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> I don't understand why a simple problem like password management, needs a subscription and a private company to create software for the problem.

Speaking from recent experience migrating non technical users to 1Password, while something like pass might work well for me/the typical HN user, there's no way I'd try to get family to use it. I have found the overall 1Password user experience to be very friendly and reliable, but am still semi regularly having to help family figure out/re-explain something about how it works. They'd be lost with something like pass.


Exactly. You're paying 1Password to maintain the various apps and browser plugins. Continuing to improve UX and add language support.

My parents don't speak English. Not everyone does.

That's what you're paying 1Password for.


I wish people would pay pass (or some other auditable open source software team) for this sort of thing instead.

The situation is particularly painful for security critical software like password managers and disk encryption. Commercial software could be keeping a rot-13 copy of the database on an anonymous ftp server for all I know (or, worse, be written for a leaky JavaScript sandbox).

The open source stuff generally stalls out after the first 90% of the functionality is there, and the second 90% of the work remains.


spider oak has a nice one for non-technical users, https://spideroak.com/personal/encryptr.

Encryptr uses their no-knowledge cloud. It's pretty cool and their processes are openly documented.


+1 on the Alton Brown recommendation from others.

A book that we've used a lot for ideas on cooking healthy and cheap meals is "Good and Cheap" by Leanne Brown. You can download the PDF for free from her site, or buy a hardcopy from several sites (I have no affiliation, just a happy buyer/reader/cook):

https://www.leannebrown.com/cookbooks/

It's based on trying to counter this very idea ... and has a lot of great ideas for what feels like "fancy" meals, but with pretty simple ingredients/instructions. Highly recommended if you are interested in expanding your kitchen repertoire (whether you're a cooking newbie or an experienced "foodie").


Funny, I just got a flier from them in the mail today. They recently (not quite 1 year ago) opened a second store in my area, about 20m down the road from another bigger Guitar Center. I thought it was a bit strange that they'd put them so close together.


I had a big robotix kit and loved it. My parents kept it and I was planning to have my kids use it, only to find out a few years ago that none of the motors work anymore, and a lot of the plastic has become brittle, so breaks easily when taking things apart. sigh


I love my Aeropress, but an arguably even simpler option is something like the Hario V60 (http://www.amazon.com/Hario-V60/dp/B000P4D5HG/). $19, and no plastic if that matters to you. I think the filters probably cost you a bit more than the Aeropress.

IMHO you should have several different coffee brewing methods at your disposal :-)


Or you can get a plastic version (with a cup) for cheaper. And the filters are easier to find than pre-cut circles for the AeroPress.

"IMHO you should have several different coffee brewing methods at your disposal :-)"

Agreed!

Now, where's my vacuum pot? I feel the need to expose myself to grievous bodily harm while making some joe.


Right. I've been using the Aeropress for about seven years. To this day I still use it every week, if not every day. I think the plunger is starting to go.

The point is it makes great coffee, and I've convinced many friends and family to buy one, but now I caution people that while it probably makes the best single serving coffee in a $25 package, it's not perfect. Basically there are a lot of parts and you're working the whole time you're using it. One guy at work accidentally punched the filter holder into the compost bin, lost forever.

If you're making 2+ servings very often, get a 6- or 8-cup Chemex. Much fewer parts. More: pour, stand around, repeat.


If the rubber plunger is starting to feel "gummy" around the edge, you might be able to get a replacement for free. They had a problem for a while and were shipping out replacement parts no questions asked.


Thanks for the tip. The seal let some coffee through one time and I also had some slime growing inside it. Gross. But it's several years old maybe expected at some point.


Just as a point of reference, I don't ever want to see the inside of a Keurig that's been neglected for years in some office or other.


Digital Reasoning -- Nashville // New York // Washington DC // London

Digital Reasoning is a leader in cognitive computing. We build software that understands human communication - in many languages, across many domains, and at enormous scale. Some tools/technologies we use: NLP, machine learning, Java, Python, Rails, Javascript, Hadoop, AWS/EC2, Agile methodology. We recently closed our Series C round (http://www.digitalreasoning.com/buzz/digital-reasoning-raise...) and are expanding our team on several fronts.

Currently hiring software engineers, data scientists, DevOps, QA, and more:

> http://www.digitalreasoning.com/careers

Apply directly to positions on our site, or feel free to ping me (charlie dot penner at digitalreasoning.com) with any questions.


I'm curious how many others here on HN are doing something similar? I.e. Making a living on their own as an indie/contractor at a rate that allows a comfortable lifestyle vs what seems more talked about/pursued in getting a large cash out.


Digital Reasoning -- Nashville // New York // Washington DC

Digital Reasoning is a leader in cognitive computing. We build software that understands human communication - in many languages, across many domains, and at enormous scale. Some tools/technologies we use: NLP, machine learning, Java, Python, Rails, Javascript, Hadoop, AWS/EC2, Agile methodology. We're expanding our team on several fronts.

All of our open positions:

> http://www.digitalreasoning.com/careers

A few that are directly on my team here in Nashville:

> Senior Operations Engineer: http://ch.tbe.taleo.net/CH15/ats/careers/requisition.jsp?org...

DevOps/Sysadmin on Linux in AWS/EC2

> Full Stack Developer: http://ch.tbe.taleo.net/CH15/ats/careers/requisition.jsp?org...

> Front End UI/UX Engineer: http://ch.tbe.taleo.net/CH15/ats/careers/requisition.jsp?org...

Web application development with Ruby on Rails/Javascript

> Data Analyst http://ch.tbe.taleo.net/CH15/ats/careers/requisition.jsp?org...

Teach our software how to read

Feel free to ping me (charlie dot penner at digitalreasoning.com) with any questions.


Any reason not to do the first one more compactly?

     ','.join(headers)


Oops. Good catch!


We've done a few blind taste tests at the office between an AeroPress and percolator (and keurig and pour over if we're counting). I suspect it's largely personal preference as the percolator advocate has chosen the percolator brew and I (the AeroPress advocate) choose the AeroPress. To me the percolator has a certain (undesirable) taste profile that always tastes like percolator. Academically I don't like that the percolator keeps "recycling" the water during the brew cycle.


Thanks for the info.

Side note, I just discovered that what I was referring to as a percolator, is actually called a Moka Pot : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moka_pot


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