When HN gets in the way

Reading stuff online can become addictive. So addictive, in fact, that it can negatively affect your productivity as a programmer. Most of us go to Hacker News or Reddit to get our dose of news. We justify it by saying that it’s research or that we are trying to stay current in the community. Whatever your excuse, you know you have a problem when you check Hacker News every ten minutes just to see if anything new and awesome has been added.

“Close Hacker News and open a f***ing book.” – Steve Losh in this talk.

Maybe you have already gotten over the initial self-denial and you have added some entries to your /etc/hosts file to keep yourself from constantly going to those sites. That’s all well and good but I think we can do better.

You’ve already opened the tab and you are now staring at a blank error page. Why not put something more useful there?

Me, I like to learn new things. There are way too many things I’d like to learn. Why not show a list of things I’d like to learn and allow me to click through to the website?

I have installed nginx on my machine and set up a simple static page with a few links things like Learn You a Haskell for Great Good or Steve Losh’s Learn Vimscript the Hardway. Now every time I go to HN, I see those links and am reminded that I wanted to spend some time learning those things…

Steps

Install nginx. brew install nginx or sudo apt-get install nginx or whatever might apply to you.

Stick this in your nginx.conf :

worker_processes 1; http { include mime.types; default_type application/octet-stream; keepalive_timeout 65; server { listen 443; server_name news.ycombinator.com; ssl on; ssl_certificate /usr/local/etc/nginx/server.crt; ssl_certificate_key /usr/local/etc/nginx/server.key; location / { root html; index index.html index.htm; } } server { listen 80; server_name reddit.com; location / { root html; index index.html index.htm; } } }

If any of the sites you are blocking are served over SSL, you will need to get a self-signed certificate. This is a one time setup and doesn’t really take that long to do.

$ openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -out server.crt -keyout server.key $ chmod 600 server.key

Now you just place those two files to the locations referenced in the above nginx.conf file and restart nginx.

And here is how you can make Chrome stop complaining about your self-signed certificate (source).

In the address bar, click the little lock with the X. This will bring up a

small information screen. Click the button that says “Certificate Information.”

Click and drag the image to your desktop. It looks like a little

certificate.

Double-click it. This will bring up the Keychain Access utility. Enter your

password to unlock it.

Be sure you add the certificate to the System keychain, not the login

keychain. Click “Always Trust,” even though this doesn’t seem to do anything.

After it has been added, double-click it. You may have to authenticate

again. Expand the “Trust” section.

“When using this certificate,” set to “Always Trust”

That’s it! Close Keychain Access and restart Chrome, and your self-signed

certificate should be recognized now by the browser.

Conclusion

Hopefully, this will be helpful to you and nudge you every now and then to learn something you’ve been putting off.