Ask HN: Askap Dataset in Steradians/Pixel
[1] https://www.livescience.com/fastest-all-sky-map-ever-askap.html
[2] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steradian
Edit: changed link 2 to avoid overwhelming a small site
[1] https://www.livescience.com/fastest-all-sky-map-ever-askap.html
[2] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steradian
Edit: changed link 2 to avoid overwhelming a small site
Are there any dominant sites where people open their artistic and conceptual projects for volunteer input? Like GitHub perhaps but supporting a greater variety of media.
Users would see sample code automatically converted and rendered in their chosen language.
Of course, this would not apply to code written for specific APIs, because the APIs may be unavailable or organized differently in different languages. Most Stack Overflow code samples are ineligible. Unless someone would take all this a step further, and allow code samples to make use of any APIs that could be accessed and translated among any of the supported languages.
Does anyone know about this being done (in a simple sense, not including API translation)? Would this be useful? – or are most modern languages similar enough that code written in any language can be understood easily by anyone (not including pointer syntax, as not everyone completely understands that)? – or is the sum state of APIs and features so fragmented between languages and competing libraries that the technical and communal feasibility of such a project is too steep?
Whether there's any merit in the idea, I'll leave up to you. To take it even one step further, I think it would be amazing if such a project could guide the convergence of languages into a common API and fundamental set of features, identical in behaviour regardless of the language code were written in. Imagine if you could write new libraries in every language simultaneously.
There wouldn't be need for a single language, that's not what I'm proposing. New languages would be developed only to provide a new way of expressing the same algorithms. Different people may find it easier or more rewarding to work in different styles. Some languages may be tuned for elegance, others for density and other particular aesthetics, like fonts.
You're absolutely free to continue the thought.
Lately I've been developing an idea for a startup. It's very exciting but I don't know how to proceed. The technical feasibility is good, the market seems available, and the potential value seems enormous. It's a perfect fit for my personality, and it's something I would love to see exist.
The catch is that I live in a bubble, don't have any professional connections, and don't know who to talk to. Somehow I ended up living like a recluse. My coworkers smirk when I talk about the future. I believe in my ideas, and want to act on them, but "Silicon Valley" is a foggy and faraway land.
How do people proceed from this position? Would you focus on networking and save your ideas until you felt like you were part of the world? Would you focus on saving money, and plan to move and get a foothold in California? Would you ask for time off work and develop a prototype in private? What would you do when you had a working prototype?
These questions may be difficult to answer, but I am looking to decide whether to continue, or whether to let it go.