoying this article.
OK, suppose it gets flagged on HN and is removed. The article would still exist on the parent site and would (supposedly) keep harming women in tech. What then? Remove it from search results? Or even better, make it a crime to write wrongthink of this sort?
I believe what you're referring to are the required steps to create a public link to a developer story.
This isn't required in order to appear in search results by recruiters. As long as a user has their job search status set to either "Actively looking right now" or "Open, but not actively looking", they will be included in candidate search.
Would it still be fair to say that Redis typically is used for things like caching, messaging etc (and it's amazing for that), but not as a primary data store? Or did I miss something?