Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | 2013-09-04login
Stories from September 4, 2013
Go back a day, month, or year. Go forward a day, month, or year.
1.How not to check the validity of an email address (dellsystem.me)
437 points by limelight on Sept 4, 2013 | 235 comments
2.School is a prison and damaging our kids (salon.com)
391 points by gz5 on Sept 4, 2013 | 380 comments
3.Warning: Google Authenticator upgrade loses all accounts
344 points by calvin on Sept 4, 2013 | 168 comments
4. [dupe] AngularJS Tutorial: Learn to Build Modern Web Apps (thinkster.io)
326 points by mfrisbie on Sept 4, 2013 | 91 comments
5. [dupe] KitKat's new website (kitkat.com)
300 points by dionyziz on Sept 4, 2013 | 150 comments
6.Glare from London 'fryscraper' blamed for melting cars (yahoo.com)
268 points by dsr12 on Sept 4, 2013 | 205 comments
7.The New AWS Command-Line Interface (aws.typepad.com)
265 points by jeffbarr on Sept 4, 2013 | 66 comments
8.N-gram Analysis of the New York Times Weddings Section (rapgenius.com)
250 points by lil_tee on Sept 4, 2013 | 64 comments

"The developers said the phenomenon was caused by 'the current elevation of the sun in the sky', and that as Britain heads into autumn the problem should disappear."

Thus solving the problem once and for all.

10.Learn X in Y minutes where X = Go (learnxinyminutes.com)
199 points by realrocker on Sept 4, 2013 | 88 comments
11.How The Art of Computer Programming was ruined for me (anuragramdasan.com)
194 points by anuragramdasan on Sept 4, 2013 | 113 comments
12.Yahoo showed us 30 days of logos. Here’s the one consumers liked best (survata.com)
193 points by awenger on Sept 4, 2013 | 98 comments

I'm an Architect and I have worked on large projects in London, although not this one thankfully[0], so I thought people might like to know how the process of designing a building like this works.

A developer hires an international 'starchitect' like Viñoly to design them an office block because the architects reputation for design helps them to get away with a larger building on the site and therefore get more net lettable area for their investment in land.

I don't know anyone who works for Vinoly, I've no idea what it's like to work for him, but I know other people who have worked in similar 'gesture architecture' practices and this is how it usually plays out:

The big boss will do a nice sketch of how he thinks a walkie talkie shaped skyscraper (or whatever shape is in fashion in the office) will fit on the site and then hand it off to a more junior member of staff to solve all the real problems. Meanwhile, he will have to go back to the international lecture/meet/greet circuit that pulls in the jobs and maintains their reputation for world class architecture.

The project team will then usually have a very tight deadline to produce the initial design, probably mostly drawn up by a team of recent architecture graduates who would be pretty low paid[1], and who will almost always end up working very long hours and weekends unpaid overtime to meet the deadline. Where the lead architectural practice is not based in the UK there will also be a local architect who will advise on local regulations, prepare the submissions for planning permission and generally deal with other regulatory authorities.

There will also be a large consultant team on a project of this scale. Probably consisting of two teams of civil engineers; one for superstructure and one for substructure. A geotechnical expert for the foundation design. A whole spread of HVAC engineers, probably separate mechanical, electrical, drainage and ventilation specialists. A facade engineer who specialises in problems specifically to do with the design of the glass cladding system. A fire engineer to design the fire escape strategy and help negotiate the fire fighting strategy with the local fire brigade. A vertical circulation engineer to design the lift and escalator strategy. A bomb blast engineer to model the effects of various bomb attack scenarios on the cladding and structure. A security consultant to advise on how defendable the building is and to design the cctv, active tramp deterrent systems :-( etc. Finally a quantity surveyor will advise on how much this will all cost.

All of these people will have been consulted briefly, probably mostly by video conference, across a couple of time zones, before the planning permission submission[2]. All their requirements have to be juggled between the different disciplines by the architect. As an architect who has done services coordination on skyscrapers and international airports, I can tell you it's not easy. One of the most frustrating things is that engineers from different disciplines don't talk to each other, even if they are working for the same firm. On top of this, the time allowed to prepare the planning submission will be a few months at most, and a lot of the effort will be spent on optimising the design and more importantly the presentation strategy to get through the planning permission process.

