I’m a week late with it, but I did want to comment on the news that Recurly was purchased by Accel-KKR, a private equity group, earlier this month. The gossip I’d heard was that with Recurly doing so well in the Corona environment, the investors felt it was a good time to sell and free up some money for their other investments.
Read more →The Giving Tree- Alternate Ending:
Read more →“Look, I was fine with giving you the apples
to help you get on your feet.
they’ll grow back next season anyway.
But no, I’m not giving you a house.
You know, I’ve seen boys like you
pull this nonsense
with other trees in the forest.”
I wanted to select some random words to use in a pass phrase and came up with the following one liner:
Read more →I guess as a disclaimer for this first story I’ll mention I took a position at Amazon. We’ll see how much it reduces the number of links to Matt Stoller and Scott Galloway.
Read more →I’m getting ths up a few days later than I’d intended so it’s bigger than usual. Hope you enjoy!
Read more →After 7 years, it was sad to leave Recurly last week. One of the things I’ll miss the most was sharing links with the folks who hung out in the #andrew-morton-barde Slack channel. I’ve decided to start doing the weekly blog posts again so I have a new outlet for the links I would have shared there.
Read more →I’ve used tcsh as my terminal shell since I’d started using FreeBSD back in 2001. I tried switching to bash a few times but found it pretty irritating.
Read more →I needed to update some code in a GitHub repo that’s checked out as part of a Jenkins pipeline. I could have just run the job over and over until it had run on all the hosts, but with 15 hosts, that sounded like a pain in the ass.
Read more →Yesterday Jason Kottke posted a link to a transcript of a talk that Richard Hamming gave at Bellcore in 1986. The talk, titled You and Your Research, is an hour long summary of his philosophy on how to do Nobel-Prize level research. I’d recommend reading the entire thing but I wanted to pull out some longer passages that really resonated with me.
Read more →Here’s a quick hack I worked out to validate Swagger documentation as part of a Jenkins pull request check. It uses curl to send the JSON off to the Swagger Validator Badge. If there are any validation errors it will display them and then fail the build.
Read more →Today marks my third anniversary working at Recurly. It’s been a pretty crazy journey so far. When I started there were only 15 people in the San Francisco office, now there are that many just in the Boulder office and over 100 people world wide.
Read more →Back in early April Recurly announced that we were opening a new office in Boulder. Since then we’ve hired nine people, five of whom are developers. I’ve gotten hands on experience with many aspects of recruiting: from passing out business cards at meetups, to phone screens, and technical interviews.
Read more →Yesterday I needed a way to test out some XPath queries against some random XML. When I found out that the major browsers supported it, decided to hack together a simple tool for trying XPath queries it in JavaScript:
Read more →The best part of the day was hearing my wife tell Ryland to “go give this to daddy”, then seeing him wandering around the house carrying a birthday card for me.
Read more →I haven’t been reading as much stuff over the last week since there’s been a lot going on with the new house. But here’s an unsorted smattering of things I found interesting.
Read more →Playing catch up since I didn’t post anything last week. Life has been pretty crazy over the last two weeks. We closed onm and moved into our new house. Now we’re planning on remodeling the kitchen.
Read more →Read more →The other great way to figure out where to eat in a new city is to provoke nerd fury online. Go to a number of foodie websites with discussion boards. Let’s say you’re going to Kuala Lumpur — just post on the Malaysia board that you recently returned and had the best rendang in the universe, and give the name of a place, and all these annoying foodies will bombard you with angry replies about how the place is bullshit, and give you a better place to go. http://www.esquire.com/_mobile/blogs/news/anthony-bourdain-how-to-travel
Read more →Deana Discovers Music is a musical journey that I have started. Inspired by the birth of my son, I have had the pleasure of watching him experience the sights and sounds of this world for the first time. Like many new parents, I’ve enjoyed exposing him to albums I’ve adored throughout the years. My goal is to open my mind and listen to one new song a day and write a corresponding review. A year from now, I hope to have 365 reviews for 365 songs. http://www.deanadiscoversmusic.com/
Read more →I just wandered in from the modeling agency next door and decided to feed your child fresh fruit. We are all wearing clean clothes. http://itsliketheyknowus.tumblr.com/post/97438828619/i-just-wandered-in-from-the-modeling-agency-next