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In this episode, Benedict shows some of the tools he loves to use including Markdown (producing PDFs and other docs using Pandoc), AWK, and Graphviz. A lot of tutorials and getting-started links in this practical-oriented episode for you. NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines The Markdown Guide (https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/) The Pandoc Website (https://pandoc.org) Using Pandoc and Typst to Produce PDFs (https://imaginarytext.ca/posts/2024/pandoc-typst-tutorial) Eisvogel LaTeX Pandoc template (https://github.com/enhuiz/eisvogel) News Roundup Awk in 20 Minutes (https://ferd.ca/awk-in-20-minutes.html) Awk by Example (https://developer.ibm.com/tutorials/l-awk1/) W3 Schools Tutorials (https://www.w3schools.com) The dot Guide (https://graphviz.org/pdf/dotguide.pdf) Introduction to Graphviz (https://ncona.com/2020/06/create-diagrams-with-code-using-graphviz/) Browser-based Graphviz Editor SketchViz (https://sketchviz.com/) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Producer Note Once we reach Episode 600, I will be backfilling out fireside website with the older episodes (before 283), depending on how your podcast feed service works, you may get a bunch of new notifications of episodes. Sadly there's nothing I can do about that, but I wanted everyone to be aware that. Also once we hit 600, we will be announcing some new Patreon Perks and new ways you can engage and get involved with the show. More to come in the upcoming weeks as we finalize those plans amongst the team. Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) Join us and other BSD Fans in our BSD Now Telegram channel (https://t.me/bsdnow)
Pisanie dobrej dokumentacji dla deweloperów oprócz wysoko rozwiniętego warsztatu językowego wymaga również umiejętności technicznych, takich jak kodowanie. Czy teoretyczna znajomość pewnych zagadnień jest wystarczająca czy trzeba również posiadać doświadczenie praktyczne? Rozmawiamy o tym jak bardzo zaawansowane umiejętności techniczne powinien posiadać technoskryba w świecie rozwoju oprogramowania i czego powinien się nauczyć, żeby brylować na deweloperskich salonach i tworzyć dokumentację o wysokiej jakości i wiarygodności. Dźwięki wykorzystane w audycji pochodzą z kolekcji "107 Free Retro Game Sounds" dostępnej na stronie https://dominik-braun.net, udostępnianej na podstawie licencji Creative Commons license CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Informacje dodatkowe: React.js: https://react.dev/ "Git (oprogramowanie)", Wikipedia: https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Git_(oprogramowanie) "Git Amend", W3Schools: https://www.w3schools.com/git/git_amend.asp?remote=github GitHub: https://github.com/ "JavaScript", Wikipedia: https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript "Java", Wikipedia: https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java Docker: https://www.docker.com/ Docker Compose overview: https://docs.docker.com/compose/ "Docker image vs container: What are the differences?", CircleCI: https://circleci.com/blog/docker-image-vs-container/ "Why is Python a dynamic language and also a strongly typed language": https://wiki.python.org/moin/Why%20is%20Python%20a%20dynamic%20language%20and%20also%20a%20strongly%20typed%20language Kubernetes: https://kubernetes.io/ "How to Launch an HTTP Server in One Line of Python Code", Real Python: https://realpython.com/python-http-server/ Npm serve: https://www.npmjs.com/package/serve REST Client, VS Code: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=humao.rest-client HTTP Client, IntelliJ IDEA: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/http-client-in-product-code-editor.html curl: https://curl.se/ Postman: https://www.postman.com/ "bash", Wikipedia: https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash
Here I will talk about top 5 websites to learn javascript this is a bonus episode for you
How to create a simple space shooter web game using Javascript and HTML Canvas, as well as drawing the Tennessee state flag. Demo code – https://github.com/levidsmith/KnoxGameDesign/tree/master/javascript Links and Notes Javascript reference at Mozilla – https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference Canvas API at Mozilla – https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Canvas_API HTML Canvas reference at W3Schools – https://www.w3schools.com/tags/ref_canvas.asp Podcast theme music – Ride by Pocketmaster
Season number: 2 | Episode number: 2001 | Episode type: Bonus | Content: Clean [Bonus Content] What is Python? Python is a popular computer programming language. It was created by Guido van Rossum. And, according to W3Schools.com, it was released in 1991.
