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We use ws(https://github.com/websockets/ws) in prod. Clean, fast, and simple. Plus it supports browsify using native implementation but wraps it to fit the server side api.


I really dig http://asoftmurmur.com/

* he has worked very hard on blending the loops. They are not detectable in the 100 hours or so I have listened to them.

* It has an Android app

* I would much rather listen to outdoors noise


This may be my favorite from this thread simply because there are individual volume sliders for each sound.


Thanks, this is awesome!



http://www.noisli.com/ is pretty good as well.


when not listening to music and needing to drown out coworkers on the phone I am partial to earplugs + http://rain.simplynoise.com/ (it also has an app) I usually take out the thunder which is distracting but the rain itself sounds nice


It is a newer pattern so I would expect there is friction. The problem is if there is any serious amount of depth to your app you need to overflow the access to the other features somehow and this is, in my opinion, a good way to do it. I think that given enough time and it becomes a pretty common pattern the pain of discoverability that the article brings up will not be an issue. Most of the arguments brought up in the article are only valid in apps with focused small sets of functionality. I think the move Google did with the Google+ app is a good(bad) example, they got rid of the hamburger menu in favor of a combination of several menus (bottom menu with a expanded menu at the top). I find trying to find things in this new app painful. The hamburger menu excels as a landing point or a dashboard access to functionality.


The book The Man Who Lied to His Laptop [1] shows that if you asked a person if they view a computer they have iteration with it view it as a person to person engagement they would say no, experiments show otherwise. There is a base emotional impact from these things that people don't obviously notice. Sure the user would not think that message seems impolite they will notice it at least subconsciously. A good example is when rating a piece of software via a electronic survey the group that took the survey on the same computer they used the software on consistently gave it better scores. Its a very interesting book.

[1] http://smile.amazon.com/Man-Who-Lied-His-Laptop/dp/161723004...


Lets not forget Chester and Coatesville I don't know if every area has these sink holes or its just the NE's reliance on those lost jobs and the population density that make these places occur.


Bing. This is an older article and they are not losing as much money anymore, but Bing has cost MS a lot of money.

http://money.cnn.com/2011/09/20/technology/microsoft_bing/


If he really is bipolar (manic-depressive is an outdated term that most of us don't use) this sounds like a very manic period after coming out of depression. The truth is somewhere in the middle. If he sustains this for more than 6 months it might be sustainable, otherwise his mania will run out and the depression will set back in.


Samsung's processors are not powerful enough for LTE, at least that has been the reasoning in the past. I'm guessing the new lower power Octa cant push LTE, and being that LTE is still pretty much a US thing we get different SoC.


It's cleaned up, but looks like its missing something. I waited for a while after the page loaded expecting more style/design. I would think they could come up with something a little more exciting.


Good design takes iteration. I always find new design launches are underwhelming and have many flaws, but they always get fixed up nicely.


Your confirmation email ended up in my gmail spam box. Not sure if its me or gmail.

Other than that I really like the low traction.


Thanks for that feedback! We'll look into getting a better email service.

By 'low traction' I presume you mean the ease of signing up. Thanks, yes, we made it super-easy on purpose. Our target market is busy people who don't feel like chasing down new jobs.


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