Post Overview
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Current Event
9 years agoCurrent Event+13 13 0Go 1.5 is released
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Current Event
9 years ago+1 1 0Docker Toolbox Announced
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How-to
9 years ago+1 1 0An Easier Way to Create Tiny Golang Docker Images
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Video/Audio
9 years ago+1 1 0Gophercon 2015 Videos
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How-to
9 years agoHow-to+1 1 0Small introduction to tags in Go
Go has an awesome feature built in, namely tags. You are probably already familiar with them, they are like annotations in Java for example. This is just a quick introduction: how to use them, and how to implement them. First...
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How-to
9 years ago+2 2 0Cheap MapReduce in Go
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Analysis
9 years ago+1 1 0How Go was Made - Andrew Gerrand
GopherCon 2015
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Text Post
9 years ago+3 3 0[Features] Summon tribe council on incorrect downvotes.
People are apologizing for other peoples downvotes, so why not make a system where they can be disputed. A tribe council of sorts.
Option for anyone to "dispute downvotes" on content. If enough reputable people agree that the content does not break any etiquette, site or tribe rules, move the negative xp to the downvoters instead with hefty bonus. It would be great if chief and mods had this power, but given that snaps are posted to multiple tribes it could be difficult.
Reddit had the same rule of not downvoting as disagreement, but it's wasn't enforced by any way. I fear that when Snapzu grows, that might be forgotten here too.
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Video/Audio
9 years ago+1 1 0Dockercon 2015 Videos: Day 1
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Text Post
9 years ago+1 1 0Claimed /t/docker
Hi,
I claimed the docker tribe as it was empty and without a chief.
Docker and go language are my weapons of choice when developing my own projects, and I read a lot about them both. I'll post any interesting links here, and hopefully other docker users will find here eventually.
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How-to
9 years ago+2 2 0A curated list of awesome Go frameworks, libraries and software
awesome-go - A curated list of awesome Go frameworks, libraries and software
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Unspecified
9 years agoUnspecified+2 2 010 things you (probably) don't know about Go
Andrew Gerrand
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How-to
9 years ago+1 1 0GoBooks - A curated list of Golang books
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Unspecified
9 years ago+18 18 0Google image recognition algorithm on a gif. [nightmarish]
This is getting way out of hand.
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Video/Audio
9 years ago+7 7 0[Game Remix] PacoChanV2 - Final Boss Theme from Splatoon
Splatoon - Final Boss Theme - Squid Sisters Version (Pseudo-8bit Remix)
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Video/Audio
9 years agoVideo/Audio+1 1 0SU&SD Review: Spyfall
Shut Up & Sit Down Reviews: Spyfall.
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Text Post
9 years ago+14 14 0Hi Snapzu, I'm Namo. This is the story how I ended up here.
I used slash-dot for a long time, I don't know if I ever made an account there, but it seemed like the best place to get links that were related to my interests. After a few years of breaking servers as part of the slash-dot effect, I heard about this great place that was made up of entirely user created content. I watched diggnation podcasts every week, then other Rev3 shows like Totally Rad Show.
I moved from Digg to Reddit some 6 years ago. I felt Digg had grown too big and the community felt a bit hostile and competitive. It wasn't a place where I could just log in and relax for few hours anymore. So I packed my bookmarks, and moved to reddit. I looked like something from 1995, but the content was great and the community was like-minded and nice. The ascetic look also seemed to filter certain type of people away from it. It became my main time-sink for the next 6 years.
I started resent reddit a bit for all the time my wasted there. It wasn't quality time anymore. It felt toxic. There were so much hate and negativity. It was there for a long time, but I really started to feel it around the gamergate. Users were used to the free speech they've had so far, so the resulting censorship was just throwing gasoline on the flames. I found myself unsubscribing from more and more subreddits, and mostly using hacker news for my programming and science interests.
I knew there were some twisted subreddits, but I never sought them out. Reddit made sure to bring them to my knowledge by starting to ban them. More torches, more gasoline, more hatred leaking to subreddits previously unaffected. I deleted my account to finalize my decision. I'm not going back there.
Enter Snapzu, first impression; looks pretty complicated. Snaps have modules? Then again, if reddits ascetic look fed the "mind over matter" in the start, maybe this feeds "quality over quantity" which I'm so thirsty for right now. Invited a few frinds, started a tribe... I think I already like this place.
I'm into 3d-printing, programming (mostly Golang), science news and 80's computers.
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Analysis
9 years agoAnalysis+7 7 0"How I Start."
Peter Bourgon's process of starting a new go project.
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Analysis
9 years ago+3 3 0The Go Programming Language Specification - The Go Programming Language
This is a reference manual for the Go programming language. For more information and other documents, see golang.org.