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Not if you want to search for it.


The search expression "go programming language" gets http://golang.org/‎ as first hit.

How hard is that?


If you really want to know it isn't for finding the main site that everyone uses golang it is for finding all other references to the language.

As an example cloudflare writes a large amount of posts that have something to do with go if you google "go cloudflare" you get relevant results but you also get results of google mixing in the word "get" for go which are completely irrelevent.

Now if you google "golang cloudflare" all results pertain to the Go programming language.

(Not the best example because cloudflare doesn't use golang in their posts).


Easy, "go programming language" cloudflare


You'll probably never get it without an exorbitant amount of money.

Try looking for a similar name plenty of people use search engines and bookmarks so a domain like thexxxx.com or getxxxx.com isn't that ridiculous.


Rackspace is pretty bare bones and lots of people like it: http://www.rackspace.com/email-hosting/webmail

I use fastmail https://www.fastmail.fm

Depending on your uses one might be cheaper than the other, fastmail is pretty cheap if you only have 1 user for all the domains (you can alias whatever email addresses you want) ($40/year personal plan)

Rackspace I haven't really used so I don't know how they handle multiple domains it might be cheaper to use them with multiple users. They do require a minimum $10/month


As long as your pdfs translate well to grayscale it should be fine.

The new kindle web browser is quite nice (I believe it uses webkit) but isn't something you'll want to use for anything that you want to get done quickly.

I haven't tried this new DX but I love eink screens and feel that they are much easier to read than laptop/ipad or other birgh screens.


I think it's the same ol' DX, just back in stock.


It is actually a comparable price to other phones.

Without contract the iphone 5 is rather expensive as well.


You make a good point, but (actually) happy with my current phone plan and wouldn't mind extending another two years for a cheaper HTC One with stock android.


I don't like the Svbtle style but I don't think you should suggest using something that stole the design and is not condoned by the original author.

It's so funny how outraged hacker news becomes when a startups design is stolen but when dcurtis made svbtle a private platform they were all to happy to have people steal the design.


I've never followed this brouhaha--was it stolen (i.e., was code lifted from svbtle) or is it a reimplementation?

I mean, to me it looks pretentious and lame and I'd never use it, but it seems like it'd be legally actionable if there was actual copyright violations in the offing.


From vague recollection - there was some pretty damning evidence when it launched that entire swathes of css were direct copies - not just functional equivalence, but identical class/id/selector names.

(Note: this vague recollection might not have been about the particular WordPress theme in the parent comment, but I do recall looking at one of the early Svbtle WP clones and seeing this)


Are you on XP? (I ask because it looks like you don't have any anti-aliasing on).

If you adjust your cleartype settings (or turn it on in XP) it will look a bit more normal.


On Windows 7 but yes, you were right. I got a new machine and the cleartype was not turned on yet. It looks much better now. http://i.imgur.com/73Ic6w0.png I appreciate your help.


I don't know why the parent comment does it but with nginx you can leverage things like caching out of the box. (Would mostly be used on static files, either generated or pre-made).


Don't break my browser defaults for your preferences.

If I want it to open in a new window I'll shift+click and if I want a new tab I'll ctrl+click or middle mouse click.


Gmail has it as an option (labs last I used gmail), that is the best way I think to do it.

I don't ever find a need to undo an email though.

I believe it was only for like 20-30 seconds as well that it offered undo.


  | Gmail has it as an option
Supposedly Gmail added this as an option because their infrastructure was setup in such a way that the delay was already there. They just made hooks so that you could cancel it before it was sent.


Any chance you could hunt down a reference for this? I regularly test email servers from my Gmail account (amongst others) and I've found that their outgoing messages hit my mail servers almost instantly.


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