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Comment Actually her" best known and celebrated work" is (Score 4, Informative) 48

> Although the Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded based on "lifetime work" rather than an individual book,
> Voices... is her best-known and most celebrated work.

According to most of the articles I've read (in the last 15 minutes), her most popular and acclaimed book is War’s Unwomanly Face which is an oral history of Russian woman who fought in WWII. It sold more than 2 million copies.

az0

Comment Expecting people to click on "Free" was bad UI (Score 1) 103

Separate from the in-app purchase issue, this is a UI improvement. "Free" is important information, but it was not obvious to new users that they should click on that word in order to download the app.

Like a lot of Apple's UI, it was obvious and easy-to-use, *once you already know how it works*. Basically it was usable, but not especially discoverable. "Get" is an improvement on multiple fronts.

az0

Comment Re:Uber Fresh? (Score 3, Informative) 139

Uber Fresh is very limited. It's only available in certain parts of West Los Angeles and only one food choice per day. So no going to Subway and no telling them what you want in your sub.

However, if you want a sub, just be in West LA on Weds and they'll bring you a Godmother from Bay Cities Italian Deli. It's widely considered the best sandwich in LA.

http://blog.uber.com/uberfresh...

Comment Forget math, programming is like organic chemsitry (Score 2) 241

As long as we're making gross generalizations...

A big part of organic chemistry in college is "synthesis" problems where you are presented with a molecule and you're supposed to outline the steps (chemical reactions) required to turn it into a different molecule. I find that this closely mirrors programming where we're manipulating data instead of chemicals. We all have access to the same tools and there's more than one pathway that will work, but we're trying to find the most elegant / efficient solution to get from A to B.

Most of the students in my OChem class were premeds and many of them struggled with the synthesis problems. A lot of the premed curriculum involves memorizing and regurgitating huge amounts of information, with less emphasis on problem-solving. I always thought the ones that were good at the synthesis problems should switch gears and become programmers.

az0

Comment A heavy, complicated solution to a rare problem (Score 3, Informative) 235

I commented elsewhere that this is heavy, complicated and no better than a tiny rear flasher. Plus, while getting rear-ended by a car sounds scary, it's one of the least common bike accidents. According to these stats (based on bike collisions in 3 cities in 1995), only 3.8% of crashes were car rear-ends bike:

http://www.bicyclinglife.com/L...

There's some cool tech in this product, but it won't help with the most common bike collisions (#1 car pulls out in front of bike, #2 parked car door opens into bike).

Comment Re:Useless (Score 1) 235

I have to agree with jam42. Anyone who rides in a city is in close proximity to cars constantly. All this will do is make my bike heavier and more complicated while providing no more safety than a tiny rear flasher running off a watch battery.

Comment Re:cool tech, hot back (Score 1) 86

I did not get paid in any way for that link. I have no relationship with that company or product. I don't even own it, since as I said, it's too flashy for me. I'm just an avid bike rider who remembered a kickstarter for a similar device. Do you criticize every comment that links to a product relevant to the story?

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