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7 hours later…
6:41 AM
Morning, What is this navigation gem sorcery. sounds interesting
And how does it make my app easier to code than the if conditions?
Netbeans has a ruby IDE? Im looking for an open source IDE, my RUby Mine Evaluation is expiring
 
I use Atom
 
7:00 AM
I use atom too, occasionally
 
 
3 hours later…
10:08 AM
I saw this fantastic comment about sock puppeteering by Jan and wanted to share it:
what if I use a sock to crank up my spam flag count so that I can flag more of the spam that keeps piling up on the front page of this brand new site? Is it still abuse? — Jan Dvorak May 28 '15 at 10:13
 
 
1 hour later…
11:37 AM
So i ended up with Aptana Studio for my IDE..... I think its better than RubyMine so far, still learning the keyboard shortcuts but i love it
 
 
2 hours later…
1:54 PM
What do you like better about Aptana Studio?
 
 
1 hour later…
3:23 PM
@Ndeto i'm not sure it does...as everything in rails, you have to twist your thinking from logical to "magical" ... but interestingly, tabs_on_rails ...i just tag each controller to set the tab name when it calls the views & i think I can just feed that into the :title too, so two birds one stone ... i'm at the point though where I have to extend his builder to make it set "active" inplace of the string for "current" so bootstrap and other frontend frameworks will work with it.
(small change, 1 word of 1 line in a 18ish line class I mostly copied)...github.com/weppos/tabs_on_rails#creating-a-custom-builder
nm, it's buried in the source, but I can set active_class => "active"` where as default is "current"
 
 
2 hours later…
5:50 PM
Trying out the "secure erase" hard drive command, because... why not?
If you don't see me back for a while it's because I targeted the wrong drive :D
 
lol
i feel like it's wasted spins but :)
 
6:13 PM
I've got an old drive I'm decommissioning--it was a backup drive. I could use dd or shred, the old fashioned way, but the data is not super sensitive so trying the drive's built-in erase. It can supposedly erase inaccessible blocks (those that were swapped out for spares).
 
kind of cool
 
But it's up to the manufacturer to implement it correctly, so if the data were very sensitive I'd probably erase the old-fashioned way (dd or shred) first.
It is kind of cool. And the old fashioned way doesn't work reliably on SSDs, so you kind of have to use the manufacturer's built-in erase for those.
 
...wayne...I'm pretty sure if you burn the harddrive for being a witch, even SSD's will give up the ghost...
 
Hah!
Paranoia. It's a fine hobby.
 
6:48 PM
The drive doesn't have a partition table anymore, so it has the appearance of having been erased.
And my computer still runs, so I appear to have selected the correct drive to erase.
 
w00t
 
7:34 PM
That was interesting. Apparently I had the boot loader installed on the drive I just wiped and removed. W00t indeed!
 
How'd you save yourself?
 
I had a rescue CD... that I had been using as a coaster. Fortunately, it still worked.
When I'm all done with this adventure, I'll burn a new rescue CD. And not use it as a coaster.
 
Floppies might make better coasters.
 
Haha, yeah.
 
Nooo my first file :'(
 
7:40 PM
Planning my course. This is more complicated than the usual "replace failed drive and rebuild the array" because I want to change the partition layout at the same time, and also end up with a hot spare. Hmm.
I was going to run with one of the new drives as a hot spare, but things get easier if I let the old surviving drive be the host spare.
Things also get easier if I don't repartition. Choices, choices.
 
7:55 PM
I pick easy path #1. See you later, hopefully.
 
8:21 PM
Hi @all, I have developed an API ( first time) , just want to know the ensure points that I must cover, what are the commons mistake
 
9:13 PM
@prakash Consider versioning your API. This will allow you to later make breaking changes to the API (such as removing an endpoint) without causing problems for existing users of the API.
878
Q: Best practices for API versioning?

Swaroop C HAre there any known how-tos or best practices for web service REST API versioning? I have noticed that AWS does versioning by the URL of the endpoint. Is this the only way or are there other ways to accomplish the same goal? If there are multiple ways, what are the merits of each way?

This question was closed for being opinion based, but some of the opinions expressed there may be useful.
 

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