Welcome to Code Completion, Episode 61! We are a group of iOS developers and educators hoping to share what we love most about development, Apple technology, and completing your code! Follow us @CodeCompletion (https://twitter.com/CodeCompletion) on Twitter to hear about our upcoming livestreams, videos, and other content. Today, we discuss: - Web Development - wat (https://www.destroyallsoftware.com/talks/wat) - MacStadium Collocation (https://www.macstadium.com/colo#products) - Vapor (http://vapor.codes) - W3Schools (https://www.w3schools.com) Your hosts for this week: * Spencer Curtis (https://twitter.com/SpencerCCurtis) * Dimitri Bouniol (https://twitter.com/DimitriBouniol) Be sure to also sign up to our monthly newsletter (https://codecompletion.io/), where we will recap the topics we discussed, reveal the answers to #CompleteTheCode, and share even more things we learned in between episodes. You are what makes this show possible, so please be sure to share this with your friends and family who are also interested in any part of the app development process.
Carla Román, experta en Python, nos comenta el por qué este lenguaje multidisciplinario es gran demandado por las empresas a nivel mundial, además de brindarnos tips y recursos gratuitos para empezar a aprender. Notas del episodio sugeridas por Carla Aprende Python Gratis en: W3Schools: https://www.w3schools.com/python/default.asp Código Facilito: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLE549A038CF82905F Cursos de pago: Platzy: https://platzi.com/clases/python/ Mentor Lab: https://www.facebook.com/mentorlabcbba/ Sigue a Carla en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/carlirom.py/ Visita MentorLab: https://www.facebook.com/mentorlabcbba/ Visita nuestra web: https://declarandovariables.com/ Siguenos en nuetras redes sociales: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Declarando-Variables-112507530523436 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/declarandovariables/
Last Week in .NET - January 30th, 2021We're getting our first snow here in the DC area for the first time in what feels like forever; and the .NET team is pondering the true meaning of the words "Backlog management". Let's get to it.
Checkout Code Academy, W3Schools, or just google learn web development and learn from the free sources! Support the Chattervast Podcast! Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/chattervast Store: https://teespring.com/stores/chattervast Podcast: https://anchor.fm/chattervast Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/chattervast/id1535136464 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/chattervast/support
8/24/20POW! Diego Lizarazo, Samsung Developer Evangelist Season 1, Episode 11In this episode of POW, I interview Diego Lizarazo, Senior Developer Evangelist at Samsung. Diego is a self-proclaimed tech geek and he is all about coding apps. Both Diego and I work together as part of the Samsung Developer Program and I have invited Diego to be a future guest host on the podcast. Where my specialty is design, Diego’s specialty is coding, and his tech geek personality shines as we chat about his path to Samsung and how he is helping the developer community.Topics Covered:· Journey to Samsung· Developer Conferences· COVID-19· Future of Gaming· Game Development· Global Developers· Spanish Webinars· Learning to Code· Hackathons· Tizen TidbitsSamsung Developer ProgramVisit the Samsung Developer Program website at developer.samsung.com to learn more about developer opportunities and building a relationship with Samsung.Be sure to sign up for the Samsung Developer Newsletter to learn about the latest from the Samsung Developer Program. More POW!Like and subscribe to the POW! podcast where ever you listen to your favorite shows. https://samsungdev.buzzsprout.com/ Helpful Links:Galaxy Store· Getting StartedTizen· developer.tizen.orgLearning to Code· Freecodecamp.org· W3schools.comExample Code· Codepen.ioGame Development Tools· phaser.io· scirra.com· unity.comGame Assets· opengameart.com· sketchfab.comGenerate Colors Combinations· coolors.coFree Software· gimp.org (Photoshop Alternative - Pixel Based)· inkscape.org (Illustrator Alternative - Vector Based)GuestDiego Lizarazo, Senior Developer Evangelist, SamsungTwitter - twitter.com/hielo777Instagram - instagram.com/hielo777LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/diego-lizarazo-24620613Samsung Developer ProgramHomepage - developer.samsung.comBlog - developer.samsung.com/blogNews - developer.samsung.com/newsFacebook - facebook.com/samsungdevInstagram - instagram.com/samsung_devTwitter - twitter.com/samsung_devYouTube - youtube.com/samsungdevelopersLinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/samsungdevelopersHostTony Morelan, Senior Developer Evangelist, Samsung Twitter - @axeirbuzzInstagram - #axeirbuzzLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/tony-morelan
SQL is the language of databases, and SQL programmers are in high demand. This week, I want to share how to learn SQL for free — and in your spare time — during quarantine. All you need to get started is access to an MYSQL database, as well as some datasets to play around with. 1. Install a Database — If you want to learn SQL, you’re going to need a SQL database. One of the easiest ways to get a database is to register for a shared hosting account. If you go to hostgator.com and enter the code “onemonthcode,″ you’ll gain access to a MYSQL database for only $0.01 (for the first month). Once you’re in the control panel (or cPanel) click the option to create a new database. Then, click on “PHPMyAdmin” for access to your MYSQL database. Watch this video on setting up shared hosting to learn more. 2. Download a (Free) SQL Dataset — In order to learn SQL, you need a dataset. I've included a free SQL dataset (.sql file) that you can download and upload to your MYSQL database. Open it in Sublime Text, or any text editor, right now, and you can see! Once you’ve completed the MYSQL installation, go to your MYSQL database and click “Import” to import this .sql file. 3. Discover some great resources! My favorite SQL book is Sams Teach Yourself SQL in 10 Minutes by Ben Forta! They say only 10 minutes a day, but you’ll find all the knowledge you need to write SQL statements in this tiny book. One of my favorite free online resources for SQL code is W3Schools. They have some pretty great SQL quizzes you can try out too! Once you’re ready to ramp things up and become a true SQL expert, consider signing up for my 30-day One Month Learn SQL course. During the course, you’ll learn to read, write, query, and analyze data using 20+ of the most popular SQL commands.
W3Schools (https://www.w3schools.com) Census (/podcasts/alex-census)
Hi and welcome back to Weekly Dev Tips. I’m your host Steve Smith, aka Ardalis. This is episode 43, with a quick story about dependency injection. A Dependency Injection Story Sponsor - devBetter Group Career Coaching for Developers Are you a software developer looking to advance in your career more quickly? Would you find a mentor and a group of like-minded professionals valuable? If so, check out devBetter.com and read the testimonials at the bottom of the page. Sign up for a risk free membership if you're interested in growing your network and skills with us. Show Notes / Transcript A few years and several businesses ago, my wife and I ran an online ad business, Lake Quincy Media, that served banner ads on software developer web sites like W3Schools, www.asp.net, and ASPAlliance.com. I wrote the original ad serving software for the company, and over the years as we grew we built a team and rewrote it a couple of times. We were using ASP.NET, what would now be called web forms, at the time I first really understood how to use dependency injection. I still remember exactly how it happened, and it dramatically changed how I looked at structuring my object-oriented applications from that point forward. Backing up a bit, I'd learned about and bought into practices like automated testing and continuous integration some years earlier. These practices were not as widespread as they are today, especially in the Microsoft development space, but we were using them at Lake Quincy Media to good effect on our ad server software (which also included publisher and advertiser portals, etc.). We were using a CI server called Cruise Control which included a nice system tray tool called CCTray that would pop up a notification and play a sound any time the build failed or was fixed. It worked great and problems that broke the build were quickly addressed by our small team. However, the application was architected using a traditional N-Tier architecture that was the recommended approach at that time. This meant that the ASP.NET application depended on the business logic application which in turn depended on the data access layer that called the database. Tests of the business logic required a test database, and so our tests ran SQL scripts that reset the database to a known good state before every test. Running several hundred of these tests took about 5-10 minutes on the build server as a result, which wasn't ideal. The point is, we were using automated tests, but our architecture was forcing us to rely more on integration tests rather than unit tests. This background leads to the next part of the story. I remember distinctly trying to write a test for a method that dealt with saving new banner ad media files once they were uploaded to the server. The method in question needed to save the file, perform some work on the file, and then based on some other factors, call some other methods. I was trying to write tests for this, but I was forced to write tests that actually dealt with the file system, and these were very painful. A configuration file was required to specify the upload path, this path wasn't the same between servers and developer machines. Sometimes the file would be locked and tests would fail, or someone would check in a different version of the config file with the path set wrong, and the tests would fail. It was quite brittle, and the files access really wasn't what was being tested - the conditional logic of the method was. By chance I was chatting with my friend and fellow MVP and Iraq war veteran, Jeffrey Palermo as I was struggling with this. He hopped on a screenshare with me and showed me how to change my business-level class so it wasn't working directly with the file system. Instead, he created an interface that included the required file operations like save and rename file, and moved the actual logic for working with the file system into a new class that implemented this interface. Then he created an instance of the interface in the business-level class, which was set by the constructor. However, in our test code, he showed me how to create a fake implementation of the file interface, which we could have the tests configure to return whatever kind of result we needed for the test case we were validating. This was huge! It literally blew my mind and changed how I thought about and wrote code from that day forward. Aaron B., who recently joined my tips mailing list, prompted this tip with his question, "What is one thing you wish you knew when you first started your development career?" and this is what I thought of. Thanks, Aaron, and thanks again, Jeffrey, for showing me this awesome technique for reducing painful coupling in software applications. Needless to say, armed with this technique and a desire to learn more about the related SOLID principles, my tests quickly started to emphasize unit tests wherever possible instead of intregration tests for everything. Our builds started to get faster, and we found tests were quicker and easier to write as well. This was over ten years ago now, but I wish I'd learned it much sooner in my career, and I hope sharing it here will help some of you. If you have a story you'd like to share about something you learned later in your career that you wish you'd learned sooner, go to weeklydevtips.com/043 and leave it as a comment. Thanks! Show Resources and Links devBetter See Visualizations and Subscribe to WeeklyDevTips in YouTube Clean Code on Amazon That’s it for this week. If you want to hear more from me, go to ardalis.com/tips to sign up for a free tip in your inbox every Wednesday. I'm also streaming programming topics on twitch.tv/ardalis most Fridays at noon Eastern Time. Thank you for subscribing to Weekly Dev Tips, and I'll see you next week with another great developer tip.
Episode 18: 1. SoloLearn [dot] com Learn to code for free and earn XPs, badges, & certificates. 2. W3Schools [dot] com A popular free reference & learning resource for web developers. 3. freeCodeCamp [dot] org Another great resource to learn web development for free. Next episode: TBD (To Be Decided). Web pythonfumasters.com | Facebook @pythonfumasters | Instagram @masterhun
DO YOU ENJOY THE PODCAST? SUPPORT THE SHOW! Support for this episode came from: Domain.com My Awesome Supporters! Become one today! Feedback, Shoutouts, and Links Sully Baseball Podcast Dan Gallagher Dan Borgoff Stacey Lindes Code Interactive Chris Harris Denis Sheeran, author of Instant Relevance: Using Today's Experience to Teach Tomorrow's Lessons Sylwia Denko Kathy Chow-Isaacs #EdTech Thought Take Risks Get out there! Meet and engage people Get into the places you want to be. Surround yourself with what you want to do and be. Be a communicator. Allow yourself to be pushed and encouraged by others. Be selfless and be a giver. Make investments in yourself. You're worth it! Have the guts and tenacity. #EdTech Recommendation Neocities - Neocities is a social