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Cs50

Diana Kimball Berlin
Diana Kimball Berlin
Reading, writing, and what happens in between.
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Building SoundScout

Between November and December 2012, I built SoundScout as a way to discover up-and-coming musicians on SoundCloud. What started as a simple command-line script rapidly evolved into a Ruby app running on Sinatra, powered by two gems, deployed to Heroku, fueled by Sidekiq workers managed by a…


Code Log 12.4.2012

Notes on what it’s like to write code.

I woke up this morning and pulled my open laptop onto the mountainous comforter piled over my knees. Eyes blinking against the sunlight, I squinted at the Terminal window on my screen. Before email, before Twitter, before…


Code Log 11.4.2012

Notes on what it’s like to write code.

Today, I raced back into Ruby’s arms.

It’s hard to believe, but the end of the semester is drawing near, and so CS50 (the intro to computer science course I’m taking at Harvard) is winding down, too. Well…


Code Log 10.25.2012

Notes on what it’s like to write code.

The past month has been a quick, rocky plummet further into C. With every problem set, I feel like I’m hanging on for dear life. My eyes go wide as I read the specification; a few hours later, I’ll have solved one small part of…


Code Log 9.27.2012

Notes on what it’s like to write code.

It’s late (or early) — a bit past 2am on September 27, 2012. I just submitted my third CS50 problem set of the semester. It was titled “pset2,” (since, of course, the psets are zero-indexed), and marked two weeks of progress in C.


Unbundling the Classroom Experience

This year — my sixth on campus, and my last — I decided it was finally time to take CS50, Harvard’s introductory computer science course. CS50 lectures happen twice a week in Sanders Theatre, a ridiculously majestic setting. Yet for all intents and purposes (and…


Code Log 9.10.2012

Notes on what it’s like to write code.

CS50 started last week. It’s the introductory computer science class I never took as an undergrad, so I’m beyond excited to be taking it now. We learned all about psuedocode and binary and ASCII and Scratch. I watched both lectures…