I don't like the Touch Bar, but I've grown to hate it less. However it does register unintentional presses regularly. And no, I'm not "using it wrong".
If these are truly unintentional touches, as in, you were not touching the bar at all and it registered a key press, then you probably have a hardware issue. I just replaced a machine that would self press the touch bar on the right side when putting any sort of pressure (like resting your palms) to the right of the track pad.
I don't have a hardware issue, it's just very easy to brush the touchbar and set off a button when you didn't intentionally press it. If you overshoot one of the keys on the top row slightly you can end up pressing one of the touchbar buttons.
Maybe they should have come up with a way of requiring a press to active buttons on the touchbar.
Agreed! The bar is incredibly sensitive. I run it in customised mode and often when hitting backspace I'll brush against the bar and activate something.
It got so frustrating that I gave up and added loads of whitespace to the far right side of the bar. It looks weird having a big chunk of empty space there, but it has dramatically reduced my accidental activations.
At this point though, almost two months in, I'm just apathetic towards the bar. I tried to get used to the 'app contexts' but it felt too forced for me. So now it's just a function bar with a bad UX. I rebound Caps to escape and got used to it because the touch escape, even with the extended hitbox, feels extremely unpleasant to use.
I'm hoping someone figures out a way to run an app that takes over the bar even when not in focus. I'd quite like, for example, to have a mini version of iStat Menus on it, the currently playing track, or some other cute widget.
I know the above is not how Apple intend the touch bar to be used (as a second screen), but I'd sure find it more useful than what it does now!
This is dead on. Almost every mountain bike ride I go on gets me into a state of flow where I'm not thinking, just doing. It does happen when I run as well, but generally external conditions have to trigger it (awesome music, beautiful day, great views, etc). This feeling is usually accompanied by a general feeling of happiness and punctuated by occasional thoughts of how great and lucky I am to be alive and able to participate in these activities.
I never considered that euphoric feeling during exercise to be the "runners high". I always thought it was the euphoric and satisfied feeling I have _after_ exercise that is the high. I pretty much always feel great afterwards unless I really over exerted myself.
NYC or SFO Full-Time and Interns - Dev, Devops, Design - Major League Soccer Digital
MLS Digital is hiring developers, operations developers, and UX designers at all levels.
My team manages the development and operations for web, mobile web, and APIs across the entire league (20 sites) and the products we build are used by millions. We are very forward thinking for a sports league. Our CMS is built on Drupal and our matchcenter and APIs run on Node.js, and we are constantly evaluating new tools and technology.
Specific job descriptions are here: http://www.mlssoccer.com/jobs/opportunities, but the bottom line is that we are looking for people who are passionate about software and soccer. If this is you (even if the job descriptions don't match exactly) we would love to hear from you!
Drop me a line! justin dot slattery at mlssoccer.com or @jdslatts on twitter.
We are Major League Soccer Digital, headquartered in NYC. We are a small team of developers who build and maintain Major League Soccer’s web, mobile-web, and content services. Most of our existing platform is built on a Drupal/PHP/MySQL stack, though we are investing heavily in Node.js, Redis, and Couchbase for our new products. We are not language snobs. We are hackers and doers. We are dedicated full stack developers who believe in using the right tools to create amazing experiences for our fans.
We have "official" job descriptions below, but we are interested in anyone who has a passion for technology and sports and the technical chops to push our team forward, be that in Dev, Ops, or QA.
You sound plenty hire-able to me, based on your story. Your best bet will be getting a job through a personal connection, somebody who _knows_ how you work and wants you (or is willing to strongly refer you). Barring that, not all companies will make you do sorting algorithms and brain teasers for a job interview.
My problem is that I have the memory retention of a gnat. I learn quickly, then discard the information to make way for new stuff. Six years ago, I was a full time .NET programmer (for years!) and I can barely remember anything about .NET at the moment. This makes certain types of technical interviews difficult for me.
My team runs a moderately high traffic web site. Learning quickly, being flexible, and fiercely persistent matter much more to us than a deep understanding of computer science concepts. Now that I am in a position where I do the hiring, I try to accommodate people like us. Unconventional background, hate whiteboarding in public, terrible memory. Whatever. Can you produce something of value in a reasonable time frame? That is all we care about.
The way I hire people now days is to give them a simple challenge to do (at home, on their own time). Basically, take a small data set and display it on a web page. Depending on the level of interviewee, I will ask for more or less features (make it sortable, derive additional data points according to some algorithm you must devise).
The challenge has no time limit or rules. You can use your own resources and do it on your own pace. When it gets sent back to me, I evaluate the candidate based on the final product. I don't much care how they got there. If the product is good, we bring you in for an interview.
During the interview, I ask you to work on _your_ code. The code you provided to get the interview. Essentially, we pair program. Adding features, fixing bugs. Whatever seems the most fun.
If you show me that you can code on your own codebase, using your tools and process, and you are pleasant enough to work with side-by-side for several hours, you've got the job.
I know you said you don't want to move, but we are hiring developers here where I work in NYC. Drop me a line if you are interested jdslatts at fzysqr dot com.
Sorry. We already moved to flowdock (https://www.flowdock.com). Turns out its about 1000x more appropriate for us anyway as a central dev status hub. I would encourage any dev team who was using grove.io to check it out. IRC client compatible!
All this consternation and speculation (and general negativeness) about a completely alpha stage product is why Apple does not show their products (much) before release.
Think about it. Now if you are Microsoft, you have to decide whether your vision is good or if you should "listen" to what the market is telling you and shift your strategy. Glad I don't have to make that decision.
Apple doesn't show their hardware products much before release. With their operating systems it's different. Remember, iOS 5 was announced a few months ago and still isn't released yet.
They sure are getting a crapload of publicity out of this. I much prefer them talking about it early than to late. If it's really bad ideas at least they can adjust before finalizing win8.
The time for Delicious may be over, but there seems to still be tons of demand. The mismanagement of Delicious created a perfect opportunity for http://pinboard.in/ to step in. I pay for the full archival membership and I highly recommend it.
If these are truly unintentional touches, as in, you were not touching the bar at all and it registered a key press, then you probably have a hardware issue. I just replaced a machine that would self press the touch bar on the right side when putting any sort of pressure (like resting your palms) to the right of the track pad.