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Like the guy in Star Trek IV who took too much LDS.


Via Futurism:

Scientists Gene Hacked a Plant So It Grows Five Types of Psychoactive Drugs at Once

https://futurism.com/health-medicine/gene-hacked-plant-grows...


Is there a man man man article that will explain how to read man man?

The full documentation for man is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info program is properly installed at your site, the command

              info man

Ah that crap is/was so rage inducing!

https://archive.is/98Lhk

You may groan, as I did, when you see "What’s on the dark side of the Moon?" in the article's headline.

The article itself correctly uses "the far side of the Moon".

Proof once again that authors don't write their own headlines; editors do.

So I used the text from the <title> tag instead.

Title quibbles aside, it's a pretty good article. I learned several things from it.


Location: Menlo Park, CA

Remote: Yes, or hybrid if nearby

Willing to relocate: Possibly

Technologies: Python, Ruby, C, C++, C#, JavaScript, TypeScript, PowerShell, Flask, SQL, PostGIS, Shapely, Unity, Unreal Engine, multiple assembly/machine languages, Windows user code and kernel drivers, Google Maps and other map APIs, geographic and airspace data

Résumé/CV: https://www.geary.com/resume.html or https://www.geary.com/resume.pdf and https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelgeary/

Email: mike@geary.com

Hi, I'm Michael Geary. I've programmed in many languages and environments over the years. Some of my current interests are:

• Developer experience. I love helping my fellow developers solve problems, and building tools to make their jobs easier and more enjoyable.

• Aviation and geographic data. For example, airspace and obstacle data importers for Wing; election results and voter information maps for Google; many interactive maps for other companies.

• Hardware interfacing. In a way, I am a "full stack" developer, but my stack may involve a front end to a piece of hardware rather than the cloud. I first got into programming via ham radio, so RF hardware remains an interest.

• Designing and building APIs. Too often an API is designed by exposing the internals of whatever system provides the API. My philosophy is the opposite: start with the apps. I like to build a series of sample apps before starting on the API. This way I can imagine what API will make those apps and others like them easy to build.

• Talk with users! I don't like to sit in a back room cranking out code. I want to make sure it's the right code for what my users need, and that it's easy to maintain and improve as we learn more about what they want.

Open to full time or contract.

I look forward to talking with you!


I think you will enjoy this: https://youtube.com/shorts/k3nwW40sYkI



Here is my favorite visualization of quicksort, by a group of Hungarian dancers:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3San3uKKHgg


Thank you for this!


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