Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | timmipetit's commentslogin

Yeah, having those Dutch street names pronounced in English is so confusing and funny! It would be perfect if you could use your phone in English, but use your local language for navigation. Still haven't found a way to achieve this on my Android phone though :(


The App Settings xposed module allows you to change locale (among other settings) per app. I use it to keep Google Maps and Here Maps in Greek while my device locale is English.


0 hours, we pay for the hosted option via https://githost.io/


This image originally comes from http://www.brendangregg.com/linuxperf.html


As a Mailgun customer, I can unfortunately confirm this. A lot of our clients are having problems getting mails delivered in hotmail mailboxes. This started some weeks ago, and we haven't seen any improvement since. It is getting to a point that we're working on migrating to something else right now.


I'm sorry we let you down. If it's not too late, I'd love to get to the bottom of this today. Can you share details with me? josh [at] mailgun [dot] com


We use angular-ui-date https://github.com/angular-ui/ui-date, which works pretty well for us.


That's really cool! I did something similar for my thesis. We used flight information from http://planefinder.net/ as our data set. Unfortunately no WebGL, but you can see an impression in this Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvrdxLymMv0 More info here: http://www.cs.rug.nl/svcg/SoftVis/FlightVis


Very nice Tim - I love the way you smear out the data.

I found plotting the data over Europe and the US to be a difficult visualization problem - there is just so much data in a small space. Perhaps changing the size of each point depending on your distance would work?


Yeah, especially Europe is really hard. We haven't found a solution yet for visualizing detailed information above very dense and scarce areas at the same time. Showing the data above a single country in Europe works a lot better (for example: http://www.cs.rug.nl/svcg/uploads/SoftVis/trails_length_1.pn... and http://www.cs.rug.nl/svcg/uploads/SoftVis/trails_length_4.pn... ). We use an option to reduce the point size based on the zoom-level.

If someone is interested, here are 2 more videos of our visualization

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYfBvQGKE9Y (short pulse-trails with background context, colored by altitude, above France)

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0oqxIhO69tU (medium pulse-trails, no background trails, colored by direction).

For more information and pictures: http://www.cs.rug.nl/~alext/PAPERS/MSc/klein14.pdf


Thanks for the advice, we've had some strange situations where our mails got marked as spam. Currently we only have issues with Outlook. Mails send using Mailgun often get marked as spam, while (the same) mails send using Gmail don't have this problem. Unfortunately, this doesn't seem to happen on all Outlook installations/instances, and Outlook is pretty much a black box to test. Perhaps this could be similar issue (we've had no issues on a clean Outlook installation). Anyone else with similar problems?


This also just happened to me. Some messages that I send (using the browser) to a friend were received by someone else. A messages intended for my girlfriend was received by a coworker. My Hangouts app (Android) actually showed these messages in the "wrong" conversation.


Check out MyPy: http://www.mypy-lang.org/ It uses the Python 3 annotations syntax for type checking.


MyPy is the only thing that would make me keep coding in python in the long term.

Do you know how mature it is ?


You could use Celery: http://www.celeryproject.org/


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: