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HPSHELTON

Programming, Privacy, Politics, Photography

Apr 5, 2018

Testing in Production, the Safe Way →

Great overview of various techniques for testing in production and qualifying releases.

Mar 17, 2018

Responding to American Christianity's obsession with youth →

"Yes, overall having a youth pastor is a net positive. However, those positive elements can be undercut when we imagine that the youth pastor is the "youths' pastor." Instead, it is the job of the youth pastor to be pastoring the whole congregation with the particular job of advocating, listening to, and connecting young people with others in the congregation."

Mar 12, 2018

You're Browsing a Website. These Companies May Be Recording Your Every Move. →

Analytics software that measures mouse movements or keystrokes has been around for years, says Steven Englehardt, one of the authors of the study. But the technology has typically been used to track groups of users, such as the parts of a web page where visitors linger the longest. The researchers found that FullStory and the other companies are now tracking users individually, sometimes by name.

Dig into the underlying research presented at https://freedom-to-tinker.com/tag/noboundaries/.

Mar 11, 2018

How Can I Possibly Believe That Faith Is Better Than Doubt? →

Lots of great quotes in here.

Mar 10, 2018

U.S. Soldiers Are Revealing Sensitive and Dangerous Information by Jogging →

In war zones and deserts in countries such as Iraq and Syria, the heat map becomes almost entirely dark — except for scattered pinpricks of activity. Zooming in on those areas brings into focus the locations and outlines of known U.S. military bases, as well as of other unknown and potentially sensitive sites — presumably because American soldiers and other personnel are using fitness trackers as they move around.

Good opsec, y'all.

Mar 9, 2018

The Boys Are Not All Right →

Too many boys are trapped in the same suffocating, outdated model of masculinity, where manhood is measured in strength, where there is no way to be vulnerable without being emasculated, where manliness is about having power over others. They are trapped, and they don't even have the language to talk about how they feel about being trapped, because the language that exists to discuss the full range of human emotion is still viewed as sensitive and feminine.

Mar 8, 2018

I finally learned to accept my own vulnerability as a man. It helped. →

What men need most is a willingness to own our vulnerability, weakness and even shame, alongside our strengths. This is where real liberation begins. The most profound shift in my own life occurred when I found myself able to say, "Yes, I have shortcomings I wish I could be free of — but they are not all of who I am."

Feb 14, 2018

Why Roses Cost What They Do →

The majority of roses Americans give one another on Valentine's Day, roughly 200 million in all, grow here, the savanna outside Bogota, summoned from the soil by 12 hours of natural sunlight, the 8,400-foot altitude and an abundance of cheap labor.

Globalization at work.

Feb 12, 2018

Why Paper Jams Persist →

There are many loose ends in high-tech life. Like unbreachable blister packs or awkward sticky tape, paper jams suggest that imperfection will persist, despite our best efforts. They're also a quintessential modern problem - a trivial consequence of an otherwise efficient technology that's been made monumentally annoying by the scale on which that technology has been adopted. Every year, printers get faster, smarter, and cheaper. All the same, jams endure.

Jan 29, 2018

The surprising thing Google learned about its employees →

Project Oxygen shocked everyone by concluding that, among the eight most important qualities of Google's top employees, STEM expertise comes in dead last.

Project Aristotle shows that the best teams at Google exhibit a range of soft skills: equality, generosity, curiosity toward the ideas of your teammates, empathy, and emotional intelligence. And topping the list: emotional safety.

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H. Parker Shelton

I'm just an ordinary thirty-something who's had some extraordinary opportunities. I graduated from Johns Hopkins University, work for Microsoft in Silicon Valley, code websites and applications, take the occasional photograph, and keep a constant eye on current events, politics, and technology. This blog is the best of what catches that eye.

 
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