I help early stage startups deliver on their technical milestones with progressive development and solid communication/project management. I'm an FP-oriented JavaScript developer with direct influences from Scala, Haskell, and Clojure. My passions lay in the lower-end of the spectrum, with particular emphasis on microservices, stream processing, machine learning, natural language processing, and expert systems. I'm also a data science practitioner with a heavy background in both frequentist and bayesian statistics. Currently focusing on freelancing with React/React-Native/Flux-like frameworks to develop unified web, iOS, and desktop experiences.
OVH, SoYouStart, and KimSufi with Dokku Alt (for quick apps) or custom Ansible/Docker deployments (for big apps). Since OVH created their North American DC I took the leap and have been very very happy. Knowing just how cheap the hardware/ops game is, I just can't bring myself to spend anything more than what these guys do:
- $115/mn for a 64GB ECC, 3x Intel SSD, Xeon E51620v2, 500Mbps, etc
- $50/mn for a 32GB ECC, Intel Xeon W3520, 4TB SATA
- $15/mn for a 4GB RAM, Atom N2800, 1TB HDD
I scale differently as a result; huge gobs of RAM/SSD/CPU is easily within reach. For instance, I can use Redis Cluster as a primary data store with then op/s an order of magnitude higher than most might be used to.
- From the creators of this site and its previous version
- After being compared to Duke Nukem Forever
- "I’ve never agreed to having my face used on the itemz website"
- "There are millions of task management apps. Creating another one is just stupid."
- "I don’t use this app and I‘m not planning to start"
Despite OP saying otherwise in this thread, this has to be a joke.. right? Every page/video seems to have things like this. OP, if you are serious get a native english speaker (you said you weren't one) to go through the site.
It is a joke but this part was indeed checked by a native speaker...
Anyway, thanks a lot for your comment, we'll run a doulbe-check on the testimonials:)
Having done much with districts in the past, I observed the same push to collect data and then make use of it in the classroom and at the district level. In the districts I encountered, there was plenty of data collection and there were even some basic reports each system might provide, but beyond that, very little thought went into `what to do with this data to turn it into actionable knowledge`. Districts would blindly throw hundreds of thousands of dollars at the problem of data collection with very little, and often none, at the actual analysis portion of the problem.
Districts often face even more fundamental problems, such as each software system being a silo to it's own data and being very hard to cross reference with other systems. SISes, LMSes, HR, and dozens of smaller systems existing in their own world. Many questions one might want to pose needs data from two or three of these. So, questions like `is Steve a much more pronounced risk of dropping out of high school` are hard/impossible to ask (depends on the software systems and data collection practices).
- 4 to 6 hours of dedicated/uninterrupted work per day
- 6 to 7 days per week
- Wake early, say 05:30, and start work right off the bat
I looked at my own GitHub work history to see when I was most productive and also read a book about how many of the most profound creatives worked in their own lives. Both suggested such a structure and it allows/addresses many of your concerns (i.e. I also have a child, need to do chores, don't want to count hours but productivity, etc). The thought being many work best early in the day, you only have so many hours in a day you can focus on hard problems without wasting time, and consistency is a virtue.
Docker ID: rockymadden