-
+6 +2How to make release notes count
Why are release notes important? Learn how and why to make them content clear, understandable, and most importantly, relevant.
-
+1 +1Optimising the front end for the browser
An introductory overview to optimising front end code for the browser, to improve UX and SEO rankings.
-
+30 +6AI learns to write its own code by stealing from other programs
Software called DeepCoder has solved simple programming challenges by piecing together bits of borrowed code.
-
+41 +3The code that took America to the moon was just published to GitHub, and it's like a 1960s time capsule
"Burn, baby! BURN!"
-
0 +1Write Explicit Tests
Where I work, we have an in-house Python course that includes a few exercises.I’ve been checking the same exercise solution for a few years now, for every newprogrammer in our group. It’s interesti...
-
+1 +1Benefits of Microservices - Choreography over Orchestration, Low Coupling and High Cohesion
Why to use microservices and why they are a good fit for agile development
-
+11 +3Which programming languages have the happiest (and angriest) commenters?
It’s officially winter, so what could be better than drinking hot chocolate while querying the new Stack Overflow dataset in BigQuery? It…
-
+14 +4Scaling Your Web App 101: Lessons in Architecture Under Load
It’s the classic champagne problem that most successful web apps will deal with – there are so many users on your site that things are starting to get bogged...
-
+5 +2Linux 2017: With great power comes great responsibility
Linux and open-source software now run the world and that means we need to work harder than ever to make sure it's trustworthy.
-
+11 +3The Distribution of Users’ Computer Skills: Worse Than You Think
Across 33 rich countries, only 5% of the population has high computer-related abilities, and only a third of people can complete medium-complexity tasks.
-
+3 +1How to Estimate Anything
Matt Heusser provides a more-accurate method to predict project completion dates -- in the face of uncertainty and ambiguity.
-
+1 +1Programming Has Changed My Life
The story of how programming has made me a better person than I was.
-
+1 +1You Wouldn't Base64 a Password! Cryptography Terms and Concepts for Developers
A gentle introduction to cryptography concepts and terminology.
-
+5 +19 lessons from 25 years of Linux kernel development
It may be many years before we fully understand the keys to the Linux kernel's success, but there are a few lessons that stand out even now.
-
+29 +67,500 Faceless Coders Paid in Bitcoin Built a Hedge Fund’s Brain
RICHARD CRAIB IS a 29-year-old South African who runs a hedge fund in San Francisco. Or rather, he doesn’t run it. He leaves that to an artificially intelligent system built by several thousand data scientists whose names he doesn’t know. Under the banner of a startup called Numerai, Craib and his team have built technology that masks the fund’s trading data before sharing it with a vast community of anonymous data scientists. Using a method similar to homomorphic encryption, this tech works to ensure that the scientists can’t see...
-
Current Event-1 +1
MongoDB Training - Live MongoDB Online Training By Expert Trainers
MongoDB Training - Instructor Led Live MongoDB Online Training ✓ 30 Hrs Project Scenarios ✓ Recorded Sessions ✓ Training Material ✓ Pay in Installments*
-
How-to0 +1
The Next Challenge for Big Data: Geo-Distributed Architectures
Organizations need to develop skills and technology to manage Big Data operations across multiple data centers, likely across large geographic areas.
-
-2 +1Autoscaling: How the Cloud Provides a Tremendous Boost
If you are looking to transition some or all of your IT infrastructure to the cloud, one advantage that may help persuade people to get on board is the ability to use autoscaling. With autoscaling, you can provide a real boost to your website or web
-
+7 +2musicForProgramming("00: _manifesto");
A collaborative series of mixes designed for listening while programming (compatible with other activities).
-
+22 +4May the Fork Be with You: A Short History of Open Source Forks
Every time there is a fork, and I think forks are actually good things, it means somebody sees a need and a technical reason to do something different from the standard kernel. But most forks are failures. They find that the things they needed were not actually worth doing and as a result, most forks …
Submit a link
Start a discussion




















