Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | colbyolson's comments login

Check out salt. Simple and amazing.


I've tried looking into salt a couple of times, but I find the documentation really lacking. The information is too spread out. I just took another look at the docs and it appears to do just about everything puppet does, but is much easier to configure (puppet-db/mcollective salt-alternatives are default).

Is there a canonical tutorial that's worth reading?


Is it worth mastering? No. Worth understanding? Yes.

Regex is used in so many applications and commands, it would be silly not to learn it.

You don't need to be a wizard, but do understand the basics and it will get you far.


Somewhere in between "the basics" and "wizard" is probably best. Regexp is powerful, extremely valuable in the right places, and knowing more than the basics will be useful. On the other hand wizard-level expertise is not necessary to net 99% of the value of regexp.


That depends. The skills I developed with sed and awk have paid dividends. But when I hear someone speak of becoming a regex master, as if a regex was an entire tool unto itself and not just a way of representing a pattern, that makes me think of Perl regexes in all their absurdity.


Is there a way to get the reading list for this course?


Shameless plug: search wengu, you'll get a site with Chinese texts ands translations.


Link: http://wengu.tartarie.com/wg/wengu.php (right?)

It's fine to link to your stuff especially if it's useful/educational/etc.


Yes, thanks.


I thought this was an excellent writeup and I would like to learn more more.

Are there any recommended books on learning about the Internet/DNS on a global scale?


http://www.amazon.com/Cisco-Essentials-Press-Networking-Tech... (Networking) http://www.amazon.com/DNS-BIND-5th-Cricket-Liu/dp/0596100574 (DNS)

There are always the standards texts, Computer Networks by Tannenbaum and Internetworking by Radia Perlman for the theory.


Neat 'recipe for success' but what's there to discuss?


Anyone play golf? I love it.

I also enjoy riding my motorcycle, reading literature, weightlifting, photography, and playing Battlefield 2.

I am learning to play piano and chess.


How did you learn to play golf? I've wanted to learn for some time but don't know where to start.


I've messed around with golf for about a year or two before getting serious this summer. Lessons made the biggest improvement. After I had a rough idea from the lessons, reading really made me understand the hows and whys.

This should help you on your way: If there are any golf courses around you, check their clubhouses for a local pro. There's usually someone around giving lessons.

This is where you need to spend the most money. Buy 5 or 10 lessons. Learn the fundamentals first, dont worry about distance, worry about contact.

Do this instead of a "craigslist deal". You'll be sure to get sound advice from someone who really understands the game.

For clubs, buy used or secondhand. These will last you until you either fall in love with the game or give it up and something else.

Suggested reading would include:

    Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf — Ben Hogan
    Harvey Penick's Little Red Book: Lessons And Teachings From A Lifetime In Golf — Harvey Penick
    Golf My Way: The Instructional Classic — Jack Nicklaus


If you want to try it out in a less intimidating environment, check out your local Par 3 course.

They're usually pretty low-cost and only 9 holes. As someone who enjoys playing golf, but doesn't have it as a top priority to get better at, 18 holes of a real course can be exhausting and frustrating if I'm not playing well. 9 holes on a par 3 can be over in less than an hour.


I enjoy seeing these python related posts being submitted. As @whalesalad said, it seems a lot of the innovation is in ruby/node land.

Although the first thing I noticed when I clicked the link was that it looks like it's a scraped design of Svbtle.

edit: spelling.


Yea, it is a scraped design. https://github.com/orf/simple

I was more surprised that the author claims this as a new feature. I feel like I heard about this over a year ago... In any case, excellent write-up.


Could you explain your thoughts on sharing images/use of PACS? I do IT work for an imaging center and would be interested in your experience with such software.


Expected an article about Nikon hardware, but still enjoyed it.

The author has a lot of neat looking posts, I recommend giving them a look.


Is that network yours? No? Then it's illegal.

It's an interesting way to have someone do the dirty work. I would love to see a postmortem writeup.


Is "breaking into" a shanty town built on my neighbourhood's various front lawns illegal?


In many countries, yes.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: