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I remember reading about Birkenstock having the same issue at a much larger scale.


Infinite scroll on a desktop is potentially a bad idea.

Infinite scroll on a mobile device makes perfect sense.


I think that's exactly the other way around. While my desktop has a lot of memory for the large pages, my mobile device has only about 2 gb. Browsing tumblr for example kills my phone's browser if I read more than 10 "pages".

I am also more likely to open tabs on my desktop than on my phone because it's more complicated to switch to the newly opened tab in Chrome.


> I think that's exactly the other way around.

Precisely correct. Like you, on my desktop, I counter the user interface deficiencies of infinite scrolling by opening links in new tabs. This prevents the very real and very annoying problem of not being able to return to the infinitely-scrolling list view at the position I left it. Tabs prevent that loss of page context.

On a mobile device, tab-based workarounds are possible but more cumbersome, so I usually choose to open one item from the infinite scrolling list traditionally. If when I return via the back button, context is lost, I usually concede defeat by this bad user interface paradigm and leave the site.


I've found the other way around to be my reality on Monday Mornings cough bittorrenting when my network is somehow constrained.

Tumblr refuses to load the `next page`, and I don't want to hit the refresh keystroke combination because I really really don't want to go back to the top of the "page". I simply want the "next page" to load correctly.


Even on mobile it's common to lose your place when following a link and going back to the infinite scrolling page.


Dictator? I don't think you know what that word means. Maybe you should come visit and see exactly how off the mark your comments are.


Singapore is a single-party state with almost no regards to human rights. Political dissidents are routinely either jailed and tortured or fined and driven out of the country.


>routinely either jailed and tortured...

I'm not sure there is record of anyone being tortured, let alone it being routine?

One of my Singapore female friends pointed out you have a far lower chance of being raped or mugged if you walk around in Singapore than in most other countries and she considered that a more important than the ability to insult the government without them trying to sue you.


> One of my Singapore female friends pointed out you have a far lower chance of being raped or mugged if you walk around in Singapore than in most other countries and she considered that a more important than the ability to insult the government without them trying to sue you.

But when you put it this way, it sounds like there's a link between these two properties. I don't see how restricting free speech improves the safety of women.


I could have put that in a less muddled way. I think I was trying to get at that if you want to get on with life without being beaten, killed, imprisoned, tortured of raped you have a better chance of that in Singapore than many other countries. Indeed I imagine all of the above are statistically more likely in the US for example.

I don't think restricting freedom of speech helped directly but both things are to some extent the result of a rather authoritarian government. Singapore isn't perfect but probably has a better quality of life than many of its neighbours.


That may be true. You could make that kind of comparison about a lot of the human rights we enjoy vs. the benefits of their absence. In this case, there doesn't seem to be any obvious connection. How does silencing political speech prevent rape and mugging?


GP is likely referring to the on-going, completely sanctioned and culturally ingrained practice of corporal punishment for what would otherwise be minor offenses in the Western world. While likely not thought of "torture" in the minds of Singaporeans, the thought of corporal punishment is abhorrent to many of the 20-30 somethings in Western urban environments.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caning_in_Singapore

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vandalism_Act_(Singapore)


Are you trying to say it isn't abhorrent to people who are not in their 20s or living in urban areas? I don't think that's an accurate statement.


No, sorry, that statement wasn't meant to be exclusionary. People of all living situations and ages could definitely find it abhorrent. Just expressing my opinion that that specific demographic would likely slant extremely heavily towards calling it inhumane, if not outright torture. People in older generations are sometimes closer to having been the recipients of corporal punishment themsleves, whether in school or at home, and my vague inclination suggests that these practices might have continued longer in rural areas than in urban areas. In that way, they might not see it as inhumane, but younger generations might.


There seems to be a very loose definition of dictatorship going on here.

`Dictator`

a ruler with total power over a country, typically one who has obtained power by force.

Singapore isn't a single-party state. There are other political parties that take part in the elections. Singapore's government is made up of members from mostly one party because the people voted them in. Let me repeat the last part: the citizens of Singapore voted the party in on their own accord. That's not a dictatorship. No one pointed a gun at my head and told me to vote for the incumbent party.

And as for your point about political dissidents, while that is true and is an important part of the history, it doesn't really happen now. What normally happens is that someone says something stupid that borders on libel and defamation and he gets sued. Is is heavy handed? Probably. Were they breaking the law? Yes. Is this a sign of dictatorship? On it's own, no.

There is heavy censorship, there is the death penalty, I believe Singapore still sell land mines, homosexuality is against the law. There are many flaws about Singapore but to call the state a dictatorship is putting the wrong label on the country.

When you say `Dictatorship`, I think North Korea, Iran. There is no way in the world Singapore even comes close to being a North Korea or an Iran.


Also one of the few countries in the world to use corporal punishment, such as canings, in response to crimes.


Woohoo Singapore represent! Ok serious question though: is he the only world leader that can code?


Merkel was a physicist, so one would assume she has written at least some code.


Merkel wrote Fortran code for her PhD thesis. [1]

Afaik she approximated the Schrödinger equation to compute the rate of decay of molecules with up to 6 atoms.

This [2] is the last physics paper of her (from 1990). After the wall fell, her interests changed quite a bit... Only political papers from then on.

[1] http://www.file-upload.net/download-9106454/AM-Diss.pdf.html

[2] http://dx.doi.org/10.1002%2Fqua.560380214


Have you seen the code written by physicists? Go look up the source code to CERN's ROOT package and browse it's change-log. Some of it quirks can be forgiven for it being incredibly old, but still...


I had heard Obama referring Bubble Sort in some TV show. Here it is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4RRi_ntQc8

It may be rigged, not sure.


It's a line he was given, Google was asking that question to a bunch of people.


China's Politburo Standing Committee, past and present, have had many Engineering trained members.


Thanks for writing this. It spoke so much truth I feel like I could have been the one writing this.


Get a hobby.


How about checking out the wall formerly known as shame.

http://python3wos.appspot.com/


Isn't this kinda moot if you're using any services that is domiciled in the States?


remember: as long as you are outside the US, you are safe from espionage


1) Well I started learning when I was 28. Self employed as a web dev now

2) Frontend dev that knows Javascript

3) Javascript. Regardless of whatever serverside stack you decide to further pursue, every one of them still has to interact with js. Choose Python while you're at it.


I'm finding it hard to understand what you're saying because this is one big blob of text. Can you format it with paragraphs and bullet points?


That, and I couldn't pick out the actual question in any case.


Sorry about the paragraphs - they should be there now.

The question is what do you make of the feedback in relation to the product. Does it seem that there is a need for the product. Am I asking the right questions of my potential customers.


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