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Would anyone be interested in creating a Space Coast Hacker House?

The idea is to assemble a small group of talented folks. Even digital nomads who want to do a short stint would be welcome. And then solicit contracts, or start New Space ventures.

Main benefit is of course proximity to rocket launches ;) For which we could host viewing parties, outdoor BBQs, photo shoots, etc.

Region is known for relatively cheap rents (compared to South Florida). Great weather. Year round golf, tennis, scuba. Not sure about high speed internet availability. And it may be a cultural backwater. But that only leaves more time for building ;)


Perspective of a current "digital nomad" that grew up in the area:

The weather is great in a sense that it's warm, but be prepared for sweltering heat and humidity for ~340 days of the year. Especially during the summer, it's hard to be outside for more than a few minutes without needing a shower.

Lots of outdoors stuff to do like you mentioned, especially water-oriented activities. If you surf, New Smyrna is the most consistent spot but even that's not nearly as consistently good as it is consistently sharky.

High speed internet would be no problem. Brevard and the surrounding areas are red but I wouldn't necessarily consider it cultural backwater. You'll be exposed to a much higher number of crusty beach people (especially in Cocoa Beach) than you will rednecks or similar.


Damn, I have never been called crusty before.


When you say "culture backwater" are you referring the the fact that the Space Coast has the highest ratio of engineers to population in the US, or b/c it just not near a major city?


A lot of people dislike Florida politics, state social policies and culture. It's very, very different from Seattle or Portland. Similarly the Floridians think people in Seattle are insane.


The "surrounding areas are red but" immediately preceeding implies that being largely Republican-voting qualifies an area as a "cultural backwater".

We get a disappointing degree of "people who disagree with me are stupid" here at times.


Could just be referring to a lack of concerts, nightlife, etc. If you're used to the frequency with which major acts visit LA or Chicago or Nashville, adapting to anything else can be hard.


To Californians anything that isn't California is a cultural backwater. This may also apply to New Yorkers. The amount of Californian "nationalism" I've seen is surprising.


Anything that isn’t coastal Californian you mean.


As someone who spends quite a bit of time just south of the cape in Cocoa Beach (I own a condo there), I'm not sure I would call the area a "cultural backwater", but it might be culture shock if you are coming from an urban area.

Many would be surprised by how inexpensive it is, but in my opinion (like much of the US) the area suffers from poor planning. Recently two buildings one block from the beach were torn down to make room for a parking lot. Plus there is a NIMBY / anti-development contingent which basically kills off any renewal efforts. Prime real estate has gone undeveloped because of height restrictions.

With that said, I do think it could be a good area for startups. There is a lot engineering talent, the quality of life is good compared with the cost of living. Plus there is access to a major airport in Orlando with direct flights to SF, LA, NY, etc.

Personally I'd really like to see more startup activity in the Cape Canaveral/Cocoa Beach area.


Please no. We like our culture just fine:

I have a coworker with a house at the edge of a swamp. He likes to go out in his airboat and shoot alligators. He likes to set off explosions. I have another coworker, from San Francisco actually, who has sheep and can shoot his AR-15 in his yard. Trump has dropped by twice, at the MLB airport. The lines of adoring fans went for miles, and there were only about 5 protesters total. My workplace has a giant (maybe 15x7 foot) US flag in the cafeteria, and every year we hold a military-style flag folding ceremony. Everywhere you go, there are engineers who work for defense contractors. There is a stand-your-ground law, and our wonderful Sheriff Wayne Ivey has some great videos on youtube about the need for armed citizens prepared to shoot all kinds of bad people.

For those of you who aren't horrified, we're hiring for low-level hacker stuff... but the rest of you need to stay right where you are. You'd be unhappy, and you'd make us unhappy.


I've been trying to overcome my prejudices about Florida, and you're really not helping.


Sounds great! Titusville is super cheap.


This has potential. In peer brokering at scale, its the individual state of each peer that has to be mediated. The classic "LimeWire" problem. Just wondering as a peer, how much of my metadata gets leaked? Simply determining when or where I am chatting may be enough to de-anonymize me ;)


Compare to SAFE Network, which may be far more secure but also never seems to launch their alpha :)

https://maidsafe.net/docs/Safe%20Network%20Primer.pdf


~70% participation rate in $1M angel round for serial founder with strong network doesn't strike me as an extreme outlier. Nor the "ask" set of 40+.

Bootstrapping the first company as a nobody may be the more interesting tale here ;)

But thanks for sharing, rand! Am also currently researching Carta, CapShares, TrueEquity, etc. and this is insightful.


"Kubernetes" is an Ancient Greek word meaning "more containers than customers"

https://twitter.com/srbaker/status/1002286820078571532


I assume it is written in the style of "Ubuntu is an ancient african word, meaning 'I can't configure Debian."


It is, "kubernetes" is actually the root of the word "governor", with similar meaning in ancient and modern Greek.

The naming of the software makes for very unfortunate conversations if you're talking to other Greeks about it.


This totally could have come from DevOps Borat. [1]

1: https://mobile.twitter.com/devops_borat


For most WebGL a 4x4 matrix multiply is all thats needed. GLSL will implement the basics. But all the 3D libraries include matrix ops: threejs, babylon, etc. Then there are standalone math libs like glMatrix and math.gl from Uber. There is even a WebAssembly accelerated library: glmw.

Just really curious what sort of simulations or applications one would build with an in-browser BLAS implementation ;)


This library is for fast scientific computing, you can use it for games (its 100k minified and the matrix algos are extreemly fast),


Hire someone specifically for the role. Otherwise it will morph into an all-day time suck.

The good thing is you actually don't need someone with an engineering background for this. And that community building skill they acquire can translate into onboarding new users as well.

In short, its the perfect entry-level position for a candidate with a liberal arts background who wants to get into tech. Best of luck!


Definitely could have used this back in school ;)

Nice companion is AllAboutCircuits online textbooks:

https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/textbook/digital/

Archive has the original Bell Labs manual from 1951, with some really beautiful logic gate diagrams

The Design Of Switching Circuits by William Keister, Alistair E Ritchie, Seth H. Washburn

https://archive.org/details/TheDesignOfSwitchingCircuits


Lubuntu team uses it as well:

https://phab.lubuntu.me/



This looks promising! Can you share anything about your experience using their services?


TubeBuddy is the 500 pound gorilla

https://www.tubebuddy.com

On Twitch check out Streamlabs:

https://streamlabs.com/


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