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I saw it too - props to the engineer that set page title to "Error 502 (Server Error)!!1"

DownDetector picked up a surge of ~7k a few minutes ago


Echo the love for this podcast, one of the easiest subscription purchases I’ve ever made. Jack is a great storyteller.


Google was a fan of it, too. You should look into project oxygen.


Exactly, deathbycaptcha is one I’ve seen in action more than 5 years ago. This stuff has been human powered for way longer than that.


“See this smile? Ear to ear, baby!”


Just signed up, I'd like to have my wife try this out as well. Am I able to share my account with her?


Thank you for your support, we'd love to hear your feedback. We always recommend family members have separate accounts so you can keep your data tracking individualized, however if your wife tries a session with your account and is interested in her own membership, we'd be happy to provide a Family discount! Just email me directly at celine@flowly.world mentioning this and I will set you up. Also I love to remind members they can call us at 323-545-3659 when you set up your Kit for the first time to help answer any questions and get tips.


Yeah that’s pretty brutal.


Probably not the worst thing he saw, not too familiar with him but i thing he get attacked a lot


Yeah the bottom of the article has a list of times his likeness has been used in an attack. Yikes, the downsides of being a public figure.


This lines up with my experience working on product features for customers that have accessibility requirements. From what I’ve seen, most larger companies that care about accessibility (usually for fear of lawsuits) have internal folks testing with NVDA specifically. This is another great reason to use it for your testing because you can be confident the odds of someone checking your work with NVDA are good.


That’s a dangerous generalization imo. There are absolutely organizations that value folks who are receptive to constructive criticism and who are willing to keep an open mind about all sorts of things. These companies screen carefully for characteristics that align with that culture and I can say from experience that it produces a much better working environment.


I agree, and pair programming is really the best option to learn a code base.


I switched jobs during the pandemic and my productivity has been incredible. I was doing great WFH in my last role but my current employer has much better support for this environment.

I won’t claim that any single tool is a miracle but I have found Clockwise combined with Google Calendar to make coordinating with others a breeze. The automatic status management in Slack when you’re in “focus time” or a meeting is great for signaling to others whether their question is better suited for a public channel over DMs.

For me at least, productivity when WFH comes from having a proper environment (noise cancelling headphones and an office are a life saver when your partner is watching the screaming toddler) and working in an organization that embraces distributed teams.

Edit: If you’re considering a switch to an org that does remote right, feel free to hit me up for a quick chat.


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