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React conference in San Francisco 2014

Last week I attended the React conference in San Francisco . The conference is a two day event where speakers share their experiences on building reactive systems: ones that are resilient, elastic, responsive, and message driven. The reactive manifesto web page   has more detailed information about reactive systems, and why they are useful. This year the conference was at Cobb's Comedy Club , a cozy venue for the roughly 300 people that attended the conference. Because of the tight space, power plugs were non existent, but the organizers were extremely thoughtful and provided every attendee with a rechargeable battery with iPhone and Android connectors. The sessions in the conference were great, but a couple stood out. The first was Netflix's presentation "Resilient by Design", where the speaker talked about how Netflix designs and deploys their services: from using microservices that do one thing and do it very well with well defined interfaces, to cloud servic...

Mining the Social Web, by Mathew Russell, O'Reilly Media

"Mining the social web" is a book about how to access social data from the most popular social services today by using the services' public APIs, and analyzing the retrieved data to gain insights about it. The book uses the Python programming language to access and manipulate the data, and provides code snippets of common tasks within the book, as well as full iPython notebooks on Github. The book is written as documentation for the freely available iPython notebooks, with the documentation providing context and background for the code, as well as describing the algorithms used to mine the social data. The author tries to be as concise as possible, although he did not succeed in the first chapter, where the first three section were verbose, and relatively unnecessary,  describing what twitter is and why people use it as a microblogging platform. With that out of the way, the writing style improves as the book progresses, and is a mixture of code examples and step ...

Can you make me a Cortado please?

A couple of months ago I stumbled upon an  info graphic that depicts popular coffee drinks around the world , and thought I'd give some of these drinks a try. I started with the cortado: a drink that is popular in Spain, Portugal, and Columbia, and consists of one part espresso, and one part steamed milk. Almost every coffee shop that I went to had no idea how to make the drink, and it became a great conversation starter with the coffee barista, describing where I stumbled upon the recipe, and what other coffees are popular in different regions of the world.  I was pleasantly surprised when one barista at Peet's coffee knew how to make the drink from his travels to Spain. He also suggested modifications to the drink that would make it more delicious including using whole milk instead of 2%, adding another shot of espresso, and sweetening the drink with one pack of brown sugar. The final combination is my current favorite.

Migrating from the Macbook Air to the Macbook Pro

My Macbook Air started to show wear and tear after a couple of years of heavy use. Five of the keys on the keyboard broke and had to be replaced, despite my light touch typing--honestly, and the battery has moved from the warning that it needs service to retaining electric charge for shorter and shorter periods of time, to not holding a charge at all. For my next device I contemplated getting another Macbook Air with the highly enviable 12hr battery life, or switching back to a 15 inch Macbook Pro, and enjoying a more powerful machine, with a retina display and a respectable 8 hours of battery life. The prospect of more screen real-estate, and more processor power was too enticing, so I ended up getting the Macbook Pro despite the weight difference. Since I accumulated 3+ years worth of data and software on the Air, I did not want to repeat the process of reinstalling apps from scratch and searched for an easy way to migrate the data to the new machine.  Most of the online rec...

Fitbit bands

I am fairly disappointed in the quality of the Fitbit flex bands. After a couple of months of moderate use, the bands developed deep cracks and finally broke. There are a lot of accounts online and on Facebook from Fitbit users who have experienced similar issues, so the problem is widespread and not isolated. What makes matters worse, is that after ordering and getting a replacement band from Fitbit, a rash developed on my skin. I did not experience a rash with the prior band color, and my guess is that the material is different from the original one I had. Now I have two choices, either get another replacement band with the original color, and hope that it does not cause a rash, or give up on the Fitbit completely, and wait for some of the newer health tracking technologies around the corner. An iWatch perhaps?

First impressions of the Fitbit Flex

Many years ago I bought a pedometer to help me count the number of steps that I take on a daily basis. The idea was to walk at least ten thousand steps every day to balance the modern sedentary lifestyle, caused by sitting on a chair almost all day long, both at work and at home. The pedometer was great for a while, showing how far I was from the ideal number of steps, and making me compete with myself every day to increase the number of steps I take. Because it was bulky and inconvenient to carry in my pocket, when I finally hit the goal of ten thousand steps I stopped carrying it along. And of course the number of steps declined back to where it was before the pedometer, and I did not think anything of it. This year the flu season has not been kind to me. Between a hectic work schedule and a kid at daycare, I have been hit by some cold or flu variant every couple of weeks. My wife attributed the low immunity to a lack of physical activity, and she started looking for a way to help...

Juice diets and the Vitamix

Over the weekend I watched "Fat, sick, and nearly dead", a documentary on Netflix about how a sick and overweight Australian regained his health by following a strict juice diet for about 6 months augmented by moderate exercise. The documentary tracks his progress over the 6 months period, as he travels throughout the US from coast to coast, talking to people about the health benefits of the juice diet, and showing them how it affected his health. The documentary also shows how toward the end of his diet, he started evangelizing it, and helping other people reverse their heavily medicated health problems by following a similar diet and moderate exercise. The documentary was very well made, and the author is quite likable. It was also very educational about the types of foods people consume, and the nutrients they get out of them: micro-nutrients--those that come from plant sources, and macro-nutrients--those that come from animal sources. The documentary's thesis is th...