network of 126,900 websites that are bringing back the lost individual creativity of the web. We offer free web hosting and tools that allow you to create your own website. W3 Schools - W3Schools is a web developers site, with tutorials and references on web development languages such as HTML, CSS, JavaScript, PHP, SQL, W3.CSS, and Bootstrap, covering most aspects of web programming.The site derives its name from the World Wide Web (W3), but is not affiliated with the W3C.W3Schools was originally created in 1998 by Refsnes Data, a Norwegian software development and consulting company. Featured Content IGNITE STEM: With significant backing from Princeton University, Wolfram Alpha, Google Education, and more, IgniteSTEM brings together thought leaders to make the “classroom of the future” a reality. Through international series of conferences, IgniteSTEM empowers educators and provides cutting edge ideas to disrupt STEM learning environments with education technology and project-based learning. Speakers I learned from: Jonathan Rochelle - Product Management Director at Google Apps for Education. He managed the startup and launch of Google Classroom, Expeditions, and related Google Apps for Education. He previously worked as Product Management Director and Co-Founder of Google Docs & Drive. The company he co-founded and led as CEO was acquired by Google in 2005 to become the basis for Google Sheets. Matthew Brimer - An entrepreneur, community builder, and instigator of creative mischief. He is Co-Founder of General Assembly, and has recently launched GA’s philanthropic arm, Opportunity Fund. Brimer is also Co-Founder of Daybreaker, a global community and lifestyle brand producing conscious morning experiences around the world. Brimer also serves as an advisor to a handful of startups, including Common, Fluent City, ZZ Driggs, and Lightmatter. Brimer has been named to Vanity Fair’s “The Next Establishment”, Forbes “30 Under 30", Inc. Magazine’s “30 Under 30”, and Business Insider’s “Silicon Alley 100". Mike Swift - Founder of Hacker League, the premier platform for managing hackathons, and the Commissioner of Major League Hacking, the Official Collegiate Hackathon League. He is one of the foremost authorities on organizing effective hackathons. Sarah Shannon - Sarah is a Systemic Partnership Coach at BIE, a non-profit with a mission to promote project-based learning (PBL) in schools. As a school administrator, Sarah's experiences included visioning, strategic planning and implementing whole school improvement and change efforts. In her most recent principalship, she led the implementation of PBL at the middle school level as the first step in a district-wide shift. House of #EdTech VIP JENNIFER DUDA - A new listener of the House of #EdTech who currently teaches special education in a self-contained 5-8 Autistic classroom at the Mercer Elementary School. She's inspired to do more with technology and provide an enriched experience for her students. Connect with Jennifer Duda: Follow @DynamicDuda338 [shortcode-variables slug="connect"]
Check out RailsClips! 02:38 - Derick Bailey Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Entreprogrammers RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 03:36 - RabbitMQ request-response Messaging Pattern 05:22 - Synchronous/Asynchronous; Chronological/Non-Chronological 10:33 - Why Do JS Devs Care About RabbitMQ? 12:10 - RabbitMQ and Complexity 14:04 - RabbitMQ’s Model Pub/Sub - Redis Enterprise Integration Patterns: Designing, Building, and Deploying Messaging Solutions by Gregor Hohpe Exchanges, Queues, and Bindings 22:15 - Event Emitters, Organizing Your Code Documentation 31:18 - Service Busses & Monitoring Systems NServiceBus 32:58 - How do you decide you need a messaging system? 36:40 - When Applications Crash… 39:24 - Event Sourcing Kafka 44:05 - Fault Tolerance/Failure Cases “Just let it fail” 50:21 - Putting RabbitMQ in Place Scheduling Long Wait vs Short Wait 58:28 - Formatting Your Messages RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 01:04:13 - “Saga” (Workflow) 01:05:10 - RabbitMQ For Developers Use code JSJABBER for 20% off the bundle! Picks W3Schools (AJ) 1984 by George Orwell (AJ) The edit button on the MDN page (AJ) [YouTube] W3Schools is just... Better (AJ) The Go Programming Language (AJ) [YouTube] Go Programming: Learn the Go Programming Language in One Video (AJ) hackthe.computer (AJ) Maze Algorithm (AJ) A* Algorithm (AJ) React Rally (Jamison) Web Design: The First 100 Years (Jamison) Evan Czaplicki: Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm @ Curry On Prague 2015 (Jamison) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Exploring ES6: Upgrade to the next version of JavaScript by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (Derick) Small World (Derick) Star Wars Darth Bane Trilogy (Derick) LEGO Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back Slave I Set #75060 (Derick)