Once the planning permission submission has been approved, the overall shape of the scheme is fixed and hence the parabola shape can no longer be designed out. Therefore, if no-one notices a problem like this until after the planning submission, or perhaps fails to get someone higher up to take it seriously enough to change the concept design, then they will have to remedy it by using special anti glare coatings or just plain hoping it wont be too bad. This is for a couple of reasons: because the developer will be exerting large pressure to speed up construction as they will be paying a large amount of interest on the loan for the cost of the land, because consultancy fees to redo the design would be in the order of millions at this point and because getting planning permission for a scheme like this is very politically controversial so you don't risk doing it twice if you can avoid it.

So, you can probably see how something like this could easily have happened.

[0] Because it's pug ugly, not because of the solar death ray thing, that's quite amusing really. [1] Something like £20k per year in London, which is a crap salary after 6 years in University. [2] In the UK this is a semi-democratic consultation process which occurs at local government level and involves publicly presenting the designs to local councillors to give residents of the area a chance to raise a formal objection.

14.Things You Should Never Do, Part I (2000) (joelonsoftware.com)
174 points by joseflavio on Sept 4, 2013 | 154 comments
15.My first project in Rails – Pastebin for Mathematicians (texpaste.herokuapp.com)
136 points by huy on Sept 4, 2013 | 65 comments
16.HDMI 2.0 officially announced (engadget.com)
135 points by nreece on Sept 4, 2013 | 133 comments
17."Forensics for Prosecutors" mentions backdoor in TrueCrypt (page 15) [pdf] (cryptome.org)
134 points by jhickner on Sept 4, 2013 | 57 comments
18.From Mr Average to Superman: Craig Davidson's account of using steroids (2008) (theguardian.com)
130 points by jackschultz on Sept 4, 2013 | 101 comments
19.We Post Nothing About Our Daughter Online (slate.com)
120 points by mashmac2 on Sept 4, 2013 | 141 comments

What I find the most amazing about this whole thing is that it was designed by the same architect as the "death ray" building in Las Vegas. You would think they would have learned from their mistake.

http://www.businessinsider.com/architect-behind-the-walkie-t...

21.Why Cassandra Doesn't Need Vector Clocks (datastax.com)
118 points by nickmbailey on Sept 4, 2013 | 68 comments
22.Didn't Get Enough Sleep? You Might As Well Be Drunk (forbes.com/sites/kellyclay)
110 points by bparsons on Sept 4, 2013 | 67 comments
23.Amazon ElastiCache - Now With a Dash of Redis (aws.typepad.com)
113 points by jeffbarr on Sept 4, 2013 | 40 comments
24.How to spot a fake Canon flash (petapixel.com)
105 points by unwind on Sept 4, 2013 | 65 comments

"But what abou-"

"ONCE AND FOR ALL!"

26.OpenStack adds new hypervisor to support Docker containers (openstack.org)
114 points by julien421 on Sept 4, 2013 | 11 comments
27.Sleep 'boosts brain cell numbers' (bbc.co.uk)
100 points by akandiah on Sept 4, 2013 | 40 comments

There's a reason for this pattern. When I complained to a friend at Google about the new GMail compose, he said that what was driving it was that Larry wanted a beautiful, consistent look throughout all Google's products. That sort of motivation leads to design disasters. The various Google products may have been inconsistent, but each of their designs was the product of long evolution.

Steve Jobs could probably have forced consistency on Google's products without breaking them, but few CEOs have the taste Steve had.

29.Oddities in x86 Assembly (code.google.com)
96 points by tristanj on Sept 4, 2013 | 7 comments
30.Cap'n Proto v0.3: Python support, better tools, other improvements (kentonv.github.io)
101 points by kentonv on Sept 4, 2013 | 22 comments

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: