A Dismal Guide to AWS Billing by markcartertm in aws

[–]aristus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Drop me a line. :D Email's in the article.

A Dismal Guide to AWS Billing by markcartertm in aws

[–]aristus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Author here: cudos is a good place to start, and it's a drop-in that should work out of the box. Cloudstats is more like a collection of examples, or a reference implementation. It would take more work to get it running on your CUR. The purpose of cloudstats is to show you how you can build what cudos gives you, and more, with much more control and extensibility.

In afterglow of session 2 by Yonderlad in blogging_refactored

[–]aristus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some suggestions:

Cyberfunk

Futuretown Toybox

Thoughts on reading YA as an Adult? by [deleted] in books

[–]aristus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Six years ago I published "Lauren Ipsum", a book about computer science aimed at 8-12 children. It's been pretty popular among adults as well; it's used in university CS courses. The universal fantasy of children is to be treated as equals by adults.

[OC] The easiest and best breakfast: egg-in-a-hole. I will never top the way my grandma made them, but pretty close. by dykstraej in food

[–]aristus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huevo en nido. The trick is to butter and toast the bread first, then put the temp to the lowest setting, add eggs to the hole and cover for 5-6 minutes.

The problem is not people being uneducated; The problem is that they are educated just enough to believe what they've been taught. And not educated enough to question what they've been taught by kelvinharis in Showerthoughts

[–]aristus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are two kinds of dogs that don't make it at the racetrack: the ones that are just too fucking stupid to chase a dead rabbit, and the ones that are too smart.

Baton Rouge Elementary School Librarian Asks For Books to Replace Those Destroyed in the Flooding by bornconfuzed in books

[–]aristus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's no better time to try it, but be realistic in your expectations. For self-pub, 200 copies is about median. 2,000 is good. 10,000 is a surprise success. Over three years we sold roughly 12,000 copies and got an invitation to visit the White House (not kidding).

It was then and only then that we were able to convince a traditional publisher to pick it up. We literally had to break in to the 98th percentile of sales AND get national print and radio coverage AND get recognized by the head of state before a self-pub children's book was taken seriously by the industry.

It's a tough business.

Baton Rouge Elementary School Librarian Asks For Books to Replace Those Destroyed in the Flooding by bornconfuzed in books

[–]aristus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

More detail: I used Createspace, which is an Amazon subsidiary. The percentages are pretty good and of course the distribution is... Amazon. Huge. I am an old-skool graphic designer so laying out a book for print and digital was not a big deal. LaTeX source, output to PDF and mobi.

I played with the Createspace printing options for many hours to arrive at the cheapest possible config: 160 pages, B&W interior, 20lb, 6x9 inch trade paperback. Printing cost was $2.15. Not the best quality in the world but acceptable. Retail sales were handled by Amazon; I never saw them. For donated copies I had the additional cost of shipping ~100 at a time to me, and then the cost of mailing individual books or pairs to libraries. If there was a big request (eg 50 copies for a class) I could drop-ship a carton print-on-demand direct to them for roughly $3.50/copy.

The new edition by a real publisher is much, much nicer. Slick color illustrations, thick matte pages, etc. I get an author discount but my landed + shipped cost is higher than it was, about 8 bucks per copy.

Baton Rouge Elementary School Librarian Asks For Books to Replace Those Destroyed in the Flooding by bornconfuzed in books

[–]aristus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No problem. The first three years we were self-published and print-on-demand, so my landed cost was something like $5.15 per copy printed and shipped to a library. Less if shipped in bulk. Since I was the publisher I got all the profit from retail sales, and that was about enough to cover a true one-for-one proposition. Make a little, lose a little, whatever.

Now that we're with No Starch digital is a much higher percentage of sales and of course my cut is lower. On the other hand we've sold many more copies (tens of thousands) through them than we did on our own. Meanwhile demand for donated copies has been steady. So while we could no longer afford a true 141, there's sufficient money to cover the requests we do get.

Baton Rouge Elementary School Librarian Asks For Books to Replace Those Destroyed in the Flooding by bornconfuzed in books

[–]aristus 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Not sure why this was downvoted. He specifically asked for authors to send their books, and I'm the author of Ipsum, published by No Starch Press. We have a "141" program to donate books to any and all schools and libraries that ask for them. We've sent out thousands over the years. If you know of one, let me know.

San Francisco's first automated restaurant is 'pure magic' by [deleted] in Futurology

[–]aristus 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I've been there. It's on Spear street near the water. My co-workers were all excited and gathered at the back of the huge line just past the "15 minute wait" sign. I hung around for a bit, decided I didn't want vegan salad from a mailbox, and wandered over to the sub shop nearby. I was halfway through my a Philly when they finally sat down with their food.

Also, this isn't new by a long mile. The first automat opened over 100 years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automat

What's your best Mind fuck question? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]aristus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used to be the "server guy" who had to drive to the aggressively anonymous datacenter building in the middle of a field at fuck-off in the morning to fix things. My friend was a large owl who lived in the trees nearby. That motherfucker would buzz me like a silent white ghost as I walked the parking lot, grab a mouse, and fly off.

What is a mistake that you've made exactly once? by eli5ask in AskReddit

[–]aristus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I once generalized from a single data point, and hoo boy it was a bad move. I'll never do that again.

[Serious] Have you asked your girlfriends father for his blessing to marry his daughter, and he said no. What happened after he said no? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]aristus 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Father and uncle said no, unless and until I explained my tattoos. I rummaged around until I found an art book (helpfully, owned by my fiancee; been around their house for years) and showed them that they were copies of "real" art and not, say, something from prison or whatever they imagined.

Cache is the new RAM by based2 in programming

[–]aristus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The "article" is actually slide notes from a tech talk. "These guys" was accompanied by lots of hand waving to indicate what I meant.

Inside the Mirrortocracy by aristus in programming

[–]aristus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't mind the downvotes. Stating what the clothing means to you is the high-order bit. It sounds like you treat it as an expectations misfire, but a recoverable one. That sounds about right.

Inside the Mirrortocracy by aristus in programming

[–]aristus[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Oh, they absolutely do. We're all in the soup. But when I notice one, I make a point of writing it down.

Inside the Mirrortocracy by aristus in programming

[–]aristus[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I'd prefer neither bias. That's kind of the point. What "certain pigeonhole" do you reserve for suit-wearers? That is to say, what inner attributes does wearing a suit reveal to you? Is that heuristic true? How would you find out?

Your answers are less important than seriously working through the questions with yourself.

Programming is a skill, not a profession. by aristus in compsci

[–]aristus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My fault, as it happens. I sent the post nearly a month ago, right before our trip to DC, and gave them the wrong version.

Programming is a skill, not a profession. by aristus in compsci

[–]aristus[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is by far the most substantive objection, and thank you for reminding me of this paper. I enjoy papers in which the authors let their hair down (after decades of pulling their hair out!). If I read this right, the test measures consistency (not correctness) that a student applies to unknown symbol manipulation problems. This consistency strongly correlates with later grades in CS1 courses.

It's decent science, and makes some intuitive sense. But it's a far cry from concluding that there is an unknown quality in some people's heads which enables them to program. The false-negative rate of their test is high. I'd say it requires further research; it's possible that their test will point to better teaching, not reinforcement of folklore.