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anyone know the breed of that dog on the "Meet our team" section ?


It looks most similar to a Siberian Husky to me, although the face is different. Possibly a mixed breed from the husky, or just a unique looking husky.


A good foundation in math is imperative (if you're serious about programming). Sure, anyone can pick up syntax but can you program, that's the question. In my experience, it's what makes a difference between a good or bad programmer.


Couldn't disagree more. A recent link on HN was along the lines of "ability to mange complexity is the key differentiator of a good programmer" and I think this is vastly more important.

Most code has very little mathematics in - beyond the core skills of recognising patterns and abstractions. If that's all you mean by 'a good foundation in mathematics' then we agree but I don't think your formulation is terribly useful.


Code does not have to have mathematics for someone to have a difficult time writing it. By a good foundation, I meant being able to understand fundamental mathematical concepts such as those taught in discrete math. It's not a numbers class but it makes you use your brain in ways which help and facilitate the writing of code.


I wonder what you mean exactly by 'a good foundation in math'. There are all kinds of programs you can write with the most basic of math knowledge.


I remember reading this years ago he explains my point better than I do:

"Most people think of math as doing arithmetic or memorizing arcane formulas. This is like asking if you need perfect spelling or an extraordinary vocabulary to be a good writer.

Writing is about communication, and math/programming is about the process of clear, logical thinking (in a way that you can't make mistakes; the equation doesn't balance, or the program doesn't compile). Specifically, that logical thinking manifests in:

Ability to estimate / understand differences between numbers: O(n^2) vs O(lg(n)), intuitive sense of KB vs MB vs GB, how slow disk is compared to RAM. If you don't realize how tiny a KB is compared to a GB you'll be wasting time optimizing things that don't matter.

Functions / functional programming (is it any coincidence that the equation f(x) = x^2 is so similar to how you'd write that method? The words "algorithm" and "function" were around in the math world far before the first computer was born :-))

Basic algebra to create & reorder your own equations, take averages, basic stats

So, I'll say you need a math mindset, being able to construct & manipulate mental models of what your program is doing, rather than a collection of facts & theorems. Certain fields like graphics or databases will have certain facts you need also, but to me that's not the essence of being "good at math".


cryptocurrency encourages this type of behavior and makes online extortion possible.


looks much like lego brainstorms minus the price tag.


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