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electron -> react native ;) javascript is eating the world.


Eating the world’s ram, you mean.


Yep! But you know what I mean here instead.


technology / D2C / supply chain startups are desperately needed in this area to solve these problems.

At unspuntech.com (where i'm employed) we're working on creating high quality denim garments using 3D body scanning as the basis for custom fit. This allows us to go 0 inventory, and consumers generally don't mind a 2-3 week wait time for manufacturing thus far. up to 10-30% of garments end up unsold, so 0 inventory can have a large effect. We're also working on robotics solutions to remove steps from the manufacturing process, and eventually to reuse parts of the garment that get worn out.

More thought has to be put into the fast fashion part of the equation -- consumers (moreso women than men for clothing) want a large variety of options, and if they can get them at the cheapest prices, why not? There either needs to be a shift culturally (maybe look at how organic foods became prevalent at super markets) or through some sort of regulation (not ideal).

if any hner's want to talk more about these issues, please email me!


great stuff, a lot of cool posts i wouldn't have known about otherwise.


is this open source?


Of course. It's a demo for Samples.js, which is opensource.


These are all way too hard for an average 11 year old...


I doubt it very much. Children have an amazing capacity to learn and are usually constrained by adults thinking that kids can't cope with more than simple challenges.


Some of those are even to hard for some adults I teach to. One of the most important thing in pedagogy is to never mix several notions in the same theme. E.G: making exercices involving maths.


absolutely. if maths, etc had have been framed like this I would have been a model student. as it was, I spent my time coding other (not useful) things instead of homework


Being "kicked out" seems kind of misnomer. I was expecting some kind of story about how he defied PG or did something unusual, not how the company was accepted on a whim and were disassociated with the program before it even started. Great story none the less.


I am working on am intelligent locker system that will first be debuting in the ski market. Customers can put their skis/snowboards and belongings into a locker, and can use a mobile phone, RFID card or CC as a form of authentication. We are doing a beta test this winter at a ski resort. http://mysnowgate.com


Anything gate instantly makes me think of scandal. May not matter but just a heads-up.


Interesting, but it is little more than a novelty.


I was just thinking about making something like this after finishing my college stats class. I'm not sure if I just don't see it, but it would be cool to add in some statistics stuff, mean, variance, linear regression estimates and stuff like that.


Hey jferge, Thanks for the feedback. You can already do linear (and polynomial) regression through the plotly spreadsheet GUI. Way easier than Excel, imo:

Linear fit with dates: https://plot.ly/~jackp/487 Partial linear fit): https://plot.ly/~jackp/489 5th order polynomial fit: https://plot.ly/~jackp/490


Its amazing that this was done with a regular board. I would have to imagine with a longboard it would have been much easier.


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