Good point, thanks! I've removed the footnote, and I'm going to rewrite that paragraph to steer away from Common Lisp a bit.
My point wasn't Clojure > Common Lisp. I was simply anticipating the "but npm has 200k modules" argument against Lisps in general and I wanted to illustrate why it doesn't matter if you're using Clojure.
It does seem like a somewhat valid case against Common Lisp, but I don't care and it detracts from my main point.
We emailed them for permission to make a custom server a while back, and they said it was ok. We haven't contacted them specifically about the MMO yet though.
Like orangethirty said, foodies tend to be really visual, so we encourage the user to take a high quality photo by making it the focus of their recipe page.
Good job, I'm excited to see where you go with this. :)
Whenever my business partner or I have one of those "WE SHOULD MAKE A GITHUB FOR BIOLOGY!" moments, we put it on a Trello card in the "Someday" pile, tag it with the appropriate categories, and write all our thoughts on the card. We've also got "soon," "doing," and "done" categories, but we mostly use the board as an idea bank for those "Somedays."
My point wasn't Clojure > Common Lisp. I was simply anticipating the "but npm has 200k modules" argument against Lisps in general and I wanted to illustrate why it doesn't matter if you're using Clojure.
It does seem like a somewhat valid case against Common Lisp, but I don't care and it detracts from my main point.