Check out RailsClips! 02:38 - Derick Bailey Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Entreprogrammers RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 03:36 - RabbitMQ request-response Messaging Pattern 05:22 - Synchronous/Asynchronous; Chronological/Non-Chronological 10:33 - Why Do JS Devs Care About RabbitMQ? 12:10 - RabbitMQ and Complexity 14:04 - RabbitMQ’s Model Pub/Sub - Redis Enterprise Integration Patterns: Designing, Building, and Deploying Messaging Solutions by Gregor Hohpe Exchanges, Queues, and Bindings 22:15 - Event Emitters, Organizing Your Code Documentation 31:18 - Service Busses & Monitoring Systems NServiceBus 32:58 - How do you decide you need a messaging system? 36:40 - When Applications Crash… 39:24 - Event Sourcing Kafka 44:05 - Fault Tolerance/Failure Cases “Just let it fail” 50:21 - Putting RabbitMQ in Place Scheduling Long Wait vs Short Wait 58:28 - Formatting Your Messages RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 01:04:13 - “Saga” (Workflow) 01:05:10 - RabbitMQ For Developers Use code JSJABBER for 20% off the bundle! Picks W3Schools (AJ) 1984 by George Orwell (AJ) The edit button on the MDN page (AJ) [YouTube] W3Schools is just... Better (AJ) The Go Programming Language (AJ) [YouTube] Go Programming: Learn the Go Programming Language in One Video (AJ) hackthe.computer (AJ) Maze Algorithm (AJ) A* Algorithm (AJ) React Rally (Jamison) Web Design: The First 100 Years (Jamison) Evan Czaplicki: Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm @ Curry On Prague 2015 (Jamison) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Exploring ES6: Upgrade to the next version of JavaScript by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (Derick) Small World (Derick) Star Wars Darth Bane Trilogy (Derick) LEGO Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back Slave I Set #75060 (Derick)
Check out RailsClips! 02:38 - Derick Bailey Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Entreprogrammers RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 03:36 - RabbitMQ request-response Messaging Pattern 05:22 - Synchronous/Asynchronous; Chronological/Non-Chronological 10:33 - Why Do JS Devs Care About RabbitMQ? 12:10 - RabbitMQ and Complexity 14:04 - RabbitMQ’s Model Pub/Sub - Redis Enterprise Integration Patterns: Designing, Building, and Deploying Messaging Solutions by Gregor Hohpe Exchanges, Queues, and Bindings 22:15 - Event Emitters, Organizing Your Code Documentation 31:18 - Service Busses & Monitoring Systems NServiceBus 32:58 - How do you decide you need a messaging system? 36:40 - When Applications Crash… 39:24 - Event Sourcing Kafka 44:05 - Fault Tolerance/Failure Cases “Just let it fail” 50:21 - Putting RabbitMQ in Place Scheduling Long Wait vs Short Wait 58:28 - Formatting Your Messages RabbitMQ: Patterns for Applications by Derick Bailey 01:04:13 - “Saga” (Workflow) 01:05:10 - RabbitMQ For Developers Use code JSJABBER for 20% off the bundle! Picks W3Schools (AJ) 1984 by George Orwell (AJ) The edit button on the MDN page (AJ) [YouTube] W3Schools is just... Better (AJ) The Go Programming Language (AJ) [YouTube] Go Programming: Learn the Go Programming Language in One Video (AJ) hackthe.computer (AJ) Maze Algorithm (AJ) A* Algorithm (AJ) React Rally (Jamison) Web Design: The First 100 Years (Jamison) Evan Czaplicki: Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm @ Curry On Prague 2015 (Jamison) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Exploring ES6: Upgrade to the next version of JavaScript by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer (Derick) Small World (Derick) Star Wars Darth Bane Trilogy (Derick) LEGO Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back Slave I Set #75060 (Derick)
Download MP3: Stop Chewing on My Electric Sam’s new service: http://sendnao.com/ & why we need it ATM side-channel attack contributed by our favorite listener Neal: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/08/thermal-imaging-camera-can-read-your-atm-pin/ Catch-up on our life doings, Merrick: Drupal 7, Sam: Motion Graphics, Ben: JavaBeans & JSP (Java Server Pages). Merrick was confused about the Das Keyboard being able to switch layouts & [...]
