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

Not necessarily in Canada's north or in areas where it's too costly to build transportation infrastructure.


We're back up. Turns out hackernews can send quite a bit of traffic.


Thanks for all the comments everyone. I was the editor who commissioned the piece. To give some context the writer had about 12 days to write the article. An impartial observer (not me obviously) might get the impression that the people offering up advice here might need to take themselves a little less seriously. Have a lovely day and thanks for reading and commenting.


To give some context, most of the people on this site are professional software developers. i.e., my full-time job is writing iPhone apps, so I've been thinking about that process for the last 2-3 years.

For me personally, 75% of my working hours is spent talking to people who have an app idea and don't have the funds to execute, and trying to separate those from paying clients. If I could cut that number in half, I would literally be twice as productive. It would be like adding 3 hours to every workday, or producing an additional ten apps a year.


Fair enough. This is hackernews. I've passed the link to this comment thread along to the writer and we'll slowly educate the client base, one at a time.


On the contrary, we love the article. I'm not an iOS developer, but to me the obvious steps are to start from "figure out the development environment". Apparently to an outsider, finding a consultant to do it is about the only option, and he doesn't even have the resources or background to communicate effectively with developers. I guess I'm used to working with people who, though they may never have written a line of code in their life, are familiar with the process at a high level.


To answer the title, I think I'd have a much better idea after I lurked in a class first. Once I've experienced how it works I'd be able to make a more informed decision.


This socialization comment is one that my coworkers always brings up. "They're breeding serial killers" he half-jokes.

I wasn't very well socialized in school. Maybe that's why I was interested in writing this story.


The socialization question is an extremely common one, and it usually indicates that the person asking it thinks unschooling is somehow "school at home" or something similar. This is frustrating, since it's exactly the opposite of the truth: People unschool their children so they can be exposed to a wider range of social experiences than those provided in the narrow and artificial environment of most schools.

I think pg's essay on why nerds are unpopular has some good insight into much of the "socialization" that goes on in school: http://www.paulgraham.com/nerds.html


Thats kind of funny, until you realize he is actually right.

Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris would not have been serial killers if they had not be so mercilessly bullied in school.

Granted most people don't end up as serial killers, but they do end up pretty ruffled and with psychic scars for the rest of their life.

The irony is that if geeks actually did kill more people they would have women falling all over them in prison.


Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris would not have been serial killers if they had not be so mercilessly bullied in school.

Causation for that has not been rigorously demonstrated. But, agreed, the school social environment they were in is described by press reports as having been toxic even before they brought their weapons to the school.


Technically they weren't serial killers at all--their killings were not really in series so much as all at once. They were "parallel killers".


The site is up now. On my own Wordpress installs I usually run SuperCache but it interferes with some of the custom hacking I've done on this template.

Thanks for the comment.


It is a good article. I agree that unschooling is probably the most demanding form of education for a parent to undertake. I wouldn't insist everyone do it this way (maybe there.ls a possibility for unschooling tutors?).


That's not the author with the comment, the author is Max Fawcett. That's me, the web editor, with a cheap throw to other content on our site.


Sorry, my mistake.

The author of the post isn't explicitly labelled, but your name (and Jeff Lewis) appears to the right of the blog post. I got confused.


I haven't seen any side effect data aside from the oft-quoted 1 in a million instance of GBS and occasional anaphalactic reactions.


Is that statistic based solely on the 1976 vaccine? If so, I'm not sure it's relevant today.


Read this yesterday. A great profile piece by the NYT on an obscure but awesome story.


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

Search: