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Location: Barcelona, Spain

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies:

Résumé/CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/salvadornavarrete/

Email: salva.navarrete at gmail.com

Generalist software engineer with 8+ years of experience writing production-level code and leading complex projects from conception to deployment within fast-paced environments. Strong expertise in full-stack development, cloud infrastructure, and AI/ML.


OT: "Gene Therapy-Induced Antigen-Specific Tregs Inhibit Neuro-inflammation and Reverse Disease in a Mouse Model of Multiple Sclerosis"



Definitely looks good, congrats. (a bit puzzled to see this #1 though)


Thanks. Well yeah me too.


For those who want to give it a try I'd highly recommend this (short) book http://amzn.to/11zPRcJ (Deep Meditation - Yogani), of all I've read on the subject this was the best by far -no religion, common sense, and simple method.


ship this and I'll bury Chrome! (Well, Chromium)


Was this a reference to RA2's taunt "We will bury them!"?


Which itself must be a reference to Nikita Khrushchev's famous outburst[1].

1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_will_bury_you


Funny that so many are taking this so seriously. I thought it was a brilliant reflection on Internet privacy.


Yes! The whole point is listed in the About section:

"After all, just like they say at Facebook, Google, Twitter, Instagram and all the other social networks whenever they sell your profile hundreds of times each day: It's only business!"


I think "reward for browsing New" could be a good idea yet very difficult to implement it well. What I'd like to see is a front page with various lists of submissions according to different criteria, some ideas: 1st| most votes this month - this week, 2nd| "Hot today" (this'd be similar to the current front page I believe), 3rd | "Promising" (Posts from New section that begin their momentum), 4rd | Most commented month / week. Basically a bit of filtering.


I used to always start in Photoshop and when I had 2/3rds of the design start coding. But since I started using CSS3 attrs like 'box-shadow', 'border-radius', etc. I only open Photoshop for tweaking icons, patterns, gradients; but never to design the actual page.


Exactly. Not taking advantage of what you can do - and how easy you can do it - in the code right away just means more time wasted. Once you get the basic layout out, all Photoshop is good for is finding the colors you're going to use (which a lot of times, tools like Colllor in addition to preprocessors with color functions can supplement) and quickly prototyping something just to see it (which is easier in Illustrator, anyhow).

With things like this and CSSHat, I fear that people will use these tools not to learn from, but to immediately sell themselves as devs and further worsen the state of an industry that's already lost its passion for the combination of art and experience by cutting all corners possible.


Wow, thank you SO MUCH for mentioning Colllor. Can't wait to use it in my next project :-)


Right? I spent a good chunk of time trying to figure out who was behind it so I could send them some money, but couldn't. They finally added a form so I hit them up to put a donate button on there. If it interests you at all, I try to put all of the color and general prototyping tools I find on my snip.it -- http://snip.it/collections/1064-design--development-web


Price will surely go down, but as long as they have exclusive control on supply, and the ability to manage it smartly they could still make a ridiculously huge amount of money.


kind of unlikely revenue will be $8 trillion or whatever the valuation is, though, right?


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