Enregistre le 4 aout 2011 News Java 7 Le bug des compilations de loop dans HotSpot http://www.lucidimagination.com/blog/2011/07/28/dont-use-java-7-for-anything/ http://www.infoq.com/news/2011/08/java7-hotspot Kotlin Site web Kotlin http://confluence.jetbrains.net/display/Kotlin/Kotlin Stephen Colebourne http://www.jroller.com/scolebourne/entry/reversed_type_declarations et http://www.jroller.com/scolebourne/entry/kotlin_and_the_search_for Les motivations derriere Kotlin http://blog.jetbrains.com/kotlin/2011/08/why-jetbrains-needs-kotlin/ Cast-IT Cast-IT http://www.cast-it.fr Mix-IT http://www.mix-it.fr/ Devoxx Les oeufs de Paques de Devoxx http://www.devoxx.com/display/DV11/Home Google Le blog d’un ancien de Google http://rethrick.com/#waving-goodbye Le BileBlog http://www.bileblog.org Google+ http://plus.google.com Google Code et Git http://www.blog-nouvelles-technologies.fr/archives/5344/google-code-annonce-son-support-a-git/ JBoss AS 7 http://www.jboss.org/as7.html Nabaztag est mort, vive Nabaztag ! Arrêt des serveurs suite à la mise en liquidation judiciaire de Mindscape qui ne pouvait plus payer son prestataire http://blog.karotz.com/?p=5224 http://blog.karotz.com/?p=5284 Le lapin reprendra t’il vie avec la communauté ? http://nabaztag.forumactif.fr Les mains dans le cambouis Sites “statiques” Awestruct http://awestruct.org Jekyll https://github.com/mojombo/jekyll/wiki Sass http://sass-lang.com/ Markdown http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ W3Schools http://www.w3schools.com/ Les protocoles de serialization Google Protocol Buffer http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/ Apache Avro http://avro.apache.org/ MessagePack http://msgpack.org/ JSON http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript_Object_Notation BSON http://bsonspec.org/ Apache Thrift http://thrift.apache.org/ JBoss Marshalling http://www.jboss.org/jbossmarshalling Comparaison http://www.igvita.com/2011/08/01/protocol-buffers-avro-thrift-messagepack/ Outils de l’épisode BalsamiQ http://balsamiq.com/ Gliffy http://www.gliffy.com/ Dia http://projects.gnome.org/dia/ OmniGraffle http://www.omnigroup.com/products/omnigraffle/ Conferences JUG Summer camp le 16 septembre à la Rochelle http://sites.google.com/site/jugsummercamp/ OpenWorldForum 22 et 23 septembre à Paris http://www.openworldforum.org/ JavaOne 2011 du 2 au 6 octobre à San Francisco http://www.oracle.com/javaone/index.html Riviera Dev les 20 et 21 octobre à Sophia Antipolis http://rivieradev.fr/ Devoxx 14 au 18 novembre à Anvers http://www.devoxx.com/display/DV11/Home Nous contacter Contactez-nous via twitter http://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs sur le groupe Google http://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs ou sur le site web http://lescastcodeurs.com/ Flattr-ez nous (dons) sur http://lescastcodeurs.com/
Welcome to Contracast 31! This week we're talking new apps, Avatar on home video, conferences, html, Microsoft Kin, a FREE MOUSE, and more!Links for you: BMW spy camera, Palm for sale.Link of the Week:W3Schools.App of the Weeks:Opera Mini, We Rule.Contact UsPaul: Site, Twitter, FacebookMike: Twitter, FacebookJohn: Twitter, FacebookContracast on iTunesDownload Link
Google Energy, the Starcraft 2 Beta, the best game graphics of the last decade, and why colleges should drop their old web services and use Google's. PICKS OF THE WEEKLinkW3Schools.com: Full web building Tutorials for free! AppSword and Poker: An awesome balance of JRPG elements and poker, this game will have you playing for a very long time.Contact UsPaul: Site, Twitter, FacebookMike: Twitter, FacebookJohn: Twitter, FacebookDownload Link Contracast on iTunes